I’m loving Swift Playgrounds - it’s getting daily use switching back and forwards between the iPad and MacBook. It’s sort of amazing that a tool to support education - it seems designed for primary school students, and is certainly being used that way - scales right up to “commercial” level app production.

iPad Pros is a podcast about iPads (unsurprisingly) by Tim Chaten and I listened to a 2017 episode about the launch of Playgrounds 4 with guest Frank Foster. The focus was more about using the iPad as a serious development tool - a la XCode for iPad - than the education possibilities. I’m all for XCode (or something closer) on iPad, but I’d be disappointed if Playgrounds was changed in any way that made it more intimidating for children.