It’s got the same home screen and the same interface conventions as the smartphone, which makes it all the more perplexing when new features arrive on iOS and don’t come to the tablet: for example, homescreen widgets debuted in iOS 14 but didn’t appear on the iPad until iPadOS 15 and, this year, iOS 16’s customizable lock screen remains sadly absent from iPadOS.Īt the same time, iPadOS having been forked into its own platform does mean that it has progressed to offer features not present on (and not suited to) the iPhone, such as multitasking via Split View and now Stage Manager. IPadOS is starting to stand on it’s own, but it needs to evolve much more to provide an experience that separates itself from the iPhone.īut because of these underpinnings, at its root, the iPad still largely remains, for better or for worse, a big iPhone–a criticism often levied at it in its earliest years.
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