![]() Everything’s a little wider apart, so that one small widget fits in the same space as a single app icon (with an enormous amount of padding around the icon, of course). Apple’s clever solution to how widgets would fit into the iPad’s differently-sized app grid was to expand the app grid. ![]() That’s great, but I wanted more after waiting a year. Expanding that functionality seemed inevitable, and with iPadOS 15 iPad users can now place widgets pretty much anywhere, on any page of the home screen. The problem was that while widgets could live anywhere on the iPhone, they were limited to a single column at the left side of the first page of the iPad’s home screen. IOS 14 introduced widgets that can live on the iPhone and iPad home screen. Still, some features are more notable than others.īlast from the past: Widgets and App Library Never once did I regret updating my iPad Pro, which I use for many hours each day for both business and personal tasks, to a beta release. In addition to all the features of iOS 15 that Dan has detailed in his full iOS review, there are some iPad-specific aspects worth discussing separately. ![]() ![]() I’ve spent the last three months using pre-release versions of iPadOS 15 on an M1 iPad Pro. And I’ve reduced my home screen to a single page thanks to the addition of App Library. Widgets can be placed anywhere, not just in the left column.
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