Apple may be planning a major update for the iPad Pro series in 2024. Accordingly, the tablet may come with an OLED display for the first time. It will probably use the new M3 chip.
There are already rumors that Apple may join the “Ultra” fever. The Cupertino manufacturer is reportedly planning an iPad Ultra that will have a larger display. If the leak is to be believed, a 14.1-inch OLED display will be used here. Now there are new rumors about the rest of the iPad Pro models, which have been named internally J717, J718, J720 and J721 Run these are clearly the 11-inch and 13-inch versions (previously 12.9 inches). WiFi and 5G versions are also hidden behind the name.
The iPad Pro gets an OLED panel
According to a Bloomberg report, all iPad Pro variants will switch to one in 2024 OLED-Display Until now, Apple has only offered tablets with LC displays. In the iPhone sector, OLED technology has been in use since the iPhone X and so on since 2017. In addition, the panels used must be brighter than the current ones. At least that would make sense 1.600 nits HDR at its peak. Currently 600 nits are achieved in SDR and around 1,000 nits in HDR.
Significantly higher peak brightness
According to display analyst Ross Young, this will be the first commercial device “gestapeltem” OLED-panel Act. This would allow peak brightness to be up to twice as high, while service life could theoretically be doubled at low light. After all, individual pixels should only glow half as brightly. Additionally, the new display technology should enable a thinner and lighter housing. OLED panels are supplied by LG and Samsung.
Presentation in March 2024
Along with the new display, there should also be a new chip inside. Here, as the supposed Ultra model, Apple M3 can be used, where at least the basic model has four performance and four competency cores. There is likely a revised 10-core GPU. The first Macs based on the chip were launched last year. The new iPad Pro models are scheduled to be introduced in March 2024.
formula
For reasons of better readability, masculine, feminine and different language forms (m/f/d) are not used at the same time. All personal names apply equally to all genders.