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Giant foldable iPad with MacBook-like design rumored to arrive in 2028

An iPad Pro and Apple Pencil


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Apple's foldable iPad plans could also include a super-sized version twice the size of an iPad Pro, that could go on sale by 2028.

Apple is long rumored to be creating some form of foldable iPad, in what could be a brand new form factor for the company. The latest report into the concept now has Apple working on an extremely large version, which could potentially turn itself into an impromptu MacBook.

In Sunday's "Power On" newsletter from Bloomberg, it is claimed that Apple has designed a giant foldable iPad that is approximately the size of two iPad Pro tablets side-by-side. The large display needs to be a foldable because carrying around a tablet with a screen close to 20 inches in diagonal would be difficult for most users.

This foldable approach could result in a large book-like design, that could effectively act as a giant notebook computer with a screen instead of a keyboard and trackpad. This would be somewhat similar to the failed Microsoft Courier and Surface Neo, as well as the Lenovo Yoga Book 9i.

Apple's version will supposedly run on iPadOS or a similar variant, and it won't be a "true iPad-Mac hybrid" according to the report, but it will have elements from both worlds. Apple has repeatedly insisted it doesn't intend to merge the iPad and Mac product lines into a single product category.

A release sometime in 2028 matches up with other recent claims on the topic. A display roadmap shared on December 5 mentioned an Apple foldable device out in 2028, equipped with a foldable OLED and RGB Tandem display, and an 18.8-inch size.

The 18.8-inch screen is practically the same diagonal measurement you get if you put two 13-inch iPad Pro displays next to each other, and measured, corner-to-corner. Previous rumors have also suggested a 20-inch screen for this.

Going down this approach makes sense, as it would effectively result in a foldable iPad with the same screen size as a 13-inch MacBook, and a similar overall size too.

Apple has previously been reported to be working on a foldable iPad for 2026, a much smaller model with an 8-inch display.

There have been theories that this initial foldable tablet could actually be similar to the iPad mini in size. It's also plausible that a device like the iPhone Fold could offer iPhone-like usage when folded, but expands to an iPad-like screen when unfolded.

The super-sized folded iPad could have a few uses, including offering a much larger iPad workspace to use while on the move. It may also act more like a MacBook replacement, without necessarily requiring users to carry around a Magic Keyboard too.

The report suggests that it won't be running macOS, but rather a hybrid iPadOS operating system of some kind. It's likely too early to be accurate about this aspect of the product yet.

Long-time design

As usual for Apple, it has spent a lot of time coming up with ideas for future products and services, and the ideas from the report have cropped up in the past. Chiefly this is done via patent filings and applications.

Diagram of a folded device resembling a laptop with a large screen and keyboard area, featuring labeled sections and rotational arrows. An image from an Apple patent for a foldable iPad display

It has been granted patents in the past for devices using a hinged OLED screen. This effectively turns a giant iPad into a MacBook, with the lower display able to be repurposed as a keyboard and trackpad area, and the upper section used like a MacBook display.

The lower display, when used in this folded mode, could provide context-sensitive controls that change depending on the app being used. For example, switching to a large trackpad area for stylus usage in art programs.

There have been repeated proposals for a "keyless keyboard" using a dual-screen approach, replacing the keyboard with a display using force-sensing and haptic feedback. The software keyboard could change layouts, depending on the user's preference.

For example, a user may need to use a different key layout depending on the language they are typing. Users may also elect to switch layouts to a more ergonomic version, changing their hand positions without needing to change any physical hardware.

It also doesn't have to be a flat key-less display, either. Another filing mentions the use of raised "key" sections on a display panel.

Using raised key sections, users will have a more tactile feel for the keys than they would with a flat glass panel, as is the case for existing display typing. It's plausible that these raised keys could be temporary, with the use of actuators to change the physical shape of the screen's surface.



12 Comments

Cesar Battistini Maziero 410 comments · 8 Years

If that thing ran Mac OS, it would be an instant buy. 

AppleZulu 2189 comments · 8 Years

I’ve been pointing out in the various ‘iPhone fold’ threads that a foldable iPhone is a ridiculous gimmick that won’t happen, but a large screen foldable iPad is something that actually makes sense. It’s a simple concept that has a reason to exist. 

Naturally the “analysts” and rumor writers can’t be satisfied with that sort of simplicity (despite simplicity being the hallmark of Apple design forever) and have to raise the MacBook hybrid nonsense, presumably to generate clicks. 

There will be no hybrid, nor is the purpose of a folding iPad to create a fan-fiction form factor that makes an iPad running a ‘variant’ of iPadOS more Mac-like. 

The purpose of a folding iPad is to make a large screen iPad portable. That’s it. Why is that so hard for people to understand?

omasou 642 comments · 7 Years

Why, just why.

What is the use case?

mpantone 2252 comments · 18 Years

These Apple rumors are getting nuttier and nuttier with each passing week.

At some point one needs to think whether these are actually worth reporting. 

How many times has AppleInsider posted an article about the Apple TV television set? Dozens for sure, if not over a hundred over the past ten years. After a while, anything "predicted" by "legendary" ANALyst Gene Munster ended up being a joke.

And even the recently instituted rumor score meter isn't based on analyst accuracy ratings. It's just some random score determined by site staffers often grossly inaccurate and itself the subject to doubt and ridicule.

Now I realize that AppleInsider -- like all tech media sites -- worships at the Altar of the Almighty Pageview but there is a tipping point between healthy and reasonable speculation and sheer silliness. For each person that threshold is different but for sure veteran Apple watchers will have more skepticism than many other newcomers to technology. Crossing that threshold too many times just erodes confidence and as some people know trust is earned.

Anyhow, thanks for the Sunday morning funnies. Nice break from glancing at Premier League fixture scores. And that's coming from a Yank who has no vested interest in English football.

 :)