Owners of older iPad Pro models will receive the Stage Manager as the latest iPadOS 16.1 beta introduces support beyond the M1-equipped versions.
When Apple introduced Stage Manager at WWDC, it was clear that it would only be available for iPad models with the M1 chip. With the latest iPadOS 16.1 beta, the feature now appears to be available on more models. The update enables Stage Manager in the beta for all generations of the 11-inch iPad Pro, as well as all 12.9-inch iPad Pro models of the third generation and later. Earlier 12.9-inch models and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro that don't come with the A12X or A12Z chip won't get this additional support, as Engadget reports. reported. The extension does not include all elements of the Stage Manager.
iPadOS 16.1: Apple refines the Stage Manager
Even if the feature is expanded to include support for external displays, models without an M1 chip or newer can only use Stage Manager on the built-in display and not on an external monitor. A recent statement from Apple states:
We introduced Stage Manager to enable multitasking with overlapping, resizable windows on both the iPad display and a separate external display, and to run up to eight live apps on the screen simultaneously. This multi-display support is only possible with the full power of M1-based iPads. Customers with 3rd and 4th generation iPad Pro have expressed great interest in being able to use Stage Manager on their iPads. In response, our teams have worked hard to develop a single-screen version for these systems that supports up to four live apps simultaneously on the iPad screen. External display support for Stage Manager on M1 iPads will be available with a software update later this year.
The M1 iPad Pro models will also see a change to the Stage Manager, which will remove support for external monitors for the time being.

However, it is expected to be added with a software update before the end of 2022. Apple had previously stated that the Stage Manager requires the fast memory swapping feature in iPadOS, which can convert free flash memory into up to 16 GB of RAM. This is a resource-intensive feature that Apple says was only possible with the M1 and not with previous A-series chips. (Photo by Unsplash / Daniel Romero)