Affiliate Disclosure
If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. Read our ethics policy.

New iPadOS beta adds Stage Manager support to older iPad Pros

Owners of older iPad Pro models will get Stage Manager, as the latest iPadOS 16.1 beta introduces support beyond M1-equipped versions.

When Apple introduced Stage Manager during WWDC, it was determined that it would only be available on iPad Pro models using the M1 chip. With the latest iPadOS 16.1 beta, it appears the feature will now work with more models.

The update now enables Stage Manager in the beta for all generations of the 11-inch iPad Pro, as well as all 12.9-inch iPad Pro models from the third-generation and later. Earlier 12.9-inch models and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro that don't have the A12X or A12Z chip won't gain the added support, reports Engadget.

The expansion also won't bring over all elements of Stage Manager. Even when external display support is added to the feature, models made without a M1 chip or newer will be limited to using Stage Manager only on the built-in display, and not on an external monitor.

"Customers with iPad Pro 3rd and 4th generation have expressed strong interest in being able to experience Stage Manager on their iPads," said Apple. "In response, our teams have worked hard to find a way to deliver a single-screen version for these systems, with support for up to four live apps on the iPad screen at once."

The M1 iPad Pro models will also see a change to Stage Manager, which will remove the external monitor support for the moment. It will apparently be reintroduced in a software update before the end of 2022.

Previously, Apple explained that Stage Manager needed the fast memory swap feature in iPadOS, which allowed free flash storage to be turned into up to 16GB of makeshift RAM. This is a resource-intensive feature, which Apple deemed was only possible with the M1 and not earlier A-series chips.

Apple's full statement reads:

We introduced Stage Manager as a whole new way to multitask with overlapping, resizable windows on both the iPad display and a separate external display, with the ability to run up to eight live apps on screen at once. Delivering this multi-display support is only possible with the full power of M1-based iPads. Customers with iPad Pro 3rd and 4th generation have expressed strong interest in being able to experience Stage Manager on their iPads. In response, our teams have worked hard to find a way to deliver a single-screen version for these systems, with support for up to four live apps on the iPad screen at once. External display support for Stage Manager on M1 iPads will be available in a software update later this year.



16 Comments

racerhomie3 7 Years · 1264 comments

This is excellent news. I am happy my iPad Pro 2018 will be getting this new feature.Thanks Apple!

tht 23 Years · 5654 comments

Seemed a rather obvious decision to make from the beginning. Lots of strange UI decisions with Stage Manager.

Another thing they need to do is to let users turn off the auto-sizing and auto-placement of apps. It's admirable that they want to protect their novice users and make sure they know that their app-view isn't hidden behind another window, but anything auto-adjusting for the market of expert users is typically despised. So, there should be a way to turn off auto-adjusting parts of Stage Manager.

For Split View and Slide Over, I like there to be a target zone to get apps into them. Currently, it's a long press to lift, slide up and release. People do this naturally just scrolling, and Apple's algorithm really can't tell the difference. So just have a 0.5" drop zone at the top for activating Split View and Slide Over, which would be much hard to accidentally activate.

lam92103 4 Years · 148 comments

Apple seems to be taking a cue from politicians. First create the problems, then claim credit for magically solving them. This is what happens when you put too many people who care about profits & money incharge. They loose focus of the products and end up doing dumb shit like this or trying the Burger King strategy (small, medium & large) with phones.

This is exactly what Steve Jobs had bought to the company. He was a guy who cared about good products & user experience first, and the profits would just follow along as a consequence.

tht 23 Years · 5654 comments

lam92103 said:
Apple seems to be taking a cue from politicians. First create the problems, then claim credit for magically solving them. This is what happens when you put too many people who care about profits & money incharge. They loose focus of the products and end up doing dumb shit like this or trying the Burger King strategy (small, medium & large) with phones.

This is exactly what Steve Jobs had bought to the company. He was a guy who cared about good products & user experience first, and the profits would just follow along as a consequence.

Totally disagree. Jobs made poor decisions too, we just tend to forget them. He made arbitrary support decisions many a time. PPC support was dropped in what, 4 years? iOS support of 2007 and 2008 iPhone models were dropped pretty quick! I think the rate of mistakes is basically about the same, but Apple's breadth of product now is basically 10x larger now than 12 years ago. So, there appears to be more mistakes.

appleinsideruser 5 Years · 663 comments

Gotta say, it sounds to me like more phased obsolescence to encourage upgrading. Oh, we can’t do this magic without fast swap. Oh hang on, turns out we can…🤔

My 32G 3TB Fusion, 2014 5k 27” iMac is rocking the latest MacOS even though Apple blocked support. Thank you OpenCore!