
Apple's iPad Steals Another MacBook Feature
Apple loves to blur the line between its tablet-focused and keyboard-focused hardware. The latest step to bring more of the Mac to the iPad comes in one of the most straightforward UI changes possible, but it will have a considerable impact.
The upcoming iPadOS 19 is expected to be previewed at Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference 2025 on Jun 9. Following the event it will go into a mix of private and public beta versions, before a public release in late September. One of the updated features will include a traditional menu bar.
It will not be present at all times. Still, when an external keyboard is connected (such as Apple's Magic Keyboard), the menu bar will become an ever-present feature, pushing the platform further towards a laptop-like portable experience than a handheld tablet.
That feeling will be boosted by changes to Stage Manager, Apple's tool to support multitasking on the iPad. The next version of Stage Manager—part of iPadOS 19—will offer more control and management tools for apps when a keyboard is attached.
Apple continues to blur the lines between its tablet-based products and its desk-bound products. The tweaks to iPadOS allow that distinction to be blurred again, although only under the limited circumstance of a third-party keyboard connecting to the iPad. Apple continues to push the idea of a connected ecosystem, allowing files and information to move between hardware. What it is refusing, once more, is to offer that same synergy of software in its hardware. The Mac will always be bound to a desk, the MacBook will always be a laptop, and the iPad will always be an iPad.
Now read the latest iPad, iPhone, and Mac headlines in Forbes' weekly Apple Loop news digest...

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