Don’t Force It.
I have been reading and listening for the past few years, about the
whole whether you can do everything on your iPad or not debacle. And
more so recently since (the half-baked) iOS 13 came out. Although iOS 13
was supposed to be the shit, people are still struggling with
whether the iPad Pro (or whatever iPad you may have) is best suited for
their needs or not.
I personally grew up doing all my stuff — whatever that stuff was — using computers, mostly Windows. It wasn’t until the first iPad Mini that I sort of got into the iPad ecosystem. At the time it was all media consumption — comic books actually. It wasn’t really until the 10.5" iPad Pro that I even considered it to do more with. Before the 10.5 it was all on a 2015 MacBook Pro (non-retina) and later the mid-2017 13" MacBook Pro.
I still have the MacBook Pro of course but if I’m being honest I don’t
use it much these days. Now you’re expecting me to say “I
only use my iPad Pro!”. Well let me tell you, 75% of
everything I do on iOS, if not the 80%, it’s on my iPhone XS. Most of my
blog posts are composed using my iPhone because most of the time my iPad
is on my backpack or I have no access to it — for whatever reason. If
I’m being honest, I most likely got my iPad Pro out of FOMO, and not
because it was gonna change my life for the better. All the cool kids
got it, all the cool kids were using it and loving it so if didn’t have
one, I wasn’t doing it right. I do like it myself, not gonna lie, but I
knew I didn’t really need one when it was first unveiled. Yet,
I still got one and I do love it but I don’t swear by it to be any
better than anything else I was already using. Maybe except for the fact
that is much more portable but that’s it. I am not a power user nor an
Automator of any kind. In fact I have very few shortcuts and automation
systems, it’s all done from one place, my phone (or iPad) using
Drafts.
Something I have sorta of figured out recently is that it’s not about
where I’m doing what but what’s accessible to me at that moment for a
specific task. Some things just work for me using my phone because it’s
in my pocket at all times. Sometimes I feel a little hipster-ish so I
would use my iPad Pro, if possible. The MacBook, well it usually stays
at home and I very rarely reach for it honestly but it is still a great
device to do stuff on, again, it’s just what’s accessible at the
time.
Ultimately, don’t force things down your throat, just use whatever works for you and not what everyone else is swearing by. (I need to apply this to myself too) I feel like most of the time we try to make things work for us simply because everyone else in the mother is.