Do It All With an Apple iPad 10th Gen

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.
Apple Ipad 10th Gen Featured

There are many different opinions on whether an iPad can replace a laptop. If you’re still unsure, let’s look at what an Apple iPad 10th Gen can do. You can use it for productivity, to handle your household and your business, connect with your friends and family, and stream your favorite entertainment.

You can do all that on the 10.9” Liquid Retina display. iPadOS 17 allows you to have multiple apps open at the same time, allowing you to multitask and collaborate with the built-in Safari, Messages, and Keynote. You’re not restricted to that, though, as there are more than a million other apps on the App Store. Add an Apple Pencil (sold separately) to use the Scribble function, navigate apps, draw, annotate, and edit photos.

Connect through Wi-Fi for access to your files, uploads, downloads, and of course, stream your favorite TV shows, music, and blockbuster movies. The A14 Bionic chip provides enough power to stream all that entertainment, play games, edit photos and videos, and more. Store all those downloads, photos, and videos on 256GB, and store even more in iCloud.

Apple Ipad 10th Gen Color Options

Hear your games, movies, TV shows, and music on landscape stereo speakers. Take pictures and video with the 12MP Wide back camera, and take video calls and selfies with the 12MP Ultra Wide front camera. You can also take advantage of AR. Add a Magic Keyboard Folio (sold separately) and turn the tablet into a laptop.

Buy the Apple iPad 10th Gen now and get AppleCare+ protection. It will extend your repair coverage and technical support to two years. You aren’t limited with the number of incidents and accidental damage you can claim, and will pay just $49 plus tax each time. Reach technical support via chat or phone.

Take $109.01 off the price of this 256GB Wi-Fi Apple iPad 10th Gen in your choice of colors, with AppleCare+, and pay just $558.99. Also check out the prices of Wi-Fi + Cellular and 64GB.

Apple iPad 10th Gen

Make Tech Easier may earn commission on products purchased through our links, which supports the work we do for our readers.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Our latest tutorials delivered straight to your inbox

Laura Tucker Avatar

Read next

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots
A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.
French scientist Michel Siffre spent two months alone in a cave with no clock, no calendar, and no sunlight — and when his team finally told him the experiment was over, he thought he still had nearly a month left underground
When Cingular chief Stan Sigman backed the original iPhone before its 2007 unveiling, he accepted terms American carriers usually refused: no logo on the device, no control over its software, no preloaded apps, and a share of monthly subscriber revenue flowing back to Apple, after signing on without seeing a prototype
In 2016, archaeologists dated two rings of snapped stalagmites in France’s Bruniquel Cave to 176,500 years ago, evidence that Neanderthals had walked 336 metres into darkness with fire and built architecture deep underground long before modern humans reached Europe
Otto von Bismarck was 74 when Germany adopted the world’s first national old-age social insurance program in 1889, setting the pension age at 70 after years of fighting socialists with bans, laws, and a promise few workers would live long enough to use
When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.
When Harvard astronomer Cecilia Payne submitted her 1925 doctoral thesis arguing that the Sun was made almost entirely of hydrogen, the field’s senior figure Henry Norris Russell talked her into adding a line calling the result ‘almost certainly not real,’ and then published the same conclusion himself four years later to widespread acclaim.