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>super-premium professional's device, still doesn't have mouse support

I would like mouse support on the iPad as much as anyone else here, but it's still a very bold assumption to say it needs to have a mouse to be called "professional". It only takes a few minutes in any large airport to see real professionals using iPads for real work.



Not having mouse support is just the tip of what's wrong with the iPad Pro as a work device. The file management system is extremely primitive compared to Android, never mind a desktop OS. A quote from an article [0] about using the Ipad Pro as a daily driver:

> Accepting this new reality – that an iPad can't manage local files and folders like a Mac – took time and dedication. If you don't adapt – if you think you can force iOS to be more like the Mac's Finder – you're going to have a bad experience in your transition to iOS.

I think people's expectations of a 'professional' device include not having to adapt their workflow to suit the device's inherent half-baked approach.

I do see people using iPad Pros for work. The head of my division is one of them. Unsurprisingly, he uses it to respond to emails and swipe through slide decks people send him. So basically, exactly like an iPad or even a $300 Android tablet. I'd wager there are 10x more users like him using iPad Pros than there are people using the Apple Pencil to do SVG or print design in Procreate or Affinity Publisher, apps that are actually tailor made for the ipad Pro.

[0]: https://www.macstories.net/stories/one-year-of-ipad-pro/2/




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