![]() The additional screen space it offers over the Mini Retina gives you the freedom to get the most out of the best apps, which is surely one of the main reasons you’re looking at an iPad at all, while its added whiff of luxury will permeate your existence for a long time to come. If you want the absolute best iPad you can get, however, with money no object, the iPad Air has to be the winner. Deciding between them is pretty much a simple case of do you need to travel light, or do you want the extra screen real estate you’d get from the iPad 4. If you don’t intend to store much in the way of video and music, the 16GB of storage you’ll get on either is just about enough to allow you to enjoy the world of iOS on a budget, and both have lovely Retina screens and plenty of power. On price alone, it’s a straight choice between the £320 Mini Retina and £330 iPad 4. READ MORE: Everything you need to know about iPhone 6Īll three iPads have something to offer you, depending on your priorities. Indoors it’s quite practical and comfortable on any of the three to reduce the brightness slider by as much as 50%, which will help stretch out the already impressive battery life. Even though that’s not something you’re likely to notice unless you have a trained eye, together with the increased display area it means the Air should be the first choice for anyone heavily into graphics or video work. Apple iPad Pro 11 (4th Gen) - 128 GB Wifi 1668 x 2388 Liquid Retina IPS LCD, 120Hz, HDR10, Dolby Vision, 600 nits (typ) 11.0 inches, 366.5 cm2 (82.9 screen. The Mini’s screen is excellent, but the Air has more accurate colour reproduction, with the Mini struggling with some hues, reds in particular. If the number you see has a slash '/', that's the part number (for example, MY3K2LL/A). Look for the model number in the top section. Open Settings, tap General, then tap About. Apple iPad Pro (4th Generation) Tablet - 11 - Octa-core) - 8 GB RAM - 128 GB Storage - iPadOS 16 - Silver - Apple M2 SoC - 2388 x 1668 - Liquid Retina. ![]() That’s dense enough to make pixel edges invisible to most eyes on the iPad Air and iPad 4, but the Mini Retina beats that (for what it’s worth) with an even greater pixel density due to its smaller screen size. You can find the model number in two ways: Look on the back of your iPad. The Mini doesn’t lag behind on pixel specs, sharing its 2048×1536 resolution with the two full-sized iPads. The Air’s colours are very vivid – check out iOS 7 icons – and it’s a slightly brighter, crisper screen. Between the iPad 4 and iPad Air, it’s the same resolution and 9.7in size but there are small differences in colour and contrast. Three Retina display tablets but they’re not identical. ![]()
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