![]() With Adobe products, you can access photos through Creative Cloud. Photographers can transfer files to and from the iPad Pro and external drives this way, but it’s hardly as seamless as using external drives on a computer. The Gnarbox app, for example, can use a Gnarbox to connect any external hard drive and then access it wirelessly on the iPad. There may be some adjustment to find Photoshop’s tools once it arrives on the iPad. There are workarounds - some third-party apps can support external storage. If you’re accustomed to working with large libraries and external hard drives, you’ll need to adjust to a new workflow to use the iPad as your primary editing tool. While the iPad Pro comes in sizes up to 1 TB, working photographers know that will run out quickly. Cloud storage is one of the few options for stashing larger photo libraries. IOS doesn’t directly support external storage, so all images will need to be imported to the iPad’s internal storage. Images can also be imported directly from a camera if the camera has a USB-C or mini-USB port. To import images, you’ll need an SD card reader dongle - which, if we’re keeping score, is no different from the latest MacBook Pros, which no longer have built-in SD card slots. In fact, there’s just one, the USB-C port. Hillary Grigonis/Digital Trendsīut the thin bezels of the iPad Pro - just 0.23 inches - mean a lack of ports in the name of portability. The Pen sits magnetically on the edge of the iPad, automatically connecting and charging, and flipping up the keyboard automatically eliminates the on-screen version. Paired with accessories like the Apple Pen and Smart Keyboard, the iPad Pro feels more like a mix between tablet and laptop than an oversized smartphone. ![]() The iPhone 15 Pro cameras may not be as ridiculous as we thought I found a phone that fixes the iPhone 14 Pro Max’s biggest flaw
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