Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

MacBooks could soon fall behind the iPad Pro in this important way

The iPad Pro (2022) sitting in the Magic Keyboard.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

The dynamic balance between the Mac and the iPad may be about to shift again. Both the MacBook Air and iPad Pro will reportedly get updated this spring, boosting performance with the inclusion of the new M3 chip.

But a new report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman indicates that a new “landscape Face ID camera” may be in the works for the iPad Pro, potentially taking away one of the main advantages that MacBooks have over iPads. With so much of work happening in video calls, the iPad Pro might become a far better laptop replacement in this new generation.

Recommended Videos

The dream experience

A person uses an M1 iPad Pro with a keyboard case while sat at a desk.
Apple

There are all sorts of reasons why the iPad Pro might not be a great replacement of a MacBook, but the position of the camera is definitely near the top of the list. If you’ve ever tried to take a video call from an iPad, you know exactly what I mean. While the camera and screen work in landscape mode, the position of the camera over to the left creates a very awkward angle for video calls. It’s always plainly obvious that you’re taking a call from an iPad, your eyes appearing to look just off screen.

It’s a shame too, because the iPad would otherwise be a great device for taking video calls on, whether that’s for work in Teams or Zoom, or for personal calls on FaceTime. The camera is high resolution and it provides a crisper image than what you get on a MacBook Air — especially compared to older models with 720p screens.

If the report from Gurman is to believed, Apple appears to be moving the Face ID camera from its iPhone-like position to more of a laptop-like position — aka, from portrait to landscape. This would make a ton of sense, especially since the iPad Pro is obviously meant to be used in tandem with the Magic Keyboard as a 2-in-1 laptop. Docked in place, it really makes very little sense for the camera to be positioned where it currently is.

In other words, all that could make the iPad Pro a much better laptop replacement. The addition of a Face ID camera in a proper location would go a long way toward being able to ditch MacBooks entirely.

To make things worse, the MacBook line faces an even larger challenge with its cameras that doesn’t appear to be getting solved this year.

Face ID on the Mac

Apple's 15-inch MacBook Air placed on a desk.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

The current crop of MacBooks offer decent webcams, but the lack of Face ID, which iPads have offered for years, has become increasingly glaring. This situation leaves one looming question: Will the MacBook get Face ID? The answer to that is murky, but there are some clues littered here and there.

We know that Apple is at least considering bringing Face ID to the Mac because the company has been awarded a bunch of patents detailing exactly that. That’s not a guarantee that it’s coming by any means, but it suggests Apple is taking the idea seriously.

It also just makes sense. Using Touch ID on your Mac is secure, but it interrupts your workflow by requiring you to lift your hand off your keyboard or mouse. Face ID is more secure than Touch ID and less disruptive, as it only asks you to look at its sensors to unlock your computer.

That makes it a very elegant, Apple-like solution to the type of security problem the company loves fixing. As far as new feature ideas go, it feels tailor-made for Apple.

If Gurman is correct and the iPad Pro’s March update features a proper landscape Face ID camera, it will be brilliant news for the iPad — but will make the lack of Face ID on MacBooks even more blatant.

Alex Blake
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
I’m worried Apple will skip its October event – here’s what that means for the M4 MacBook Pro
Apple CEO Tim Cook looks at a display of brand new redesigned MacBook Air laptop during the WWDC22

For months now, we’ve been hearing that Apple is set to announce a boatload of new products -- including the M4 MacBook Pro range, fresh iPads, and more -- at an event this October. Yet a new report suggests that things might not be quite so simple after all.

In his latest Power On newsletter, Bloomberg journalist Mark Gurman says that Apple is set to reveal these new products “around the end of October,” with the devices going on sale on Friday, November 1. So far, so expected.

Read more
An all-glass MacBook? Here’s what Apple thinks it would look like
Bladur's Gate 3 being played on the M3 MacBook Air.

Patents and clues pointing to all-glass MacBooks and iMacs have been floating around since 2011, and this week, another patent has appeared on Patently Apple -- a "glass housing" for a MacBook-like device. It has a virtual keyboard and trackpad, and there's even a separate patent for "finger devices" that would decrease the strain of typing on a glass surface.

One of the most interesting things about the glass housing is that it "provides I/O functionality." This means, that instead of inserting a separate trackpad or keyboard keys into the housing for users to interact with, the housing itself would provide a method of input and output. In some areas and contexts, the surface would function simply as housing to protect internal components, and in others, it would display information and react to user input.

Read more
The M4 MacBook Pro is apparently listed for sale on Facebook — but I don’t buy it
An open MacBook Pro on a table.

According to analysts and industry experts like Mark Gurman and Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple is expected to announce an M4 refresh of the MacBook Pro possibly this month and most likely before the end of the year. No event announcements have come yet, though Apple has historically held an October Mac event. But now, an online leak discovered by Wccftech claims the new model is up for sale on a private Facebook group. The claim is backed up by alleged images of the retail box, but there's plenty to be suspicious about.

While the images were posted by known leaker ShrimpApplePro, the information was sent to them from an unknown source. There are two posts so far, one with an image of the back of the retail box -- with comments from AppleShrimpPro saying to take it with asome skepticism -- and one showing additional images and claiming it's for sale on Facebook.

Read more