
One caveat though is that I prefer Cherry MX blue switches overall (since i mostly use all my machines for typing-related tasks) and Asus doesn't seem to sell the ROG Claymore with blues in the USA. However, the first Aura-compatible keyboard I found was Asus's own ROG Claymore keyboard which actually looks awesome since being able to detach the number pad would be handy.

You don’t have to activate anything in the settings menus. Hooking up a mouse on an iPad running the latest version of iPadOS works exactly the same as connecting any other Bluetooth device. Some people also report that wireless keyboards and mice which use proprietary USB receivers also seem to work, but your mileage may vary.

Remember you can connect a USB mouse to your iPad or iPhone in exactly the same way as you do a USB keyboard. With all that essential info out of the way, let’s look at how to actually connect a mouse to either an iPad or an iPhone. How To Connect a Mouse To Your iPad Or iPhone Having the option to use a mouse and keyboard when needed turns the average iPad into a much more serious and versatile work machine. However, using touch input to select, copy or otherwise edit text is ergonomically a (literal) pain and way too inaccurate to be productive. We’ve been using keyboards with our iPads for years, as writers of various stripes.

The touch-screen interface works very well for some of these applications, but you wouldn’t want to do any serious writing on the touch keyboard. iPadOS, as it stands today, is a true multi-tasking operating system that plays host to fully featured video editing, photo editing, office suite and creative production software. Its main limitation isn’t performance, but software support and its input methods. iPads are powerful enough to act as full-on personal computers. The case for using a keyboard and mouse with an iPad isn’t that hard to make.
