New iPad and iPad Pro still aren’t compatible with Apple’s $19 polishing cloth


Last October, Apple gave us new AirPods, a new MacBook, and – most importantly – a new polishing cloth, which caught the attention of Apple fans everywhere, not because of how well it was able to clean but which products it was able to clean; Apple had given its cloth a compatibility list.

Fast-forward to the following year and on October 18, 2022, Apple served up an exciting trio of new tablets: two sizes of M2-powered iPad Pro and its tenth-generation iPad, which finally waved farewell to both the home button and Lightning port the company’s standard tablet line had held onto up until this point.

Naturally, while many swooned over the tenth-gen iPad’s vibrant finishes, and the possibilities and potential offered up by the new Pro’s added M2 horsepower, I leapt straight to the store on Apple’s website, brought up the product page for that all-important cloth and, as any sensible person would, promptly checked the compatibility list.

A screenshot of part of the compatibility list for the Apple Polishing Cloth as of October 21 2022

Days after their announcement, Apple’s new iPads still don’t feature on the most important compatibility list Apple has ever created. (Image credit: Apple)

To my horror, despite serving as what is possibly Apple’s most widely-compatible accessory – confirmed to work with everything from the fourth-generation iPod Shuffle and the first-generation Apple Watch, right up to the M2-toting MacBook Pro 13-inch and the iPhone 14 Pro Max – not one of the company’s latest slates was included in the roster.

Even after refreshing the page several times and hopping over to Apple’s UK and Australian web stores to see whether this was some sort of browser caching error on my end or Apple was in the process of updating the cloth’s product page in other markets systematically, all signs pointed to an absence of compatibility with the tenth-generation iPad, fourth-generation 11-inch iPad Pro and sixth-generation 12.9-inch iPad Pro. How could this be?

Apple iPad Pro 2022 range with Magic Keyboard

The iPad Pro 2022 range (Image credit: Apple)

My first thought was that the iPad Pro 2022’s new Apple Pencil Hover gesture – which detects the nib of a second-generation Apple Pencil up to 12mm away from the screen to preview brushes in creative apps and expand text boxes for handwriting – must somehow be rendered unusable if Apple’s first-party cloth makes contact with the Pro’s enhanced ProMotion display, but that wouldn’t explain the tenth-gen iPad’s absence from the cloth’s whitelist as well.



Source link

Previous articleFirst Mover Americas: Bitcoin and Ether Stay Stable in Chaotic Week in Markets – CoinDesk
Next articleProduct Review of Plants by Tinybop