Astropad Luna



X Astropad Luna fully integrates with Astropad — our award-winning drawing software that turns the iPad into a professional graphics tablet for Mac. Astropad offers absolute workflow customization, featuring a packed suite full of creatives tools like unlimited workflow shortcuts, Magic Gestures, and custom pressure curves. In June, Luna Display creator Astropad wrote a blog post titled, “Why Getting Sherlocked by Apple Was a Blessing in Disguise.” It arrived on the one-year anniversary of Apple’s launch of Sidecar. The Astropad Luna Display consists of a dongle and a companion iPad app that communicate with each other over Wi-Fi. Just plug in the dongle, launch the app, and you can use the iPad as a functional wireless second display. Luna Display turns any Mac or iPad into a wireless second display for Mac.

Contents

What is Headless Mode?
What you will need to set up headless mode
Setting Up in Headless Mode

What is Headless Mode?

Using Luna Display in headless mode allows you to turn your iPad into the primary display for a Mac mini, without the need for a monitor. It allows you to combine the processing power of the Mac mini with the touch display of the iPad.

An external monitor is required for the initial setup to connect the Mac mini and the iPad. To avoid using an external display every time your Mac mini is turned on after the initial setup, you will also need to:

  • Set up Automatic Login
  • Disable FileVault

Setting up Automatic Login and disabling FileVault allows the Luna software to run at startup and connect to your iPad.

What you will need to set up headless mode

  • Mac Mini
  • iPad
  • Luna Display and the Luna Display apps
  • Reliable local WiFi network connection or USB cable
  • External monitor - *only required for the initial setup process*
  • We recommend connecting an external keyboard and mouse or trackpad to your Mac mini

Setting Up in Headless Mode

An external monitor is required for the initial setup process.

Astropad Luna
1
While your Mac mini is connected to an external monitor, download the free Luna primary Mac app.

Astropad Luna Display Review

2
Disable FileVault
In System Preferences > Security & Privacy > FileVault, select 'Turn Off FileVault'. If the option is greyed out, click the padlock in the bottom left corner to make changes.
3
Automatic Login
After disabling FileVault, go to System Preferences > Users and Groups > Login Options. Select your preferred account for automatic login. If the option is greyed out, click the padlock in the bottom left corner to make changes and make sure FileVault is disabled first.
4
Download the free Luna Display iPad app on your iPad.
5
Connect the iPad to the same Wi-Fi network as the Mac mini. If Wi-Fi is not available or unstable, you can connect your devices using a USB cable.
6

Astropad Studio Vs Luna Display

Launch both the Luna Mac app and the Luna iPad app. Follow the instructions on your iPad screen to connect. You will be prompted to plug Luna into your Mac mini.
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Once Luna has connected your devices, you can disconnect the external monitor from your Mac mini.

Astropad Vs Luna Display

*Luna Display requires a user to be logged in to run the Mac app. If you use FileVault, you may still need an external monitor to unlock your drive whenever you reboot. Having FileVault enabled can conflict with automatic login.

We’ve seen several solutions that let you turn your iPad into a second monitor for your Mac. While they work well enough, they tend to suffer from a whole host of problems, including lag, frequent disconnections, and poor image quality. The Astropad Luna Display claims to have solved all those issues.

Astropad Luna

Like other wireless monitor solutions for the iPad, the system transfers files over Wi-Fi, allowing you to have a second monitor without any wired connection. Unlike them, it comes with a dongle that you can plug into the Mac’s USB-C slot or Mini-DisplayPort, allowing the system to access the computer’s graphics card for rendering better quality images.

The Astropad Luna Display consists of a dongle and a companion iPad app that communicate with each other over Wi-Fi. Just plug in the dongle, launch the app, and you can use the iPad as a functional wireless second display. It turns the iPad into a functional touchscreen display, by the way, so you can use taps, swipes, and gestures to interact with any Mac software you launch in the second display, all while responding to the external keyboards, styluses, and whatever other accessories you use with the Mac. The dongle is no bigger than any thumb drive, too, so you can keep it in your pocket without taking up all that much room.

Because it gets access to your Mac’s graphics card, the system gets to take advantage of its hardware-based graphics acceleration, including Apple’s Metal GPU system. That’s a huge advantage over other apps that turn iPads into second monitors, which rely solely on software solutions for rendering the images. The fast processing allows the system to provide true Retina support across all types of visual media, while a network analysis algorithm enables it to optimize transmission speeds. During use, the system achieves a refresh rate of 60 fps.

While the Astropad Luna Display is designed to work over Wi-Fi, it can also transfer video feeds via USB, making it fully usable when either your laptop or your iPad is having problems with its Wi-Fi. It can work with any Mac computer running macOS 10.10 Yosemite and iPads running iOS 9.1 or later (definitely not this one), so as long as you have relatively new machines, you should be able to us without any problems. There’s no version for Windows, though, so PC users hoping to be able to use this for their iPads are, sadly, out of luck.

Astropad has been busy giving out review units of the dongle and the software to tech websites. From what we can tell in the reviews, the system works in a stellar manner, bringing a quality that puts existing solution to shame. That’s right, reviews indicate the quality of the rendered images is even better than Duet Display – the current go-to solution for turning the iPad into a second monitor.

A Kickstarter campaign is currently running for the Astropad Luna Display. You can reserve a unit for pledges starting at $65.