The same is true here: a new A13 processor, a zooming-in Center Stage camera that the iPad Pro got this spring and True Tone on the display for ambient color temperature adjustments. The lowest-priced iPad has always been a trickle-down device, gradually getting upgrades other iPads got years ago. It's inexpensive but versatile: This iPad works with the Apple Pencil for sketching (although it's the first-gen Pencil) and with keyboard cases (although not the Magic Keyboard), and has a big enough screen to feel laptoplike (unlike the Mini, which is lovely but expensive and for me, too small). That's how I felt last year (see my eighth-gen iPad review), and it's how I feel now, too. In that regard, the basic iPad (still called "iPad" on the box) should be your default pick. That's why budget factors heavily into iPad purchases. But they're also pretty essential and useful for a lot of people. IPads are secondary devices for most people.
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