Youâll probably be happiest with the MacBook Air.
The Airâs keyboard is better than the Magic Keyboard, or so I hear. Not a lot better, just better. I use the Smart Folio Keyboard with an older iPad Pro so I donât have direct experience with the Magic Keyboard, but my MacBook Airâs keyboard is pretty good. Itâs one of the new M1 models.
The iPad has a better camera, and it will work for both photos and vidoe in a pinch, but you probalby have an iPhone that will do a better job. Both iPadOS and MacOS have pretty good integration with the iPhone, though it is a bit easier to use with the iPad. For whatever reason Photos on the MacBook is slower to sync, and does not always behave as you would expect it when syncing with the iPhone. The biggest advantage iâve found to the iPadâs camera is scanning documents. It is one less step over using the iPhone when you need to use them on the iPad.
Despite the MacBook Airâs camera being lower quality, it makes for a better video conference platform. The iPadâs camera is off center in landscape, making your outgoing video a bit awkward. Youâre always looking off to the side from the other personâs view.
As for other cameras (I assume you have a decent digital camera if youâre doing sports), importing pictures is slightly easier on the MacBook; mostly a matter of having more hardware options and being able to easily save photos outside the Photos app.
The iPad has a crazy number of good to great text editors. Many with integration with various publishing platforms. The MacBook Air (as you are probably aware) also has excellent text editors. Fewer, but the quality scope is similar.
The Airâs weight is a bit more than a large iPad Pro plus Magic Keyboard, but not so much that Iâd care which one is in my bag.
The battery life on both is good enough I donât think itâs worth considering, Either will get a lot of work done away from the charger.
The built in cellular service on the iPad Pro (if you choose that model) is great. Itâs more convenient than using the iPhone as a hotspot with the MacBook. Of course, youâll probalby have to pay your cellular provider for that convenience. With local Wi-Fi spots on the decline, having cellular access to the internet is important, however you do it.
This all sound a bit negative on the iPadâs side, but that only because Iâm trying to look at from the point of view of a journalist who is going to be typing a lot, and possible importing a lot of photos from a cameras. I switch between the two a lot, but if I only had to keep one it would be the iPad Pro. It is slightly inferior as a text editing platform, but better a reading, browsing, drawing, and several other tasks. Overall, the iPad Proâs versatility outweighs itâs single task drawbacks. At least for me.
There are some kinds of software that you can get for the MacBook Air, but not on the iPad Pro, and vice-versa. There are work arounds for most of these limitations, but I own both because Iâd rather use the best platform for a task. At least thatâs what I tell myself when look at my bank account, and when I heft my heavy heavy backpack with both devices loaded.