What to expect from Apple’s “Spring Loaded” event on April 20

What to expect from Apple’s “Spring Loaded” event on April 20

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New iPads —

This event is mysterious, but we’re confident iPads will figure prominently.

Samuel Axon

What to expect from Apple’s “Spring Loaded” event on April 20

Aurich Lawson | Getty Images

It might have taken longer than expected (the event has historically taken place in March), but Apple announced its spring product unveiling event this week. Executives from the company will take to the stage in a livestream from Apple’s Cupertino headquarters, where they’ll introduce and discuss new products that Apple plans to ship in the near future.

As has become the custom, we’ll do our best to outline what you should or shouldn’t expect in terms of announcements from the unveiling.

While each Apple event’s accompanying graphic and name—this one is called “Spring Loaded,” and you can see the graphic above—can sometimes (not always) act as a sort of teaser for what kind of announcements are to come, the name doesn’t tell us much this time around. That said, the scribbled lines that make up the Apple logo above look like the work of an Apple Pencil, one of the key accessories for the iPad.

And indeed, all signs point toward this being an iPad-centric event. So let’s start there.

iPad Pro

If there’s one product we’re relatively certain we’re going to see on April 20, it’s a new iPad Pro.

Rumor has it that the new iPad Pro will come in the same two sizes as before—11 and 12.9 inches—and that it won’t have many, if any, visible design changes. So what will be new?

Well, for starters, the new tablets are sure to include a new system-on-a-chip from Apple that will include an updated CPU, GPU, Neural Engine, and so on. We don’t know what it will be designated, though “A14X” seems like a strong possibility given past naming conventions. Reports say it will be similar in at least some ways to the M1 processor Apple put in low-end Macs last year, but we don’t know exactly what that means yet.

In any case, the Pro is sure to offer improved performance for games and creative apps. We’ll have to wait to see how big that performance bump is.

Below: Photos of the 2020 iPad Pro from our review. The new iPad Pro is expected to look similar.

  • The 12.9-inch 2020 iPad Pro with the Smart Keyboard and Magic Trackpad peripherals.


    Samuel Axon

  • The camera and sensor array on the 2020 iPad Pro includes two lenses and a lidar sensor.


    Samuel Axon

  • It’s still as thin as before, but that camera bump is a change.


    Samuel Axon

  • The iPad Pro has USB-C instead of Lightning as its one port.


    Samuel Axon

  • The design hasn’t changed at all beyond that camera bump.


    Samuel Axon

  • Here’s the back.


    Samuel Axon

Perhaps the bigger story is that the 12.9-inch iPad Pro (and not the 11-inch, apparently) will have a new display technology: Mini LED. It will still have an LCD screen, but this new approach will enable better contrast, among other improvements. Mini LED has already started shipping in high-end 4K TVs.

Supplies of Mini LED panels, however, may be limited, so the 12.9-inch model might be hard to get a hold of for a while if this rumor is true.

Apple may also choose to update the cameras in the iPad Pro, and a third-generation Apple Pencil accessory is not outside the realm of possibility. In fact, that’s the only possible hint we can imagine coming from the event’s name—there have been some rumors of spring-loaded components finding their way into future Pencil designs.

iPad mini

The iPad mini hasn’t been updated in a while, and it shows. The design of the product is ancient at this point, with enormous bezels wasting a significant amount of the device’s limited space instead of the better screen-to-body ratio seen in other recent iPads. The story is better with regards to the internals, but it’s still worth noting that the A12 chip included in the device will be 3 years old this year.

Given that Apple has more recently updated the other iPads in the lineup, the iPad mini is the only non-Pro iPad we see as a possibility for this event. That said, we’re not sure exactly what to expect from it.

Below: The current iPad mini, from our most recent review. Those are some chunky bezels by today’s standards.

  • The 2019 iPad mini. It looks like the last iPad mini.


    Samuel Axon

  • The view from the back.


    Samuel Axon

  • It has the same thickness as before, too.


    Samuel Axon

  • The home button remains, unlike in some new iOS devices, and Touch ID is still in place here.


    Samuel Axon

  • Like the Air, the camera is flush with the body.


    Samuel Axon

  • And it has a headphone jack!


    Samuel Axon

  • Those bezels, though.


    Samuel Axon

If Apple does update it, the mini will probably have a more recent chip—most likely the A14 we saw in last year’s iPhone lineup. But what we’re really hoping for is a redesign that increases the screen size without changing the actual footprint of the device.

It’s also possible that Apple could add support for a newer, better version of the Apple Pencil, as the current mini only supports the previous iteration.

Apple Silicon Macs

We believe this event will focus primarily on the iPad, but Apple did commit last summer to update its entire Mac product line to replace Intel’s chips with Apple Silicon within two years from that date. We’re coming up on one year in, and so far Apple has just updated the low-end configurations of the MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and Mac mini.

Various reports have claimed that Apple plans to introduce higher-end MacBook Pro models and a new iMac this year, with the Mac Pro desktop tower getting an Apple Silicon refresh sometime in 2022. There’s also talk of a redesigned MacBook Air, though that computer already got the M1 treatment last year.

Most of those reports have said that the MacBook Pro and Air are slated for the second half of the year, so if we see any new Mac at this event (that’s definitely not a given, to be clear), it might be a new iMac.

Apple is believed to be working on a totally redesigned iMac with more screen real estate, a different body shape, Apple Silicon, and other improvements.

Below: The M1-equipped Mac mini from our review last year.

  • The 2020, M1-equipped Mac mini.


    Samuel Axon

  • The chassis is the same as before, but it’s only available in classic Mac silver.


    Samuel Axon

  • The rubber bottom.


    Samuel Axon

We’re just speculating here, but it’s possible that Apple will do the same thing it did with the laptops last year: start with an M1-equipped lower-end iMac before bringing out a much faster high-end model with an “M1X”-type chip alongside the new MacBook Pro models later. But we don’t know for sure.

It seems worth mentioning that Apple just discontinued the iMac Pro, which you might read as a hint that a big, high-end update for the standard iMac is right around the corner to take its place. But we’re not totally confident in that reading, because the current specced-out standard Intel iMac already matches or beats the languishing iMac Pro.

Whatever form it takes, a new iMac might be accompanied by a new Apple-designed display that would offer some of the benefits of the professional studio-targeted Pro Display XDR but at a more consumer-friendly price point. Apple used to design and sell excellent consumer desktop monitors, but for the past few years, it has loosely partnered with LG, which makes Mac-focused monitors that are variants of the South Korean company’s other products.

We don’t know what a new Apple monitor would look like at this stage, but we’re hoping it will be a triumphant return on that front.

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