![]() ![]() The included power supply can offer up to 135W. There is also a combo 3.5mm audio jack here. To the side is a fast UHS-II SD 4.0 card reader, which adds portable storage to your iPad when connected, and a 5Gbps USB-C port (15W). The latest iPad Pro uses USB4/Thunderbolt 4 but it is backwards compatible with USB-C, although some of its 40Gbps will be lost in the connection.Īt the back a single HDMI 2.0 video output connects your iPad to an external 4K or HD display at 60Hz maximum resolution is 3840 x 2160.Īlongside the HDMI are three 5Gbps USB-A ports (slightly underpowered at just 4.5W) and Gigabit Ethernet for wired Internet access. The iPad is connected via USB-C with 37.5W charging and 5Gbps data transfer. ![]() The iPad magnetically attaches in either portrait or landscape mode and will even fast-charge your iPhone (7.5W) and AirPods (5W) at its base you can also add an optional Apple Watch charging module for the full Apple experience. StudioDock turns your iPad into a desktop workstation, with attached peripherals, charging and external display. Ports: USB-C (to iPad), USB-C PD (5Gbps/60W), USB-A (5Gbps), HDMI, SD and microSD card readers, 3.5mm audioįor the ultimate iPad hub, enter the Kensington StudioDock-a full-featured docking station that’s also a good-looking 120-degree tilting stand that will raise your iPad up to 13cm from the desk. Twelve South also sells a less-mini but still highly portable StayGo USB-C hub that boasts nine ports, including Gigabit Ethernet and SD and Micro USB card readers alongside the HDMI, USB-A and USB-C passthrough power delivery. The USB-A port is USB 2.0, so limited to 480Mbps data transfer compared to the 5Gbps on offer on some of the other hubs reviewed here. It weighs just 36g and measures 2.8-x-1.25-x-0.3in (72-x-32-x-8mm), making it the smallest USB-C iPad hub we have tested. StayGo mini adds just four ports, but enough for you to attach an external display (4K at 30Hz), a USB-A device and headphones as well as powering your tablet or laptop at the same time–especially handy for tablets that have just the one port. The cable is useful if your iPad is in a protective case, and you could use your own longer cable if required. Why we love it: This small hub can connect to your iPad (or MacBook) via either the integrated USB-C connector or a detachable cable (20in). Fastr includes an integrated "bookstore" of DRM-free ebooks in the public domain, so there's plenty of free reading material to get you started.įastr is available from the App Store for $3.Ports: USB-C (to iPad), USB-C PD (85W), USB-A (480MBbps, 7.5W), HDMI 2.0, Audio Out If you want to make this your main reading app, you'll have to read ebook files without DRM in them, or figure out how to remove it. They contain DRM to prevent them from being used anywhere else except a Kindle device or Kindle app. The only downside to this app is that it's incompatible with your purchased Amazon Kindle books. This makes things fast enough for me to finish a couple chapters on a lunch break and slow enough to still enjoy what I'm reading. I'm set up to read one line of two to three words per screen. I also found reading one word at a time to be disorienting, but Fastr thankfully accepts options to include more words per line, or to even add more lines of text to each screen. Over time, you'll establish something of a default speed that words for you.Īfter some experimentation, I've identified my sweet spot as being between 400-450 words per minute. Fastr will let you tear through books and novels at up to an eye-popping 1,600 words per minute, but it's a pretty unenjoyable experience at that speed. ![]() The average person who reads silently is doing so at approximately 200-220 words per minute. It often indicates a user profile.Ī demo in "night mode." Switching to "day mode" produces black text on a white background. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders. ![]()
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