![]() ![]() Unless, that is, you opt for the white version of the Brydge, which is course has a very different look. Both have a very bland-looking black rubberized cover that isn’t going to win any awards for, well, anything. With the devices closed, looked at from above/the front, there’s little to choose between them. ![]() With the latest model, however, Brydge is adopting the same magnetic attachment approach of Apple’s Magic Keyboard. Both made the iPad a little awkward to attach and detach. Later models used smaller corner prongs that initially proved challenging, but Brydge solved the problem in the production models. In older models, this was via two aluminum prongs, which needed rubber covers to protect the iPad against scratches. The one drawback was always the way the keyboard attached to the iPad – or, more accurately, how the iPad attached to the keyboard. Made from anodised aluminum, both look and feel are MacBook-like. I’ve long been a fan of Brydge keyboards, and have used them with all my iPads – but have so far been using Apple’s Magic Keyboard with my 12.9-inch iPad Pro…īrydge keyboards for iPad always struck me as the keyboards Apple should have made. ![]() Both are premium-priced keyboards with integrated trackpads, and are essentially chasing the same user demographic. When it came to trying the upcoming Brydge Max+ keyboard for the 12.9-inch iPad Pro, it seemed most sensible to write it up as a head-to-head against the Apple Magic Keyboard. ![]()
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