![omniplan 2 ipad review omniplan 2 ipad review](https://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/ipad-mini-2-e1351020532120.png)
A marketing term adopted by Apple, Retina means the display density is high enough that, when held at a normal viewing distance, individual pixels disappear and all someone with 20/20 eyesight can see is the content.
![omniplan 2 ipad review omniplan 2 ipad review](https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/37ca396a-bc6c-4223-a9a0-f0583fd587bb.0957f173f8053c9848eb378f0def4c43.jpeg)
Retina display is the marquis feature of the new iPad mini it says so right in the name. Apple A7 powered, 64-bit, it appears atomically identical in almost every way to the iPad Air.
OMNIPLAN 2 IPAD REVIEW FULL
Ever-so-slightly thicker, ever-so-slightly heavier, it manages to pack the full 2048x1536 resolution into an even higher density screen, and skips an entire processor generation to do it. Enter the 2013 iPad mini with Retina display. It was such an incredibly good tiny tablet that otherwise incredibly discerning people - people who vowed never to go near a standard density display again - forgave it its shortcomings, even if its chunky pixels never let their eyes forget it. Smaller, thinner, less expensive, and, most importantly, lighter than any iPad before it, the mini quickly found its way into pockets, purses, and hearts. Still, for many, the lack of size mattered. It had an Apple A5 processor in the age of the Apple A6, and a 1024x768 standard density display in an age of 2048x1536 Retina. Every inch an iPad, yet one of stark contrasts - a design from the future wrapped around technology from the past. In 2012 Apple took the year-old 9.7-inch iPad 2, condensed it down to 7.9 inches, and re-launched it as the new iPad mini.