The Rationale for the New 10.9-inch iPad, The Case for iPad SE, The Hoopla Surrounding Magic Keyboard Folio (Daily Update)

Hello everyone.

In today’s update, we will go over a few things that have been on my mind regarding the new iPad.


The Rationale for the New 10.9-inch iPad

On Tuesday, Apple announced an all-new $449 10.9-inch iPad (10th gen).

One question that has been gaining steam: Why didn’t Apple position the new iPad as a true iPad (9th gen) successor at $329? Apple’s decision to sell a $449 iPad, along with the $329 iPad (9th gen) has led some to say the iPad line is becoming complicated and confusing again.

Others want to know why the iPad (10th gen) received an all-new keyboard accessory while the updated iPad Pro models didn’t. We will address the keyboard question shortly.

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Thoughts on Apple’s New and Updated Products (Apple TV, iPad, iPad Pro) - Daily Update

Hello everyone.

In this special edition of the daily update, we will discuss Apple’s various product announcements from earlier today.


Thoughts on Apple’s New and Updated Products (Apple TV, iPad, iPad Pro)

Heading into October, signs were pointing to Apple having a few more product announcements ready to go for 2022. The question was whether Apple would host another event at the end of October or unveil new products via press release. The latter strategy was used by Apple during the early months of the pandemic.

We now have an answer.

Earlier today, Apple unveiled via three press releases the following:

We will discuss each product in detail.

An Above Avalon membership is required to continue reading this update. Members can read the full update here. An audio version of this update is available to members who have the podcast add-on attached to their membership. More information about the podcast add-on is found here.

(Members: Daily Updates are always accessible by logging into Slack. If you haven’t logged into Slack before, fill out this form to receive an invite.)


Above Avalon Membership

Payment is processed and secured by Stripe. Apple Pay and other mobile payment options are accepted. Special Inside Orchard bundle pricing is available for Above Avalon members.

The daily updates have become widely read and influential in the world of Apple and technology. They are unmatched in the marketplace in terms of comprehensive analysis and research on all things Apple. Members reside in 60 countries and hold a diverse range of backgrounds and occupations. They include Silicon Valley executives and investors, the largest Apple shareholders, and the leading Apple journalists in the business.

More information about Above Avalon membership, including the full list of benefits and privileges, is available here.

Above Avalon Podcast Episode 176: The Mac Earned a Diploma

The Mac is seeing momentum by being true to itself instead of trying to be something that it’s not. With a transition to Apple Silicon, the product category is now benefiting from lessons Apple learned from more popular devices aimed at the mass market. As the Above Avalon podcast enters its seventh season, episode 176 is dedicated to discussing the Mac’s Apple Silicon and what may come next for the Mac. Additional topics include the Apple Silicon transition being akin to a graduation for the Mac, the Apple Innovation Feedback Loop, and overlap between the iPad Pro and Mac portables.

To listen to episode 176, go here

The complete Above Avalon podcast episode archive is available here

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Moving Forward in a Pandemic

More has happened in the past month from a global economic and health perspective than in the past ten years. We are in uncharted territory as 200 million people in 21 U.S. states find themselves facing “stay at home” directives while a growing list of countries including Italy, Spain, France, Australia, the U.K., and India are in complete lockdowns. Travel around the world has essentially come to a standstill.

Although it may be natural to search for comparisons between the coronavirus pandemic and prior crises, such an exercise will prove inadequate. Silicon Valley finds itself in the most difficult operating environment it has ever faced.

Apple’s strategy for navigating the coronavirus pandemic is centered around continuing to move forward, however difficult that is proving to be. Along those lines, management is taking recently learned lessons from how coronavirus trended in China, South Korea, and Japan to come up with a blueprint for what to do around the rest of the world.

Key Developments

Over the past two weeks, Apple has announced a number of initiatives and actions related to slowing the coronavirus pandemic in the U.S. and around the world. This includes helping those workers on the front lines. 

  • Apple and its corporate peers were early in embracing social distancing and allowing employees to work from home. 

  • Apple was the first major retailer to close its retail stores in the U.S. The decision wasn’t a light one as Apple stores are vital sources for customers looking to get help and service for their communication devices. A third of Apple store visitors are there for service.

  • Apple has joined most of its peers in donating medical supplies that had either been stockpiled to protect employees from California wildfires or were in some way connected to the company’s extensive supply chain and manufacturing apparatus.

The preceding actions are desperately needed and should be applauded and serve as a model for others to follow. 

There were two other announcements from Apple that spoke volumes as to how the company planned to navigate the coronavirus pandemic: 

  1. Unveiling a reimagined and revised WWDC. With Apple historically holding its annual developer conference in June, the company had the time to turn misfortune into something positive by turning the cancellation of an in-person conference into a reimagined online-only WWDC (still scheduled to take place in June).

  2. Unveiling a number of new products. Apple announced updates to the MacBook Air, Mac mini, iPad Pro, a new Magic Keyboard (with trackpad) for iPad, 20 new Apple Watch bands, and iPadOS 13.4 which brought system-wide support for cursors, trackpads, and mice.

As large portions of the U.S. hunkered down to combat the coronavirus and Apple’s board likely invoked certain provisions of its business continuity plans given the sudden deterioration in market and operating conditions, Apple went forward with plans for its biggest event of the year and its spring product release.

Along with doing its part to help combat the virus, Apple is also recognizing the reality that society doesn’t stop, even during a pandemic. That decision may come off as distant, or even careless, as if Apple isn’t willing to recognize the seriousness of the matter. However, this is a misreading of the situation. 

By continuing to move forward, even during a pandemic, Apple is being true to itself. Apple is a toolmaker developing products capable of improving people’s lives. Such a mission never stops, even during a pandemic plaguing 180+ countries. 

Anecdotal reports out of China point to sustained demand for iPads, despite lockdowns and quarantines, as families look for education tools to supplement children’s time away from the classroom. The U.S. now finds itself in a similar situation with some states having closed schools indefinitely. Employees are finding that work obligations haven’t disappeared, even in the face of new challenges in the form of closed schools, daycares, and the need to keep families safe. 

In such trying times, we still need functioning tools in the form of smartphones, laptops, desktops, and even wearables, not to mention accompanying services and software powering those tools. One has to imagine FaceTime usage is at record highs as video calls replace face-to-face interactions. 

Challenges

It would be an understatement to say that Apple faces challenges in its quest to continue moving forward in the midst of a pandemic. 

Consider the following developments: 

Stay at Home Directives. California is currently in a “stay at home” directive under which residents are urged to stay at home and only leave the house for essential needs such as food and medicine. California’s governor doesn’t think there will be any significant change to the order through at least mid-April. 

Tim Cook, along with most other Silicon Valley CEOs, is following the order and working from home (as shown in the video clip below). 

Google positioned the order as a key factor for canceling I/O, its annual developer conference, altogether. Apple’s announcement of running with a revised WWDC this June was announced prior to California’s stay at home order. It’s not entirely clear how Apple can create an online-only WWDC while employees are urged to stay at home. In a worst case scenario, will we see executives give presentations and product demoes from their homes? 

Social Distancing. There is irony found with how social distancing efforts, which have been proven to be very effective in slowing the virus spread, stand at odds with the vision and goal behind Apple Park as a place for spontaneous collaboration. Even when stay at home directives are rolled back, Apple still faces a massive challenge in keeping employees safe from the virus at Apple Park and other corporate offices. 

Retail Closures. Apple’s 460 stores outside Greater China have been closed indefinitely with most of Apple’s 70,000 retail employees unable to help hundreds of millions of Apple users. While Apple has announced plans to slowly reopen stores, the company is taking a localized (and cautious) approach to such openings. 

Travel Restrictions. Apple’s massive supply chain and manufacturing apparatus require Apple employees to spend time with partners on the ground and to collaborate on product development. Last year, an unintentional leak from United Airlines showed that Apple was responsible for 20% of all business seats that fly between San Francisco and Shanghai. It’s an astounding percentage that speaks to the degree to which Apple’s design, engineering, and operation teams spend time in Asia. The coronavirus pandemic has resulted in a near halt in global travel, and it is logical to assume this will have an impact on product development timelines. 

Operating Environment

A scenario that many people may not want to admit to is that the next 12 to 18 months may be the most difficult operating environment Silicon Valley will ever face. Even if the U.S. is successful at slowing the virus spread in hot spots, ongoing travel restrictions around the world will cause long-term headaches. There are then the possibilities of additional virus waves in the fall and winter. This may end up leading to permanent changes in how companies get work done. 

Some of the challenges found with the coronavirus pandemic may very well lead to product launches being delayed. Despite having one of, if not the, most formidable supply chains in the world, Apple isn’t immune to disruptions. The products Apple unveiled last week were mostly ready to go prior to the coronavirus pandemic spreading around the world. As a general rule, the products Apple is working on today are targeted for release 12 to 18 months from now. 

Despite having $40 billion of cash and cash equivalents and another $167 billion of marketable securities on the balance sheet, is it imperative that Apple recognizes market dislocations in short-term lending markets. There is then the potential financial fallout from a prolonged period of subdued customer demand. No one knows for sure whether or not customer demand will snap back in the U.S. and Europe once stay at home directives and lockdowns have been rolled back. China, South Korea, and Japan provide hope that the demand answer is yes. However, the U.S. is clearly attacking coronavirus differently and that may mean that the rebound will trend differently as well. Even stellar balance sheets can turn south in a prolonged pandemic.

While the preceding challenges are daunting, a realization that is only now starting to sink in is that the top five giants (Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Facebook) have business models that aren’t dependent on the public leaving their homes. It’s an observation that will have implications for decades to come.  

Strong Brands

Apple finds itself at an advantage to most of its peers as it saw firsthand how China, South Korea, and Japan handled coronavirus (and are now working to keep the virus at bay). In terms of the supply chain, Tim Cook and his inner circle were at the company during the SARS outbreak in 2003. Jony Ive reportedly spent three months quarantined at Foxconn during the SARS outbreak, working on the Power Mac G5 Tower. The current executive team was also at Apple during the aftermath of September 11th, 2001 when Apple unveiled the iPod six weeks later. There are then the natural disasters that Apple’s supply chain works around. However, there is something about the coronavirus pandemic that is different. It’s a challenge like Apple has never faced. 

Earlier this week, Nike reported earnings (which were better than consensus expected). Nike’s new CEO, John Donahoe, of eBay fame, said “We know it’s in times like these that strong brands get even stronger.”

He’s right. The best brands will come out of this challenging time stronger than ever. Why? The companies with the best brands always strive to continue moving forward. 

Listen to the corresponding Above Avalon podcast episode for this article here.

Receive my analysis and perspective on Apple throughout the week via exclusive daily updates (2-3 stories per day, 10-12 stories per week). Available to Above Avalon members. To sign up and for more information on membership, visit the membership page.

For additional discussion on this topic, check out the Above Avalon daily update from March 30th.

Don't Feel Bad for the iPad

Last month marked the tenth anniversary of Apple unveiling the iPad. The occasion took on a somber feel as the most common reaction in tech circles ended up being sadness and disappointment for what the iPad had failed to become. While some are convinced that the iPad is in some way a victim of neglect, mismanagement, or even worse, such feelings are misplaced. We don’t need to feel bad for the iPad.

Anniversary Reactions

Apple unveiled the iPad on January 27th, 2010. To mark the tenth anniversary of the unveiling, a few publications had articles recapping the iPad’s first decade. Some of the reactions were complicated, to put it gently.

Here’s John Gruber, over at Daring Fireball, in a post titled, “The iPad Awkwardly Turns 10”:

“[Steve] Jobs’s on-stage pitch was exactly right. The iPad was a new class of device, sitting between a phone and a laptop. To succeed, it needed not only to be better at some things than either a phone or laptop, it needed to be much better. It was and is.

Ten years later, though, I don’t think the iPad has come close to living up to its potential. By the time the Mac turned 10, it had redefined multiple industries. In 1984 almost no graphic designers or illustrators were using computers for work. By 1994 almost all graphic designers and illustrators were using computers for work. The Mac was a revolution. The iPhone was a revolution. The iPad has been a spectacular success, and to tens of millions it is a beloved part of their daily lives, but it has, to date, fallen short of revolutionary.”

Ben Thompson, over at Stratechery, agreed with Gruber and went further in his own article, “The Tragic iPad”:

“It’s tempting to dwell on the [Steve] Jobs point — I really do think the iPad is the product that misses him the most — but the truth is that the long-term sustainable source of innovation on the iPad should have come from 3rd-party developers. Look at [John] Gruber’s example for the Mac of graphic designers and illustrators: while MacPaint showed what was possible, the revolution was led by software from Aldus (PageMaker), Quark (QuarkXPress), and Adobe (Illustrator, Photoshop, Acrobat). By the time the Mac turned 10, Apple was a $2 billion company, while Adobe was worth $1 billion.

There are, needless to say, no companies built on the iPad that are worth anything approaching $1 billion in 2020 dollars, much less in 1994 dollars, even as the total addressable market has exploded, and one big reason is that $4.99 price point. Apple set the standard that highly complex, innovative software that was only possible on the iPad could only ever earn 5 bucks from a customer forever (updates, of course, were free).”

There were then tweets (lots of tweets), regarding the current state of iPad. Here are two:

Riccardo Mori: “What I believe is that the iPad and its OS could have been so much more than a reinvention of the computing wheel adapted for a touch interface.”

Loren Brichter: “[T]he App Store is what killed the iPad.”

You get the point. There was no shortage of writers, pundits, and industry analysts using the iPad’s 10th anniversary to give eulogies for the product in terms of its inability to be revolutionary, grab momentum, or even just meet expectations.

A handful of people talked highly of iPad on its anniversary. However, such perspectives were few and far between. Interestingly, the articles that were published still ended up including noteworthy disclaimers and qualifiers. For example, here’s Om Malik in “iPad at 10. An affair forever”:

“A decade after its introduction, I think the iPad is still an underappreciated step in the storied history of computing. If anything, it has been let down by the limited imagination of application developers, who have failed to harness the capabilities of this device.”

My Reaction

I hold a very different view of the iPad at 10 years old. In recapping the 2010s, I went so far as to position the iPad as one of two most important tech products of the decade (the iPhone being the other one). The iPad has become ubiquitous in various industries and sectors, and in the process, it has altered modern computing.

How can there be such a dramatic difference in opinion when it comes to iPad?

Different perspectives.

To see how important perspective becomes in this discussion, we need to go back to the iPad unveiling in January 2010.

Selling a Problem

A closer look at the iPad unveiling reveals it wasn’t that Steve successfully made the sales pitch for a new product category. Instead, Steve successfully sold consumers on a problem they weren’t even aware they faced.

A few daily tasks like email, web browsing, video watching, and mobile games could be better handled on a large piece of glass with multi-touch than on a small piece of glass with multi-touch (iPhones) or a non-multi touch device (MacBooks). Such juxtaposition elevated the iPad at the expense of the iPhone and Mac. The iPhone was positioned as a tiny device designed for portability while the Mac was positioned as a heavy beast blown out of the water by iPad when it comes to handling simple tasks.

Consumers agreed with Steve that there was an indeed a problem and that the iPad was a genuine solution to the problem. The iPad became Apple’s best-selling product out of the gate with the company selling 22 million devices in just the first 12 months. Ten years later, it is difficult to envision a new Apple product that will be able to grab that kind of adoption so quickly.

The iPhone

In January 2010, the iPhone was more of an idea and a promise than anything else. When the iPad was unveiled, there were only about 30 million people using an iPhone. Apple now sells that many iPhones in about two months. In 2010, it was the iPad, not the iPhone, that was considered to be the more important product in the future.

Given such lofty expectations, maybe it shouldn't have come as a surprise that the iPad’s tenth anniversary was met with awkwardness, sorrow, and even sadness as some look at the product as a promise that wasn’t kept. However, the early promises found with the initial iPad were met. There was just an unexpected twist.

The iPhone ended up carrying the vision found with a larger piece of glass supporting multi-touch that Steve unveiled on stage in January 2010. As iPhone screens became larger over the years, the product leveraged the inspiration found with the initial iPad and turned it into something consumed by nearly a billion people. There are 32x more iPhone users in the world today than there were when the iPad was unveiled in 2010. The iPhone became an iPad that fit in one’s pocket. Based on the iPhone’s resounding success, it is fair to say that those early calls that the iPad would turn into something very big ended up being true.

A Pivot

Instead of raising the white flag and letting the iPad set sail into the sunset after being replaced by the iPhone, Apple pivoted the product category to accomplish two things:

  1. Serve as a content creation machine (Apple Pencil for drawing / keyboard accessories for typing).

  2. Represent a low-cost entry point into the Apple ecosystem ($329 starting price).

Those two changes gave the iPad a very successful second chapter. Unit sales have stabilized at 45 million per year with approximately 20 million new people entering the iPad installed base each year.

The iPad is currently shaping industries far more than some people are giving the product credit for. There are at least 350 million people using an iPad in some capacity. The iPad has indirectly added billions of dollars of market cap to companies ranging from Slack and Microsoft to Square when considering the product’s widespread adoption and influence in enterprise settings.

A Line in the Sand

The iPad has become a line in the sand between those who grew up on laptops and desktops and those who never felt comfortable with such devices. Apple finds itself walking a thin line when it comes to adding functionality to the iPad for some users while keeping the device’s simplicity and intuitiveness front and center for other users.

Multi-tasking is a great example of this battle. For instance, some Mac users are not pleased with Apple’s implementation of multi-tasking on the iPad. These users find multi-tasking on an iPad to be a mental exercise. Meanwhile, a portion of iPad users have no need or desire for multi-tasking on iPad. These users are also likely to view multi-tasking on a laptop or desktop as not intuitive. Going a week with no laptop or desktop usage will do interesting things to one’s perception about computing and intuitiveness. When returning to a laptop or desktop, the machines feel like taking a step back. Our brain has to be rewired to handle something that is inherently less intuitive.

The iPad’s Problem

Apple doesn't sell perfect products. There will always be room for improvement, refinement, and new thinking. In some ways, the lack of perfection is what serves as motivation for Apple to keep pushing. When defining the problems now facing the iPad, my criticism is a bit unconventional.

The iPad’s primary problem is that it is viewed by some as needing to be a laptop replacement in order to have any value. This unrealistic viewpoint has resulted in a type of expectational debt being placed on the device. The iPad is expected to become more like the Mac and macOS over time. This is problematic as the iPad is not a laptop replacement.

MacOS should not be positioned as inspiration for where to bring the iPad or iPadOS. This isn’t meant to belittle macOS. Instead, touch-based computing has blurred the line between consumer and professional devices. When debating content consumption versus content creation and the broader definition of work, there is a habit in tech circles to not consider how such terms have dramatically different meanings for hundreds of millions of people.

The takeaway is that the iPad has become a different kind of product, and it should be allowed to stand apart from the iPhone without being forced to replace macOS. Hence, there is iPadOS and things like Apple Pencil support. Instead of asking how best to handle multitasking on an iPad, a better question is to wonder what multi-tasking should even mean on an iPad. Such questions present new challenges regarding user interfaces and design.

Being Itself

Apple’s product strategy is to push all of its major product categories forward at the same time. This is different from pushing the iPhone forward and trying to have the iPad and Mac come along for the ride. Positioning the iPad as a content creation platform for the masses, designed to handle some tasks given to laptops and desktops while also handling completely new tasks, is a winning strategy. It allows the iPad to be itself while not forcing the product into a corner in order to satisfy certain segments of the Apple installed base.

A lot has changed during the iPad’s first 10 years. Some may be disappointed with how the iPad has evolved, even to the point of thinking Apple lost a great opportunity. However, I wouldn’t feel bad for a device that revealed the iPhone’s true potential and then became a different kind of content creation tool now used by more than 350 million people.

Listen to the corresponding Above Avalon podcast episode for this article here.

Receive my analysis and perspective on Apple throughout the week via exclusive daily updates (2-3 stories per day, 10-12 stories per week). Available to Above Avalon members. To sign up and for more information on membership, visit the membership page.

For additional discussion on this topic, check out the Above Avalon daily update from March 2nd: The iPad’s First Decade, The iPad’s Second Decade.