When Apple’s new iPad Mini came out of the box, it was love at first sight. A cloud formed above my head, and I began to imagine all the wonderful adventures ahead with this tiny tablet: reading all of my ebooks, writing to-do lists with the second-gen Apple Pencil, streaming Ted Lasso (again), and FaceTiming friends while scrolling through social media—whenever, wherever I want.
It's easy to feel enamored with the thing. It comes in a few fun colors! It looks modern with slim borders around the screen, it has a USB-C charging port, and it's petite! Apple took its sweet time with proper upgrades to its smallest slate, but these improvements feel well worth the wait.
Then the love bomb wore off, and it didn't take long for reality to set in. I wasn't living out those fantasies. Perhaps partly because we're all still stuck in pandemic land. Instead of opening an ebook, I grabbed a paperback from my bookshelf. When I needed to jot down some notes, I reached for my Sailor Moon Moleskin and ballpoint pen. To binge-watch New Girl, I grabbed my remote. When hopping on a Zoom call, I opened my MacBook Pro. The iPad Mini stayed on my desk as a backup screen.
That's not to say the sixth-generation iPad Mini isn't excellent—it is—but for $499, it’s more expensive than any Mini that came before. I strongly suggest evaluating how this Mini will fit into your life before it ends up as yet another screen in your household. It has the potential to do anything and everything, but it's probably not going to replace your phone, laptop, heck, even your notebook just yet.
To engineer the iPad Mini, Apple pointed a shrink ray at last year's iPad Air. Probably. From the (almost) edge-to-edge screen, Touch ID integrated into the top power button, and the USB-C port, it's obvious where its inspiration came from.


