The mechanics, though, are very different from this keyboard’s contemporaries – in short, you shove your iPad into two rubber-cased hinges. Once set up, the combination of Brydge Pro and iPad looks more like a laptop than anything else in this round-up. We fortunately avoided a smashy incident through ‘scientific’ testing with a cushion (seriously), but you might not be so lucky. Just take care if you use the thing on an actual lap, mind – slope your legs downwards and the Magic Keyboard/iPad Pro combo has a tendency to overbalance and topple in terrifying fashion. It works with both the 2020 iPad Pro and the 2018 edition. Best of all, your iPad can be removed from the case in an instant (given that it attaches magnetically), making the Magic Keyboard ideal for a modular set-up where you switch on a whim between tablet and laptop ‘modes’. The stand is solid and robust, ensuring your iPad doesn’t move or wobble when you’re smashing words into shape. The trackpad is like a dinky take on Apple’s MacBook ones. If you spend a lot of time on your iPad Pro with apps that use traditional input, yes. You get pass-through charging, backlit scissor keys (albeit, sadly, no media keys), a trackpad, and a floating design with limitless viewing angles. This keyboard for iPad Pro costs as much as an entry-level iPad, but it’s packed with features.
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