I really love iPads. In fact, I
own like seven of them. And if you're potentially looking to
buy a new iPad, you probably have realized by now that there
are a lot of options, you have the brand new 13 inch iPad Pros
with M four processors, and magic keyboards and Apple
pencils. And then you have the iPad Air, which just came out,
which also has 11 inch and 13 inch, and then you also have the
little tiny iPad Mini, and then you have what's just called the
iPad 10th generation, there's just a lot options. And if
you've never owned an iPad before, you're probably
wondering, Where do I even start? I'm going to hopefully
make this video as short and sweet as possible. But I'm not
always good at doing that. But hopefully this will be
informative and answer the question that a lot of people
ask, which is, what iPad should I buy? Now, I think there are
two types of people, there are people that already have an
iPad, in a certain capacity, certain size, certain
generation, and they're looking for their iPad to potentially do
something more than theirs currently does. Whether it's a
bigger screen, whether it's a faster processor, whether it's
better battery life, whether it's larger or smaller, whatever
it is, there's usually a reason why someone might be upgrading
their iPad. And then there are other people that have never
owned an iPad. And they might be thinking, hey, I love my friends
tell me about how much they love their iPad. And I've been
thinking about getting one but I just don't know which one I
should buy. And then there are people that are actually
considering buying an iPad as their primary computer. And
they're trying to figure out if that even makes sense, or does a
computer make more sense, the most likely you fall into one of
those three categories. And hopefully, I'll be able to
answer all the questions that make the most sense for
everybody. So let's first talk about the different models of
iPads that are currently available. As I'm recording this
video in May of 2020. For the brand new models that just came
out are the new iPad Pros with the M four processor and the
iPad Air with the m two processor. But Apple still also
has available just a standard iPad, they call it just iPad 10
generation that has an A 14 bionic chip. And then Apple also
still has an iPad Mini available that has an A 15 bionic chip. So
we're talking about four entirely different models of the
iPad. And that's not even counting how many variations
inside the models there are in terms of screen size, and
storage capacity, and memory, and all that stuff. There's a
lot of detail. We'll talk about those things in a second. But
first, let's just discuss which model is probably right for you.
When it comes to any device, whether that's an iPad or a
computer, obviously, your use case is going to be the biggest
factor into which iPad is probably right for you.
Depending on how you plan to use your iPad, and even how long you
plan to keep your iPad really factors in, in my opinion, which
one makes the most sense for you? I think a lot of people
that purchase an iPad, use an iPad in a very basic form, they
want to be able to have a device that's a little bit larger than
their phone, and potentially a device that they can watch
YouTube on or Netflix or maybe have some sort of device that
they can watch in their bed that's a little bit bigger than
their phone. And they just use it for everyday stuff. Yes, they
may start using more apps, they may play some more games, they
may do some different things here and there. But for the most
part, I consider just basic stuff really the thing that in
all honesty, every single one of these models is going to do just
fine. Yes. Would you notice a faster processor to open
applications and maybe move throughout the iPad on an iPad
Pro compared to an iPad Mini or a standard iPad? Yes, you're
going to notice a big difference if you have them side by side
when you're talking about the speed difference between an M
four processor on the new and for iPad Pro, for example,
compared to an A 15 bionic on something like the iPad Mini.
Absolutely. The iPad Pro is going to be significantly faster
doing anything you want to do, because it has a much faster
processor that's available for that. But do you notice it if
you're not comparing it side by side? And the answer is no. Even
as someone who owns the iPad Pro M four, with a very very fast
processor, lots of memory, lots of RAM all the stuff that's
super impressive on an iPad. I still use the iPad Mini a ton
and I'm just fine with mostly everything that the iPad Mini
does. Because of what I'm using the iPad Mini for the iPad Pro
specifically is really like a computer replacement to me 90%
of the time I've talked about this in other videos before that
you can reference if you want to learn more about how I use my
iPad but I use this and it's standard configuration with an
magic keyboard and an Apple pencil to do a lot of my
everyday tasks as a business owner. So that is everything
from email to internet to sending quotes for job As to
writing documents to sending proposals, all the stuff that is
pretty common. And I like having a nice large screen for that. I
like having a keyboard attached to trackpad, I like using it
like a computer. But when I use the iPad Mini, my entire purpose
of this is drastically different. I am not doing email,
I'm not needing to type or have a keyboard attached, I'm not
really doing anything other than just, you know, maybe looking at
Twitter, or I'm on the internet, or I'm potentially watching
YouTube videos in my bed. And I just want to have a nice super
small portable iPad that just sits on my lap. And I can hold I
sometimes also use this for the remote control for my TV, my
Apple TV, all those things, I want a nice tiny portable device
for. And this way, I don't have to always bring my large iPad up
to my living room to be able to use it. And I can just have kind
of a nice smaller device there for the everyday stuff. I also
use this a lot for actually just reading books or reading
articles, being able to have potentially an e book on here, I
think this is a phenomenal device for an e book or someone
that's actually using this as more like an e reader because it
is easy to just hold in your hands with one hand no problem
and just be able to use it like a book because the book isn't
much bigger than this on a regular basis. Compared to
obviously, if you were using the 13 inch iPad Pro, and you're
using that as an e reader, it's obviously pretty large. So
though it makes a great e reader because it's large and has a
great screen, it's not necessarily portable to just
have sitting on your lap, you're really using this in my opinion
more as your doctor device that is more computer like so if
you're a person that is doing basic stuff, like how I use my
iPad Mini for just web browsing, YouTube, Netflix, different
stuff, and e reader all that there's really no reason
whatsoever that you need anything more than either the
iPad Mini, or just the iPad, standard generation, whatever
they call it now just iPad, or potentially if you want a little
bit more of an upgrade and iPad Air the new 13 inch m two
processor, because they really are going to do all those tasks
with no problem whatsoever. The m two processor in the iPad Air
is fast enough to do any task with no problem whatsoever.
Because even the iPad Mini with it a 15 bionic chip, which is
the older chip that Apple made is still plenty fast enough for
everything that I mentioned that I do want here. So when you
think about it, really try to determine what you plan to do
with the iPad, is this going to be a computer for you? Or is
this going to be a secondary device that you really just want
for media consumption, and something that's easier to just
have next to you and to grab when you want to do light work
and not have to grab your computer. In that case, any of
the iPads that are out currently are going to be totally fine for
you. Now there are additional benefits to the different
models, the iPad Pro, the iPad, air, the standard iPad, and the
iPad Mini things that depending on what you're going to use the
iPad for could make a big difference. I think the
processor, the M four or the m two, or the A 15 bionic is not
as big of a deal as potentially some of the other things that
those models have. For example, the new iPad Pro 13 inch and 11
inch model do have a much better camera than the iPad Mini or the
iPad Air even. But depending on what you're really using it for,
you may not really care. I personally never take photos
with my iPad. So I don't care if this had no camera honestly on
the outside wouldn't matter to me because of what I use it for.
I use my phone, which has much better cameras than all of them
as my device to take pictures with or cameras. Obviously. One
other consideration is camera placement on even the front
facing camera. And I may say why does that even matter? Well,
depending on if you're someone that constantly uses your iPad
for facetimes, or zooms or conference calls, whatever it
is, that could matter. Now both the new iPad Pros and iPad errs
have moved the front facing camera position into landscape
mode, which is great. So you are going to be able to have very
natural face times or conference calls or zooms whatever, in this
natural format. And it's gonna look very good when you're
actually having that conversation as compared to
something like the iPad Mini, which has the top facing front
camera. So if you're not holding it
vertically like this, you kind of look very odd because you're
looking at the person here but the cameras to the side. But
once again, if you're buying the iPad Mini that probably doesn't
matter much. Now one thing that I think is something to consider
is that the iPad Pros are the only ones that actually have
face Id rather than just touch ID. So an iPad Mini for example,
as well you have a touch ID on the power button. That's kind of
what you touch. And that's how it unlocks the iPads. So you'd
have to type in your passcode whereas the iPad when it's
locked, you basically similar to what you're probably used to if
you have a newer generation iPhone, it just looks at your
face and it unlocks. Now that may seem like Now that's not
that big of a deal. But it is more convenient in my opinion
having face ID because it's just quicker. As soon as you press
that power button, being able to unlock it immediately because
that face ID is doing its job is great. I prefer that over the
touch ID because it just is an extra step that I have to do and
kind of wait for it to authenticate. But it may not be
a big decision for you. The iPad Pro also has things like a Lidar
scanner, which if you're not using it for professional use,
that doesn't really matter much. But it is something that that
only that specific model has or the iPad, air, anything
underneath that do not have that. So also, the new iPad Pros
and iPad errs are the only ones that can use the new Apple
Pencil Pro. Now, if you have never used an Apple pencil
before, you'd be totally fine probably with all the options
that the previous Apple Pencil did. But if you want to take
advantage of some of the new gestures, and the squeezing, and
the changing of tools and all that in the barrel roll and all
the new things they put in this pencil, you kind of have to get
the new iPad Pro or iPad Air because they had to change the
camera position. So that meant they had to change the magnet
position of how you charge it. So the Apple Pencil Pro is only
compatible with the new iPad Pro, and iPad Air. So now let's
say that you've decided the iPad Pro, or the iPad Air. Once
again, your use case matters. There is about a $500 difference
between the iPad Pro and the iPad Air as we're looking at it
in May of 2024. And if you look at the comparisons of what
you're basically getting for that you are getting a little
better display, an ultra retina XDR display compared to a liquid
Retina display, they both look good in my opinion. And unless
you put them side by side, I don't think that would be that
big of a deal, you are getting a higher refresh rate on the iPad
Pro. But once again, unless you've had that model before,
you probably not really going to realize that it's not
necessarily something I'd say that you should probably buy. I
think for the average person that knows what that means
they're gonna buy the iPad Pro, because they're more of a
professional user. And that stuff does matter. I definitely
noticed a difference between those screens. But I guarantee
you if I gave this to my wife and let her compare, she would
not say anything about the fact that the refresh rate seemed way
faster, she just wouldn't you have the face ID on the iPad Pro
compared to the iPad Air. I personally do like that better
than the touch ID because it's just faster. But once again, not
a huge deal, you have the M Ford ship compared to the m two chip,
this is really only going to matter. If you're using very
professional applications that require as much RAM as possible.
If you are an artist or a video editor or a photo editor, or
someone that uses some of the iPad apps that are very CPU
intensive, it's definitely going to matter to have a faster
processor and more RAM, more memory available for you to be
able to process those apps. Once again, you'd have to do a side
by side comparison of probably really see the difference. And
if you're not used to the speed of an M four, and you previously
have an M one, while the m two is still going to feel like an
upgrade compared to what you're used to. So you're probably
still going to be fine with an iPad Air regardless. But if you
previously found that your M one iPad, for example, was really,
really underpowered compared to what you really wanted it to do,
then you're going to obviously see an even bigger jump if you
go to the M four and the iPad Pro, because you also have that
extra RAM, which does matter for performance, you're going to get
the Lidar scanner on the iPad Pro, I think very few people
honestly would care enough for this to matter. If you don't
even know what a Lidar scanner is, then I'm going to tell you
right away that you don't need to get the iPad Pro for that. If
you're someone that does a lot of work with Lidar scanner
stuff, then you probably are going to want to buy this iPad,
that's your only option. But I think that's a very small, small
amount of people. The iPad Pro has an M four chip up to a 10
core GPU and a 16 core neural engine compared to the iPad Air,
which has an m two chip, a 10 core GPU and a 16 core Noryl
engine. So it's really not going to be a drastic difference
between these two, as much as Apple will probably tell you
that it's two times as fast or whatever they're you know, they
obviously always compare and say what the actual spec difference
is. But that's if you're actually comparing them side by
side, I can almost guarantee you that 99% of people if you got
the iPad Air tomorrow, you're not going to notice that
difference. What you might notice a difference with would
be things like the camera, the camera is obviously much better
on the actual iPad Pro compared to the iPad Air because you have
those two cameras rather than just one. And that would be
something that you probably would notice a lot more. But if
you're not using the iPad to take a lot of pictures, then
that doesn't matter either. And I don't really think you should
be buying an iPad based on how good it takes pictures because
really I don't think you should be the person that's taking
pictures With an iPad one other noticeable difference between
the iPad Pro and the iPad Air is you have a four speaker audio
array on the iPad Pro as well as four microphones. And you have
only two speakers in landscape mode on the iPad Air, and only
two microphones. Now you will absolutely notice a difference
between the speaker audio compared to the iPad Pro and the
iPad Air. But once again, you have to care enough about audio
to notice it. And the average person that is listening on an
iPad in general or watching stuff on their phone doesn't
necessarily notice an audio difference, they might notice
volume difference, but that's not once again, going to be a
big factor to most people. Yes, I'm an audio person that loves
audio. And I really care about that kind of stuff. But even I
didn't buy this iPad, because it had better speakers, most of the
time, I'm actually consuming media on my iPad, I'm usually
using my air pods or something else. So I don't really care,
the microphones definitely make a difference compared to the two
microphones in the iPad Air. But once again, if you're just
having a FaceTime, or a zoom call, it's not probably going to
be that big of a difference that most people are gonna know, I
highly doubt you're gonna hop on a FaceTime, and they're gonna
say, you sound like you're definitely using the iPad Pro
with those four microphones, it sounds phenomenal. I just don't
think it's happening. From a battery perspective, they claim
to have the same battery life up to 10 hours of surfing the web,
up to nine hours of surfing the web on cellular. And that's the
same for both iPads so you're not getting a drastic difference
in battery life, battery life doesn't really matter. 13 is to
11 inch. And the reason it doesn't matter is because
specifically in the new 13 inch, they made the new 13 inch even
thinner than the 11 inch at the sacrifice of not making it have
much better battery, they kind of felt like they were okay
having a battery life be what it was, which really for the most
part is going to be full day battery life, you're not really
going to use your iPad for more than 10 hours a day. And even
someone like me who uses it a ton still has no problem with
the battery lasting most of the day. So does that mean that I'm
telling you, there's no point in buying the iPad Pro? No, because
I do think that depending on the work that you do, if you're
using a lot of heavy CPU application stuff like Final
Cut, or Lightroom, or Photoshop, or you're using multiple apps at
once, if you're a heavy multitasker on the iPad, you
will definitely notice a difference between that info
processor, but more importantly, that additional RAM, that's
going to matter. But if you are someone that primarily uses one
application all the time, and you really don't go back and
forth all the time between applications or have them up
side by side, I don't think the average person would know. So I
do think that the iPad Pro absolutely has a use for someone
like me who really doesn't want to have any limitations on the
iPad and I want to be able to use it for any applications that
come my way and have no problem with it. That is really just the
best option for me because I like getting the highest end
iPad I can because of the fact that I use it all the time
you're going to spend $500 to get a few minor upgrades that
you most likely won't notice when you could take that $500
Get the iPad Air 13 inch with a magic keyboard and the Apple
Pencil and still be cheaper than the iPad Pro 13 inch by itself.
That also goes to 11 inch model you're still talking about a
four and a $50 difference between them and not a drastic
difference when it comes to that. Obviously when you start
comparing the iPad Pro to the iPad or the iPad Mini yes there
are significant differences when it comes to a lot of things on
them but you're also talking about $1,000 difference in price
so you got to choose the one that makes sense for you. The
next decision you have to make is what size iPad that you want.
Obviously outside of the processor, one of the biggest
things that you're going to have to decide is what size you
really want the iPad to be the iPad Mini though I think is an
amazing device to have because it's very small and easy to just
hold in your hand and read might be too small if you're someone
that potentially wants a little bit of a bigger screen. The iPad
mini screen is only 8.3 inches which I think is great for the
use that I have for it and for most people might be great. But
if this is a device that you use a lot and you want to read and
you want a bigger screen because maybe your vision isn't as good
or maybe you just think this is too small then you might want to
jump up to the next option which is an iPad Air because you then
have the option of an 11 inch screen or a 13 inch screen. This
being the 13 inch screen size. This is the iPad mini size
clearly you can see a drastic difference in the size. But then
there's one between this that is the 11 inch. This right here is
the 11 inch so we got 13 inch 11 inch, eight inch iPad mini
poster I have a lot iPads Now I personally think The 11 inch is
a phenomenal size for an iPad. In my opinion, this is the iPad
Pro, but they also make 11 inch and the iPad Air. And I really,
really liked the size of this iPad, it's a great in the middle
for me between having a device that's obviously much bigger
than your phone. Great for media consumption, it's still easy to
hold with one hand, but it's still big enough that it feels
like a big upgrade from a smaller phone or something that
you have that is not necessarily a tablet. And it's really a size
that I feel like most people should get. For the everyday use
the battery life is really good on it, the ease of use is really
nice. If you put a keyboard on it, it doesn't feel ridiculous,
because the keyboard itself is not going to be tiny, like
you're probably going to have for something like the iPad
Mini, for example. But honestly, if you have an iPad Mini, you're
probably not getting a keyboard for it anyway, because you're
probably not using it for extensive typing where this if
you attach the magic keyboard to it or you have some sort of
other Bluetooth keyboard, it's still a nice size that you can
sit down and be able to use kind of like a computer and not feel
like the screen is so small that you can't even see it when it's
not, you know right against your face when you're holding it in
your hands. So eight inch here, 11 inch 13 inch down below, I
honestly think that the size of the iPad really should be the
biggest determining factor of which one you actually buy. So
my summary basically on size is that if this is going to be your
everyday computer that you use for most tasks during the day,
on a regular basis all the time, I recommend going with the
largest screen, which is the 13 inch and getting yourself the
magic keyboard, or another keyboard. But I honestly think
this is the best one you can buy because it has the trackpad. And
then it really is going to function and feel the most like
a computer, which is great if you're doing computer based
tasks. If you're someone that might do some things here and
there. But really, it's going to be more of a media consumption
device. I think that the 11 inch is a really, really great
option. Then if you're someone that still is undecided and
feels like maybe it would just be better to have a much smaller
iPad that is super portable, that you can bring with you
anywhere and bring with you to a coffee shop and not feel like
it's extra bulk, you can just toss this in a purse really
easy. You can even put it in some pant pockets because of the
size. That's a big factor. This is not going to feel like a lot
of weight when you just throw it in your in your backpack or your
purse or something just to have an additional iPad with you,
compared to an 11 inch and a 13 inch is going to feel a little
bit larger, you're probably going to need to have something
like a computer case or an iPad case, besides just your purse or
your bag, whatever it is, if that makes sense. Okay, so let's
say you've decided on which iPad to buy, you've decided on
whether you want cellular or Wi Fi, you've decided on what
screen size that you actually want. And now you have to decide
what storage space should I buy for the iPad, told you there's
lots to discuss. I'm someone that uses my iPad for a ton of
stuff. And I have not had anything more than a 512 gig
iPad in my history. All the new ones I just bought are all five
inch to 12 gigs, my previous iPad Pro and one five inch or 12
gigs. I use this for everything for most of the work that I do.
And I still have more than 60% available capacity, including
all the applications that I have, I have hundreds of
applications on it. But if you look at even this model,
currently, as we speak, you can see that I have 17,000 photos,
127 applications, this is the 512 Gig capacity, and I still
have 440 gigs available. I think it's important to realize that
in this day and age, especially if you have iCloud Drive, which
most I think most iPhone users, if you're an iPhone user, you
probably have iCloud, you know you're paying for iCloud in some
capacity, whether it's 200 gigs or a terabyte. If you have 200
gigs or a terabyte of iCloud Drive space, almost everything
these days is cloud based. So you're not really storing a lot
on here. Everything is kind of streaming from the cloud at all
times. And you're not really storing additional stuff on
here. I feel like the only people that are really, really
going to know the difference between capacity are people that
don't want to upload everything to the cloud. They don't want to
pay that monthly subscription for the cloud. And so they
really need everything to be stored here. So that is who I
would say to get more capacity to if you're a person that
doesn't pay for a big iCloud storage. So I pay for the two
terabyte family plan and we still have a significant amount
of space left on that iCloud account. If I go to my account
here we're using 500 gigs of our iCloud out of the two terabyte
that we can use and if you see what we're actually using it for
225 gigs on the iCloud is photos. So if we didn't have
iCloud storage, then my iPad is actually over 500 gigs and this
512 Gig would not be enough but we're paying for that iCloud
storage. The two terabytes we still have tons of space left
After 1.5 terabytes are still available, and the iPad is
barely using anything because we aren't downloading a lot of
stuff to it. Now, if you're someone that doesn't have iCloud
storage, and you take a ton of video, if you take a ton of
photos, and you want everything to live locally, so processes
faster, and you're able to edit this stuff that obviously could
play a factor for you, I found that I've never really once had
a capacity issue. And I use the iPad extensively. The only other
time that you're really going to be downloading stuff that's not
on the cloud is if you download a ton of videos, from your own
library or from something like Netflix or YouTube, and you
download things for offline use, right? It's the idea that I'm
going to be on a plane, and I want to be able to watch these
movies, watch these YouTube videos, and I am not going to
have internet to be able to download from the cloud. So you
store things locally. But even that, that feels like it's a
temporary thing, you could download a ton of videos, if you
want it to go on a plane, and not use up that much space, and
then just delete them when you're done. And you're gonna
get your space back. So I don't think it's a huge issue. But if
you're a Pro user who's actually editing tons of photos, and you
need them to be stored on the local iPad, because you want
them in full raw quality, you will notice that space more, you
will absolutely take up a lot more space in something like
Lightroom when you're talking about raw images, 1000s and
1000s of them if you're editing in real time. So when you see
capacities like one terabyte and two terabytes available for a
person buying an iPad, I really think that that's a very small
niche. And I think that they charge a lot of money for that
niche. Because if you actually look at the comparison, in
price, a 256 gig model starts at 1299. And it's $1,000 difference
to get two terabytes compared to 256. Apple makes a ton of money
on storage, that they really should make a little bit better,
in my opinion, because it seems a little absurd, that is that
cost but I think it's crazy. For most people to get more than 512
gigs, I do think you should go above 256. I feel like 512 is a
good sweet spot. Because 256 gets taken up a decent amount
just for the actual software, the stuff in general and a
processor, a hard drive is always going to work better.
When you are not using close to the max capacity, they always
say you should have at least 10 to 15% of your available
harddrive. For it to continuously work as good as
possible. So I do think that that is a good starting point, I think it's worth the extra 200
bucks to get the five to 12 gig. But don't even consider the one
terabyte or two terabyte option unless you are one of those nice
people who is doing tons of editing on their own local
files, whether it be video or photo. Now one suggestion I
would personally make after using the iPads a ton, is to
choose the cellular option on the iPad and not just the Wi Fi.
Yes, that's going to come with an additional monthly charge on
your cell phone bill. But in my opinion, what makes the iPad so
convenient. What I love so much about using the iPad has that
instant always on connection that exists by having cellular,
yes, anywhere you go now has Wi Fi and I get that. But anywhere
you go, you always have to choose and select the Wi Fi
that's nearby. Most of the time it's going to make you login
have some capacity, or it's going to make you type in your
email and basically give them the information for you. So they
can spam you with additional sales things. It still is a
process though Wi Fi is fried a lot of places most Wi Fi still
enables another step that may not be a huge deal to you. But I
personally have found that the Wi Fi in most places is also
just very slow compared to how fast the LTE and cellular on
these devices actually is. The 5g and LTE is on all the
networks now is just so much faster than the standard Wi Fi
you're gonna find. And it's also just not shared and slowed down
in that local place that you're actually using it. If there's a
bunch of people on a slow Wi Fi for example, it really slows
down the speeds. I personally never connect to Wi Fi when I'm
anywhere with my iPad, I just use the cellular and I just find
it more convenient because whether I go from my car, to the
coffee shop, to the airport, to a friend's house to wherever I
want to go the beach, anywhere I just have my connection and I
can always use it now yes, you could hotspot your phone
instead. And that's an option. But an option to consider that
if your hotspot in your phone and using the iPad. With that
hotspot for hours and hours on end. You're going to have to
worry about your battery life decreasing on your phone and
then you're having to worry about charging and so that's
something to keep in mind though you can hotspot your phone it
still is a little bit less convenient than just having the
iPad do its job and always be connected. So whether you buy
the iPad Pro The iPad Air, the iPad Mini, the other iPad, they
all have cellular option, I think it's worth having that
option. I also think from a resale standpoint, it's actually
good as well, because I feel like more and more people are
going to the self, the cellular options, in my opinion. And if
you are reselling your iPad at any given point, I tend to think
that more people will look for the cellular option because you
don't have to connect cellular and you can just choose to use
it as Wi Fi only and not pay that additional fee. But you
can't add cellular to a Wi Fi only iPad option. So the resale
value might be a little better on the cellular options, though
you do spend a few more dollars to buy that option in the first
place. So doesn't even out who knows. Now, if you are using the
iPad as your everyday computer, I think the cellular is a no
brainer. Because honestly you will find that it is so much
more convenient being able to just pull this out in a car,
anywhere you are instantly connect, do your thing, emails,
browse the internet, whatever go back and forth and not have to
worry about am I at arrange or if you just spend a lot of time
even in your backyard, or somewhere where there's not
necessarily going to be strong Wi Fi. That's the only option to
me is a no brainer, I would absolutely recommend it. It's
one of my favorite features of the iPad personally, and why I
use it as my everyday computer. I just really think it's great.
So those are really the options when it comes to the iPad. Which
model do you want? Which size screen Do you want? Which
capacity do you want? And do you want cellular? Or do you want Wi
Fi only? That was kind of my thoughts? Hopefully this helped
answer a lot of random questions. I have extensive use
with an iPad, and I've used them for many years on a lot of
different stuff. It's my everyday computer. So I feel
like I have a lot of experience into what matters and what
doesn't. But you have to decide for yourself, obviously what
matters to you. I'm not paid by Apple in any way. And all the
iPads that I have I have purchased with my own money.
Apple has never sent me a single product, I really wish they
would because I spend way too much money on their products.
But I've been able to buy a lot of them and test a lot of them
out and use a lot of them and I have lots of thoughts as you can
see from them. So no matter which iPad you buy, I really
think the iPad is a phenomenal tool that lets you be more
productive if you are someone that uses it in the way that I
do, or just allows you to have a really nice media consumption
device that is much better than your phone. But yet smaller than
a TV is nice and portable to great ereader it can do a lot of
things and it's only going to get better and better as the
software improves. So hope this video was helpful. Consider
subscribing if you never have because I'm going to post a lot
more iPad content as someone who uses it a lot. I already have a
bunch of videos on the iPad, and we'd love to answer any
questions for you. My stomach is rumbling I'm hungry. So let's
end it right there.