![]() There is a front 12MP camera and a small camera set up on the back. IPAD AIR 4 GEEKBENCH PROThe iPad Pro comes in Grey and Silver, with the same rectangular shape and rounded edges that we’ve come to expect with most iPads. ![]() ![]() We will be sure to test these claims once we get the tablet in for a review, though the screen does look promising. If true that still puts it behind its more expensive sibling. Apple is claiming that it has a wide P3 colour display and that it can reach up to 500 nits of brightness. While we can’t use any lab tests for the iPad Air 5, we do know that it packs a 10.9-inch Liquid Retina LED display with a resolution of 2360×1640. We noted that this is a great tablet for watching media on, with vibrant colours and deep blacks leading to a generally more immersive viewing experience than most of the other slates we test. During our lab testing we detected a nit count of 525, with impressive colour temperature and perfect blacks. It has a pixel resolution of 2732×2048 which is sharper than average and great for reading and working on day-to-day. The Liquid Retina XDR stands for Extreme Dynamic Range with a large number of individually calibrated blue LEDs to form a backlight. Which is great news for people that pay for streaming services’ such as Netflix, Prime and Disney Plus’ top tier packages. The flagship Pro comes with a Liquid Retina XDR Mini-LED display with IPS technology, with our review noting that it was great for HDR content. With 120Hz, 4 speakers, faster graphics, and all the support for peripherals, it'd be my choice.Looking to the old before the new, the iPad Pro comes in two flavours, 11-inches and 12.9-inches. Personally, I'd still say the 10.5" Pro is a better buy. I'd still try to see if you can find head to head examples for whatever apps you're going to run to be the defining factor. It's up to you to decide what is more important there. Meaning that the Air is around 1/3rd slower in terms of graphics performance. HOWEVER, the 2nd Gen iPad Pro is significantly faster in Metal performance (GPU). You can decide for yourself if that speed difference is signficant. ~800 in single (25% difference) and ~2000 (20% difference) in multi or so compared to the second Gen iPad Pro. CPU performance in both single and multi core is better on A12 (even non X). They don't have the iPad Air listed yet, but iPhone XS/XS Max's are available. ![]() I still would say again: look up benchmarks for your particular applications, but I'm still reasonably sure the Gen 2 Pro is much faster than the current Gen Air.ĮDIT: So I found Geekbenche's iOS benchmarks. If you aren't going to do audio production, video editing, or lots of multi-tasking there may be very little benefit of Gen 3 over Gen 2 in terms of processor (however the graphics improvement is significant). It's crazy that the third Gen was so much faster, although mostly only in multi-theaded workloads and not as much in single threaded workloads. There are a lot of people that also have the misunderstanding in the power of the X versus the standard chips (I saw people on Slickdeals balking at 2nd gen iPad Pro deals also erroneously believing that current gen non-Pro variants were faster and that it was outdated). The iPad Pro 2nd/3rd Gen also has 4 GB of RAM as compared to the Air's 3GB's (if that makes any difference to you). That's what makes the Pro the Pro, and also why it's so much faster than the standard non-x processors. Something that can be done when the device and battery are much larger than an SOC that has to work in a phone. The X variants are also clocked much higher. The non X variations don't have the crazy amounts of cores that the X versions do in terms of GPU and GPU. ![]() IPAD AIR 4 GEEKBENCH SERIESThe "X" series of processors are always much faster than their non "X" standard counterparts. With GPU performance twice as fast as Gen 2 (says Apple). The GPU/CPU featured massive upgrades over Gen 2, most specifically in multicore applications. As you can do that in a much larger device as compared to an SoC that must work in a phone. Not to mention the X processors are clocked much higher in terms of both CPU and GPU. To say the least is a massive difference. To Better answer your question here, the A10X has a 12 core GPU, which appears to be the same as the one used in Gen 1. Gen 2 A10X Hex Core, a massive improvement over Gen1. Gen 1 has A9X - 12 Core PowerVR 7 Series GPU and Hex Core CPU: They launched the 12.9" then the 9.7" roughly half a year later IIRC. There have been 2 variants of the iPad Pro more or less from the beginning. EDIT: For the tl dr, I'd read after the "=" below. ![]()
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