![]() ![]() Many of the iPad keyboard cases I’ve liked in the past have focused a lot upon the frame that holds the iPad, but the core element in Anker’s Keyboard Case is the keyboard - the part that needs to work well, or else. Six-month battery life between recharges is at upper end of industry performance.Offers a comfortable hard plastic typing surface with responsive keys and auto power on/off. ![]() Pares down typical keyboard case design, focusing heavily on the keyboard versus the case.Read on for the reasons why I’d recommend this over options costing three times the price. As the product of strategic compromises, it winds up giving up only one thing I typically prefer - a complete iPad-holding frame - in order to offer an excellent typing experience for the same cost as a typical iPad case without a keyboard. Its new Bluetooth Folio Keyboard Case for iPad Air 2 sells for a stunningly low $40, and just like the 25,600mAh Anker iPad battery pack I previously reviewed, it delivers remarkable value for its price point. ![]() But unless you count discontinued models for prior-generation iPads, there aren’t many great options.Īnker is changing that. Personally, $100 is the ceiling I’d ever be willing to pay for an iPad keyboard case, and I’d rather pay less. Drop $130-$150 (or go nuts for $170), and you can get a metal keyboard that partially resembles a MacBook Air. If you’re willing to spend $100, you can get a much nicer iPad-holding case attached to a nearly great keyboard. Thankfully, a lot has changed since then. I’ve tested almost every major iPad keyboard case since the first iPad was released five years ago, and still recall when companies charged $100 for greasy vinyl folios with terrible, squishy rubber keys. ![]()
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