The 13-inch iPad Air (2025) isn't the most exciting year-on-year upgrade but it remains the iPad to buy for creatives who don't want to spend $1,000 on the Pro.
The iPad Air matches the design of its predecessor and comes in two sizes, 11-inch and 13-inch. This is only the second-generation 13-inch iPad Air, with the first having landed in May 2024.
Apple today introduced new 11-inch and 13-inch iPad Air models with the M3 chip, along with an updated Magic Keyboard for the device. With the M3 chip, the new iPad Air should offer up to 20% ...
An iPad Air refresh shouldn’t provide much room for rumination. Boiled down, the latest version, even with an upgraded M3 processor, is still the same mid-range Apple tablet. It comes in a ...
“The new iPad’s best trait is an unchanged asking price, despite doubling the storage and serving a faster chip. It’s a polished package that doesn’t disappoint.” With the 11th ...
The M3 iPad Air sounds useful, but I'm most excited about the boost to the entry-level iPad. The new models arrive March 12, but you can preorder them now. I started with CNET reviewing laptops in ...
MacRumors has confirmed that Apple's new entry-level iPad unveiled this week is equipped with more RAM than the iPad 10 that it replaced. The new iPad with the A16 chip includes 6GB of RAM ...
It's not the update that most Apple watchers were hoping for, but today, Apple announced upgrades to two of its iPads, including the standard iPad and the quirky middle child, the iPad Air.
The iPad Air M3 is finally here, and we've already rated it as one of the best iPads and best tablets you can buy. Apple announced its new iPad Air powered by the M3 chip, and it offers better ...
I’m feeling an immense amount of deja vu as I sit down to write this iPad Air M3 review. I could have sworn I reviewed this exact tablet just months ago — and that’s because I basically did.
Alongside the new iPad Air with the M3 chip, Apple also upgraded its base model tablet. While this seems to be the long-rumored iPad 11, the company doesn’t state it that way. Instead ...