![]() Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac Adonit Dash 4 performance Charge the Adonit Dash 4 by placing it in its holder, with the dock plugged into any USB-C port. At least the magnets in the dock hold the stylus at any angle so you don’t have to stop using your iPad if it’s providing power. The pen truly looks great without a port, but the charging dock is something else to keep track of. I have slightly mixed feelings about this. The stylus and dock cling securely together with magnets. It instead gets power through a wireless charging dock that plugs into a USB-C port. The button glows blue or green, respectively, to indicate the mode. But this switches between iPad mode and iPhone/Android mode. ![]() The product comes with two replacements, and more are available.Ī button on the far end makes it look even more like a pen. The Dash 4 has an easily replaceable nib. That means it doesn’t cling to the edge of the tablet, like some styli do, including the Apple Pencil. ![]() Is it a pen, or is it the Adonit Dash 4? Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of MacĪdonit designed the stylus to go in your pocket, not attach to the iPad. The length is 6 inches and the circumference is 1.1 inches. It looks better than an Apple Pencil - though that’s a low bar. The aluminum barrel is very sleek, and blends very well with an iPad, whether you choose matte silver or graphite black. ![]() Hardware and designĪt first glance, the Adonit Dash 4 looks like an expensive pen. And a look that really matches Apple devices. Handset users can replace their fingertip with Adonit’s stylus.Īnd the Dash 4 has a few bonuses, like port-free wireless charging. Tablet users can take handwritten notes, annotate documents, sketch out ideas. The Adonit Dash 4, by contrast, works with both iPad and iPhone. The Apple Pencil is an outstanding iPad stylus but does exactly nothing on an iPhone. ![]()
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