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Apple Pencil

MacFormat UK

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September 2021

How Apple’s superb stylus does the write thing

- Carrie Marshall

Apple Pencil

The difference between an ordinary pencil and an Apple Pencil is pretty clear. The former is for writing, drawing and shading on paper; the latter, for writing, drawing and shading on iPads. The Apple Pencil may look a lot like a normal pencil but there’s a lot of technology crammed into its compact case. Which is just as well, as it costs quite a bit more than a normal pencil does.

The first-generation Apple Pencil was launched in 2015 and is still on sale; the second generation launched in late 2018. If you’re buying one, it’s important to know that not all iPads support the first-generation or any generation. See below to check what works with what. The short version is that if your iPad has a USB-C connector, it only supports the second-generation Pencil.

Although there are important differences between the two generations of Apple Pencil, they work in the same way. The Apple Pencil contains an ultra-low-power ARM-based microcontroller with 64MB of flash memory, a 0.329Wh rechargeable lithium-ion battery, a Bluetooth module to connect to your iPad wirelessly and a three-axis accelerometer to detect motion and velocity.

The tip of the pencil is made from a hard capacitive plastic. Capacitive means it conducts electricity, just like your fingers do, which is important: if the tip wasn’t capacitive, your iPad wouldn’t be able to detect the pencil at all. It’s a softer plastic than the rest of the Apple Pencil, so it wears away over time – albeit over a very long time.

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