Opinion: iPad sees year-over-year sales decline, I blame iPadOS for that

By: Michael Korgs | 01.05.2022, 17:05
Last Wednesday, Apple’s earnings report for its second quarter ended March. While the company just launched a new iPad Air with the M1 chip, Center Stage, and 5G support, numbers show that the iPad is generating less money and it’s suffering from a year-over-year sales decline. I personally blame iPadOS.

While the company was “very pleased” with “an all-time revenue record for Services and March quarter revenue records for iPhone, Mac, and Wearables, Home and Accessories,” the iPad is struggling to sell well as it’s down 2. 2% YOY with a $7. 65 billion revenue.

While the Mac hardware is finally catching up after years of controversies and issues due to Intel chips and lack of an optimized macOS system, the iPad feels like is going on the same controversial path the Mac went some time ago.

While it is impossible to say that the iPad line-up has poor hardware, you will often hear that the software does not follow up. While iPadOS could be great for the base-model iPad, it looks like it’s always falling behind with iPad mini, iPad Air, and iPad Pro models, here’s why.

iPadOS needs to be a little bit different for each iPad

For the iPad mini, iPadOS lacks optimization. Its weird aspect ratio feels like users are always experiencing a 4:3 view – like an old tube TV. This iPad is great for iPhone app use – and I am looking at you, Instagram! – but Apple hasn’t provided an elegant solution to allow users to enjoy the top iPhone apps on their tablet.

Not only is this not what the users want, but multitasking in this device does not meet their needs. Apple could make the iPad feel more comfortable by making it smaller and allowing for more apps to fit onto its home screen.

For the M1 iPad Air and iPad Pro, Apple should take the opposite way: maximize multitasking capabilities since larger screens can help you do more things at once. Especially when talking about the 12. 9-inch iPad Pro, Apple should add a proper “Pro” mode with windows and more apps opened on the screen at the same time. Bloomberg Mark Gurman suggested three modes for iPadOS a few weeks ago:

  • A standard, touch-first mode with the normal home screen that is part of iPadOS today.
  • A new option that turns on when you connect an Apple Pencil, optimizing icons, controls, and user interface elements for that accessory.
  • And, most importantly, a new “pro” mode that kicks in when the iPad is connected to a keyboard and trackpad, such as Apple’s own Magic Keyboard, or an external display.

iPads are expensive but can do less than a Mac

Apart from the $329 base-model iPad, all Apple tablets are expensive. Imagine paying $350 for a keyboard for your $1,599 iPad. It’s bananas. OK, one could say that iPad models feature incredible hardware – and it’s true – but why add an M1 chip to a machine that can’t properly do multitasking?

With a MacBook Air starting at $999 and an M1 Mac mini for $699 (Magic Keyboard and Magic Mouse for $99 each), it’s cheaper to get a full machine with a mature software than to pay $699 for a 64GB iPad Air and $300 on a Magic Keyboard.

The problem isn’t iPad being expensive, the issue here is the iPad costing a lot and not doing half what users can do on the Mac, especially when talking about M1 Macs that can perform every task in a blink of an eye.

iPad Sales Wrap up

9to5Mac has extensively covered what Apple could improve with the next iPad operating system, always wishing the “next one” will finally unleash the power of the Pro models. Once the company does that, who knows whether iPad sales won’t start to grow again.

While WWDC 2022 is just around the corner, what are your wishes for the next iPadOS? Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

Related:

  • iPadOS 16: Here’s what we know so far about new features, supported devices, and more
  • M1 iPad Pro turns one, but patience for pro experience hits zero