When Apple released the M2 iPad Pro last fall, it was able to boast about video performance-but only by trumpeting the third-party app DaVinci Resolve, since Apple’s own video editing software still wasn’t available on the platform. “At least Adobe is investing in the future of the iPad Pro-something we’ve yet to see from Apple’s own pro software team, which still hasn’t offered versions of Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro for the iPad,” I wrote back in 2018, still lamenting the situation, as I did once again in 2021. But in the intervening seven and a half years, it’s felt that the iPad’s hardware has constantly been let down by its software-and Apple’s failure to support its own pro iPad hardware with its pro-level apps was a perfect example of the problem. Final Cut and Logic arrive on iPad: Questions and (some) answersīack in November 2015, Apple released the first iPad Pro, and I was hooked.