Business & Events

iPad Air (2022) review: Making $1,000 Android tablets look silly

The spectacle of flashy new hardware can be a lot of fun, but there's something respectably honest about new versions of products that are blatantly iterative — not everything can be reinvented from the ground up every couple of years, as much as tech companies would like to pretend otherwise. The 2022 iPad Air is such an iterative update: Apple took 2020's model, jammed newer parts in it, and shoved it out the door at the same $600 MSRP. The result is a crazy-powerful tablet at what seems like an uncharacteristically fair price, but whether it's right for you is going to come down to the details.
Design, hardware, what's in the box
The new iPad Air looks like every other modern iPad: it's slim and boxy with rounded corners, and a selfie camera that's centered when the tablet is held vertically, in portrait. That selfie camera is one of few upgrades from the last iPad Air: it's an updated 12-megapixel sensor with a 122-degree field of view and support for Apple's Center Stage subject tracking.

Physically, most of 2022's model is unchanged from 2020's. It's the same design in the exact same size, with the same 11-inch, 60Hz LCD display — buttons, ports, connectors, and cameras are all where they were two years ago. Considering the previous generation's look was already modern and handsome, it's hard to complain about any of this. You can also get the Air in a lovely blue finish this year.
Even if it is a little dated by Android standards, the iPad Air's LCD screen is crisp and vibrant, and Apple's True Tone feature that aims to match color temperature to your environment really does make reading text on white backgrounds a little nicer (you can turn True Tone off if you value color accuracy over comfort). Its stereo speakers, also unchanged from the previous generation, are loud and surprisingly full and bassy for such a thin device.
The tablet isn't as sturdy as I'd expect an Apple product to be, though. The new Air bends and creaks a bit when flexed — and with troublingly little pressure applied to its back, you can see some internal part pressing against the underside of the display. I assume this has to do with shuffling the tablet's guts around to accommodate updated components, and I don't ever see it being an issue in normal use. Still, I shudder to think what could happen if you forgot you left the thing on your couch.

The iPad Air comes with a 20-watt power brick and a USB-C-to-C cable — along with the usual literature and Apple logo stickers.
Coming from Android, iPadOS is only slightly foreign. Navigation, file management, and even notifications all work kind of the way you're used to, and iPadOS has only gotten more Android-like in recent years with additions like home screen widgets and an app drawer (well, it's not really a drawer on iPad, but it's the same idea).

Some quirks are easier to live with than others. Android and iPadOS's gesture navigation, for example, are broadly similar, and on a device you'll only ever use two-handed, not having a universal back gesture isn't so bad. Other UI decisions — ones that might make sense to someone who's used Apple software for years — are positively arcane coming from Android.
Case in point: I often like to use wallpapers from Chrome OS on other devices, so I downloaded some on my iPad. Looking at them in the Files app, though, I couldn't see how to apply them. After a few minutes of poking around, I gave up and Googled it. Turns out I had to go to the image I wanted to use in Files, tap the share icon, then select an option labeled Save Image to make it appear in the Gallery app. Once the image was in my camera roll, I could apply it as a wallpaper from there. Maybe there's some logic to doing things that way, but it's lost on me — it's just opaque and frustrating.

Some iPad software features are a joy, though. Certain ones, like the ability to swipe up from the bottom right corner of the screen at any time to open a floating Apple Notes window, have secured spots in my daily routine. There's also a wealth of ecosystem tie-ins, many of which are fantastic — if you've got any other Apple devices around to take advantage of them. My favorite right now is Universal Control, which, with very little setup required, lets you control an iPad and a Mac computer running MacOS 12.3 simultaneously with a single mouse and keyboard: Just move the cursor off your computer screen in the direction of your iPad and bam, you're controlling the tablet. You can even drag files back and forth. It's extremely cool.
The most notable difference in this year's iPad Air from the 2020 model is the inclusion of Apple's M1 chip, which powers not only the most recent iPad Pro, but also a number of the company's laptop and desktop computers. It's not Apple's most powerful CPU anymore — there are now several tiers of M1, this being the lowest — but for a mobile device, it's wickedly fast. RAM's also been doubled from four gigs in 2020's model to eight gigs here.

The iPad Air positively flies through everyday tablet use cases like games and web browsing, and it even shrugs off intensive tasks like editing large images in Adobe Lightroom. I thought mobile photo editing on the 2021 iPad Mini was quick, but boy, I didn't know what I was missing.

If you're thinking you don't have any use for that much horsepower in a tablet, you're probably not wrong. Despite decent mouse support and pricey accessories like the Magic Keyboard that turns your iPad Air or Pro into a quasi-laptop, iPadOS still isn't a replacement for a real desktop operating system: File management is awkward, multitasking is a bit of a pain, and you can't use desktop web browsers. The previous-gen iPad Air is still eminently capable of anything the vast majority of users will want to do on a tablet; for most people, this generation is not an essential upgrade from that one.

site_map