For years, iPad Pro owners have complained the ‘Pro’ is evident in the hardware, but the software is consumergrade, making the high-end tablet just a very expensive way to run iPad apps that already run as fast as you could want on far more affordable iPad models. That has improved in small steps over the past few years, but the iPad Pro still doesn’t feel like a Pro device, and it’s a software problem.
The most obvious example has been the lack of Apple’s own professional content creation software on the platform. Now, withthe release of Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for iPad, it’s a little easier to justify the ‘Pro’ in iPad Pro.