iPad
User Guide
For iOS 8.4 Software
Contents
8
8
9
10
10
11
11
12
13
Chapter 1: iPad at a glance
14
14
14
15
15
15
16
17
17
18
19
19
20
20
20
20
Chapter 2: Get started
21
21
24
26
28
32
32
33
34
35
35
35
38
38
39
Chapter 3: Basics
iPad overview
Accessories
Multi-Touch screen
Sleep/Wake button
Home button
Volume buttons and the Side Switch
SIM card tray
Status icons
Set up iPad
Sign up for cellular service
Connect to Wi-Fi
Connect to the Internet
Apple ID
iCloud
Set up other mail, contacts, and calendar accounts
Manage content on your iOS devices
Connect iPad to your computer
Sync with iTunes
Date and time
International settings
Your iPad name
View this user guide on iPad
Tips for using iOS 8
Use apps
Continuity
Customize iPad
Type text
Dictate
Search
Control Center
Alerts and Notiication Center
Sounds and silence
Do Not Disturb
Sharing
iCloud Drive
Transfer iles
Personal Hotspot
2
39
40
40
41
41
41
42
45
46
AirPlay
AirPrint
Apple Pay
Bluetooth devices
Restrictions
Privacy
Security
Charge and monitor the battery
Travel with iPad
47
47
48
48
48
48
Chapter 4: Siri
49
49
50
51
51
52
Chapter 5: Messages
53
53
54
54
55
56
56
57
57
57
Chapter 6: Mail
58
58
58
59
60
61
61
62
63
63
64
Chapter 7: Safari
65
65
65
66
Chapter 8: Music
Use Siri
Siri and apps
Tell Siri about yourself
Make corrections
Siri settings
iMessage service
Send and receive messages
Manage conversations
Share photos, videos, your location, and more
Messages settings
Write messages
Get a sneak peek
Finish a message later
See important messages
Attachments
Work with multiple messages
See and save addresses
Print messages
Mail settings
Safari at a glance
Search the web
Browse the web
Keep bookmarks
Save a reading list for later
Shared links and subscriptions
Fill in forms
Avoid clutter with Reader
Privacy and security
Safari settings
Music at a glance
Access music
Apple Music
Contents
3
66
66
67
67
68
69
70
71
71
72
72
73
Get personalized recommendations
For You
Search for and add music
Play music
New
Radio
Connect
Playlists
iTunes Match
My Music
Siri
Music settings
74
74
75
75
76
Chapter 9: FaceTime
77
77
78
78
79
79
Chapter 10: Calendar
80
80
81
82
82
83
84
85
86
86
87
Chapter 11: Photos
88
88
89
90
91
91
Chapter 12: Camera
92
92
93
93
94
Chapter 13: Contacts
FaceTime at a glance
Make and answer calls
Manage calls
Settings
Calendar at a glance
Invitations
Use multiple calendars
Share iCloud calendars
Calendar settings
View photos and videos
Organize photos and videos
iCloud Photo Library
My Photo Stream
iCloud Photo Sharing
Other ways to share photos and videos
Edit photos and trim videos
Print photos
Import photos and videos
Photos settings
Camera at a glance
Take photos and videos
HDR
View, share, and print
Camera settings
Contacts at a glance
Add contacts
Unify contacts
Contacts settings
Contents
4
95
95
96
Chapter 14: Clock
97
97
98
98
99
99
Chapter 15: Maps
100
100
101
101
102
Chapter 16: Videos
Clock at a glance
Alarms and timers
Find places
Get more info
Get directions
3D and Flyover
Maps settings
Videos at a glance
Add videos to your library
Control playback
Videos settings
103 Chapter 17: Notes
103 Notes at a glance
104 Use notes in multiple accounts
105
105
106
106
107
Chapter 18: Reminders
Reminders at a glance
Scheduled reminders
Location reminders
Reminders settings
108 Chapter 19: Photo Booth
108 Take photos
109 Manage photos
110
110
111
111
Chapter 20: Game Center
112
Chapter 21: Newsstand
113
113
114
115
116
117
117
117
118
119
Game Center at a glance
Play games with friends
Game Center settings
Chapter 22: iTunes Store
iTunes Store at a glance
Browse or search
Purchase, rent, or redeem
iTunes Store settings
Chapter 23: App Store
App Store at a glance
Find apps
Purchase, redeem, and download
App Store settings
120 Chapter 24:
120 Get books
Contents
iBooks
5
120
121
122
122
123
123
124
Read a book
Interact with multimedia
Study notes and glossary terms
Listen to an audiobook
Organize books
Read PDFs
iBooks settings
125
125
126
127
128
128
Chapter 25: Podcasts
129
129
130
130
141
142
142
142
143
143
143
143
143
143
144
144
145
145
145
145
145
146
150
151
Appendix A: Accessibility
152
152
152
152
152
Appendix B: iPad in Business
Podcasts at a glance
Get podcasts and episodes
Control playback
Organize your favorites into stations
Podcasts settings
Accessibility features
Accessibility Shortcut
VoiceOver
Zoom
Invert Colors and Grayscale
Speak Selection
Speak Screen
Speak Auto-Text
Large, bold, and high-contrast text
Button Shapes
Reduce screen motion
On/of switch labels
Assignable tones
Video Descriptions
Hearing aids
Mono audio and balance
Subtitles and closed captions
Siri
Widescreen keyboards
Guided Access
Switch Control
AssistiveTouch
Accessibility in OS X
iPad in the enterprise
Mail, Contacts, and Calendar
Network access
Apps
154 Appendix C: International Keyboards
154 Use international keyboards
155 Special input methods
Contents
6
157
157
159
160
160
161
161
161
161
162
162
162
163
163
164
164
165
165
166
166
167
168
168
Appendix D: Safety, handling, and support
Important safety information
Important handling information
iPad Support site
Restart or reset iPad
Reset iPad settings
An app doesn’t ill the screen
Onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear
Get information about your iPad
Usage information
Disabled iPad
VPN settings
Proiles settings
Back up iPad
Update and restore iPad software
Cellular settings
Sell or give away iPad
Learn more, service, and support
FCC compliance statement
Canadian regulatory statement
Disposal and recycling information
ENERGY STAR® compliance statement
Apple and the environment
Contents
7
1
iPad at a glance
iPad overview
This guide describes iOS 8.4 for:
•
iPad mini (all models)
•
iPad Air (all models)
•
iPad (3rd generation and 4th generation)
•
iPad 2
iPad mini 3
FaceTime
HD camera
Status bar
App icons
Multi-Touch
display
Home
button/
Touch ID
sensor
Sleep/Wake button
iSight
camera
Side Switch
Headset jack
Volume
buttons
Microphones
Speakers
Nano-SIM
tray (cellular
models)
Lightning connector
8
iPad Air 2
FaceTime
HD camera
Status bar
App icons
Multi-Touch
display
Home
button/
Touch ID
sensor
Microphones
Sleep/Wake button
Headset jack
iSight
camera
Volume
buttons
Nano-SIM
tray (cellular
models)
Speakers
Lightning connector
Your features and apps may vary depending on the model of iPad you have, and on your
location, language, and carrier. To ind out which features are supported in your area, see
www.apple.com/ios/feature-availability/.
Note: Apps and services that send or receive data over a cellular network may incur additional
fees. Contact your carrier for information about your iPad service plan and fees.
Accessories
The following accessories are included with iPad:
USB power adapter. Use with the Lightning to USB Cable or the 30-pin to USB Cable to charge
the iPad battery. The size of your adapter depends on the iPad model and your region.
Chapter 1 iPad at a glance
9
Lightning to USB Cable. Use this to connect iPad (4th generation or later) or iPad mini to the
USB power adapter or to your computer. Earlier iPad models use a 30-pin to USB Cable.
Multi-Touch screen
A few simple gestures—tap, drag, swipe, and pinch—are all you need to use iPad and its apps.
Sleep/Wake button
You can lock iPad and put it to sleep when you’re not using it. Locking iPad puts the display to
sleep, saves the battery, and prevents anything from happening if you touch the screen. You still
get FaceTime calls, text messages, alarms, and notiications, and can listen to music and adjust
the volume.
Sleep/Wake
button
Lock iPad. Press the Sleep/Wake button.
Unlock iPad. Press the Home button or the Sleep/Wake button, then drag the slider that
appears onscreen.
For additional security, you can require a passcode to unlock iPad. Go to Settings > Touch ID &
Passcode (iPad models with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models). See Use a passcode
with data protection on page 42.
Turn iPad on. Hold down the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.
Turn iPad of. Hold down the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until the slider appears
onscreen, then drag the slider.
Chapter 1 iPad at a glance
10
If you don’t touch the screen for two minutes, iPad locks itself. You can change how long iPad
waits to lock itself, or set a passcode to unlock iPad.
Set the auto-lock time. Go to Settings > General > Auto-Lock.
Set a passcode. Go to Settings > Passcode.
An iPad Smart Cover or iPad Smart Case, sold separately, can lock or unlock iPad for you (iPad 2
or later).
Set your iPad Smart Cover or iPad Smart Case to lock and unlock iPad. Go to Settings >
General, then turn on Lock/Unlock.
Home button
The Home button takes you back to the Home screen at any time. It also provides other
convenient shortcuts.
Go to the Home screen. Press the Home button.
On the Home screen, tap an app to open it. See Start at home on page 21.
See apps you’ve opened. Double-click the Home button when iPad is unlocked, then swipe left
or right.
Use Siri (iPad 3rd generation or later). Press and hold the Home button. See Use Siri on page 47.
You can also use the Home button to turn accessibility features on or of. See Accessibility
Shortcut on page 130.
On iPad models with Touch ID, you can use the sensor in the Home button, instead of using
your passcode or Apple ID password, to unlock iPad or make purchases in the iTunes Store,
App Store, and iBooks Store. See Touch ID on page 43. You can also use the Touch ID sensor for
authentication when using Apple Pay to make a purchase from within an app. See Apple Pay on
page 40.
Volume buttons and the Side Switch
Use the Volume buttons to adjust the volume of songs and other media, and of alerts and sound
efects. Use the Side Switch to silence audio alerts and notiications or to prevent iPad from
switching between portrait and landscape orientation. (On iPad models without a side switch,
use Control Center.)
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information on page 157.
Side
Switch
Volume
buttons
Chapter 1 iPad at a glance
11
Lock the ringer and alert volumes. Go to Settings > Sounds, then turn of Change with Buttons.
To limit the volume for music and videos, go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit.
Note: In some European Union (EU) countries, iPad may warn that you’re setting the volume
above the EU recommended level for hearing safety. To increase the volume beyond this level,
you may need to briely release the volume control. To limit the maximum headset volume
to this level, go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit, then turn on EU Volume Limit. To prevent
changes to the volume limit, go to Settings > General > Restrictions.
Use Control Center to adjust the volume. When iPad is locked or when you’re using another
app, swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center.
Do Not Disturb, also available in Control Center, is an easy way to keep iPad silent. See Do Not
Disturb on page 35.
Mute the sound. Press and hold the Volume Down button.
You can also use either volume button to take a picture or record a video. See Take photos and
videos on page 89.
Mute notiications, alerts, and sound efects. Slide the Side Switch toward the Volume buttons.
The Side Switch doesn’t mute the audio from music, podcasts, movies, and TV shows.
Use the Side Switch to lock the screen orientation. Go to Settings > General, then tap
Lock Rotation.
SIM card tray
The SIM card in iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular models is used for your cellular data connection. If your SIM
card isn’t installed or if you change carriers, you may need to install or replace the SIM card.
SIM eject
tool
SIM
tray
Nano-SIM
card
Open the SIM tray. Insert a SIM eject tool (sold separately) into the hole on the SIM tray, then
press irmly and push the tool straight in until the tray pops out. Pull out the SIM tray to install or
replace the SIM card. If you don’t have a SIM eject tool, try the end of a small paper clip.
Important: A SIM card is required to use cellular services when connecting to GSM networks
and some CDMA networks. Your iPad is subject to your wireless service provider’s policies, which
may include restrictions on switching service providers and roaming, even after conclusion of
any required minimum service contract. Contact your wireless service provider for more details.
Availability of cellular capabilities depends on the wireless network.
For more information, see Cellular settings on page 164.
Chapter 1 iPad at a glance
12
Status icons
The icons in the status bar at the top of the screen give information about iPad:
Status icon
What it means
Wi-Fi
iPad has a Wi-Fi Internet connection. The more bars, the stronger the
connection. See Connect to Wi-Fi on page 15.
Cell signal
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is in range of the cellular network. If
there’s no signal, “No service” appears.
Airplane Mode
Airplane Mode is on—you can’t access the Internet, or use
Bluetooth® devices. Non-wireless features are available. See Travel
with iPad on page 46.
LTE
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is connected to the Internet over a 4G
LTE network.
4G
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is connected to the Internet over a 4G
network.
3G
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is connected to the Internet over a 3G
network.
EDGE
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is connected to the Internet over an
EDGE network.
GPRS
iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) is connected to the Internet over a
GPRS network.
Do Not Disturb
Do Not Disturb is turned on. See Do Not Disturb on page 35.
Personal Hotspot
iPad is providing a Personal Hotspot for other iOS devices. See
Personal Hotspot on page 39.
Syncing
iPad is syncing with iTunes. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Activity
There is network or other activity. Some third-party apps use this
icon to show app activity.
VPN
iPad is connected to a network using VPN. See Network access on
page 152.
Lock
iPad is locked. See Sleep/Wake button on page 10.
Alarm
An alarm is set. See Chapter 14, Clock, on page 95.
Orientation lock
Screen orientation is locked. See Change the screen orientation on
page 23.
Location Services
An app is using Location Services. See Privacy on page 41.
Bluetooth
Blue or White icon: Bluetooth is on and paired with a device, such as
a headset or keyboard.
Gray icon: Bluetooth is on and paired with a device, but the device is
out of range or turned of.
No icon: Bluetooth is not paired with a device.
See Bluetooth devices on page 41.
Bluetooth battery
Shows the battery level of a supported paired Bluetooth device.
Battery
Shows the battery level or charging status. See Charge and monitor
the battery on page 45.
Chapter 1 iPad at a glance
13
Get started
2
Set up iPad
·
WARNING: To avoid injury, read Important safety information on page 157 before using iPad.
With only a Wi-Fi connection, you can easily set up iPad. You can also set up iPad by connecting
it to a computer and using iTunes (see Connect iPad to your computer on page 18).
Set up iPad. Turn on iPad, then follow the Setup Assistant.
The Setup Assistant guides you through the setup process, including:
•
Connecting to a Wi-Fi network
•
Signing in with or creating a free Apple ID (needed for many features, including iCloud,
FaceTime, the iTunes Store, the App Store, and more)
•
Entering a passcode
•
Setting up iCloud and iCloud Keychain
•
Turning on recommended features, such as Location Services
•
Activating iPad with your carrier (cellular models)
You can also restore iPad from an iCloud or iTunes backup during setup. See Back up iPad on
page 163.
Note: Find My iPad is turned on when you sign in to iCloud. Activation Lock is engaged to help
prevent anyone else from setting up your iPad, even if it is completely restored. Before you sell
or give away your iPad, you should reset it to erase your personal content and turn of Activation
Lock. See Sell or give away iPad on page 165.
Sign up for cellular service
If your iPad has an Apple SIM card (available on iPad models with cellular and Touch ID), you can
choose a carrier and sign up for cellular service right on iPad. Depending on your home carrier
and your destination, you may also be able to travel abroad with iPad and sign up for cellular
service with a carrier in the country you’re visiting. This isn’t available in all areas and not all
carriers are supported; contact your carrier for more information.
Sign up for cellular service. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, then tap Set Up Cellular Data and
follow the onscreen instructions.
Set up cellular service in another country. When traveling to another country, you can choose
a local carrier rather than roaming. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, tap Choose a Data Plan, then
select the plan you want to use.
Apple SIM card kits are available for purchase at Apple Retail locations in countries with
participating carriers.
14
Connect to Wi-Fi
If
appears at the top of the screen, you’re connected to a Wi-Fi network. iPad reconnects
anytime you return to the same location.
Conigure Wi-Fi. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi, then turn Wi-Fi on or of. (You can also turn Wi-Fi
or of in Control Center.)
•
•
•
•
•
on
Choose a network: Tap one of the listed networks, then enter the password, if asked.
Ask to join networks: Turn on Ask to Join Networks to be prompted when a Wi-Fi network
is available. Otherwise, you must manually join a network when a previously used network
isn’t available.
Join a closed network: Tap Other, then enter the name of the network. You need to know the
network name, security type, and password.
Adjust the settings for a Wi-Fi network: Tap
next to a network. You can set an HTTP proxy,
deine static network settings, turn on BootP, or renew the settings provided by a DHCP server.
Forget a network: Tap
next to a network you’ve joined before, then tap Forget this Network.
Set up your own Wi-Fi network. If you have a new or unconigured AirPort base station turned
on and within range, you can use iPad to set it up. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi, then look for Set up an
AirPort base station. Tap your base station and Setup Assistant does the rest.
Manage your AirPort network. If iPad is connected to an AirPort base station, go to Settings >
Wi-Fi, tap
next to the network name, then tap Manage this Network. If you haven’t yet
downloaded AirPort Utility, tap OK to open the App Store, then download it (this requires an
Internet connection).
Connect to the Internet
iPad connects to the Internet whenever necessary, using a Wi-Fi connection (if available) or your
carrier’s cellular network. For information about connecting to a Wi-Fi network, see Connect to
Wi-Fi, above.
When an app needs to use the Internet, iPad does the following, in order:
•
Connects over the most recently used available Wi-Fi network
•
Shows a list of Wi-Fi networks in range, and connects using the one you choose
•
Connects over the cellular data network, if available
Note: If a Wi-Fi connection to the Internet isn’t available, apps and services may transfer data
over your carrier’s cellular network, which may result in additional fees. Contact your carrier
for information about your cellular data plan rates. To manage cellular data usage, see Cellular
settings on page 164.
Apple ID
Your Apple ID is the account you use for just about everything you do with Apple, including
storing your content in iCloud, downloading apps from the App Store, and buying music, movies,
and TV shows from the iTunes Store.
If you already have an Apple ID, use it when you irst set up iPad, and whenever you need to sign
in to use an Apple service. If you don’t already have an Apple ID, you can create one whenever
you’re asked to sign in. You only need one Apple ID for everything you do with Apple.
For more information, see appleid.apple.com.
Chapter 2 Get started
15
iCloud
iCloud ofers free mail, contacts, calendar, and other features that you can set up simply by
signing in to iCloud with your Apple ID, then making sure that the features you want to use are
turned on.
Set up iCloud. Go to Settings > iCloud. Create an Apple ID if needed, or use your existing one.
iCloud stores your photos and videos, documents, music, calendars, contacts, and more. Content
stored in iCloud is pushed wirelessly to your other iOS devices and computers signed in to
iCloud with the same Apple ID.
iCloud is available on devices with iOS 5 or later, on Mac computers with OS X Lion v10.7.5 or
later, and on PCs with iCloud for Windows 4.0 (Windows 7 or Windows 8 is required). You can
also sign in to iCloud.com from any Mac or PC to access your iCloud information and features like
Photos, Find My iPhone, Mail, Calendar, Contacts, iWork for iCloud, and more.
Note: iCloud may not be available in all areas, and iCloud features may vary by area. For more
information, go to www.apple.com/icloud/.
iCloud features include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Music, Movies, TV Shows, Apps, and Books: Automatically get iTunes purchases on all your
devices set up with iCloud, or download previous iTunes music and TV show purchases for
free, anytime. With an iTunes Match subscription, all your music, including music you’ve
imported from CDs or purchased somewhere other than the iTunes Store, can also be stored
in iCloud and played on demand. See iTunes Match on page 71. Download previous App Store
and iBooks Store purchases to iPad for free, anytime.
Photos: Use iCloud Photo Library to store all your photos and videos in iCloud, and access
them from any iOS 8.1 or later device, Mac with OS X Yosemite v10.10.3 or later, and on
iCloud.com using the same Apple ID. Use iCloud Photo Sharing to share photos and videos
with just the people you choose, and let them add photos, videos, and comments. See iCloud
Photo Library on page 82. See iCloud Photo Sharing on page 83.
Family Sharing: Up to six family members can share their purchases from the iTunes Store,
App Store, and iBooks Store. Pay for family purchases with the same credit card and approve
kids’ spending right from a parent’s device. Plus, share photos, a family calendar, and more. See
Family Sharing on page 36.
iCloud Drive: Safely store your presentations, spreadsheets, PDFs, images, and other documents
in iCloud, and access them from your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, Mac, or PC. iCloud Drive is
available on any iOS 8 or later device and on any Mac with OS X Yosemite v10.10.0 or later. If
you’re using an earlier version of iOS, see Set up iCloud Drive on page 38.
Mail, Contacts, Calendars: Keep your mail, contacts, calendars, notes, and reminders up to date
across all your devices.
Safari Tabs: See the tabs you have open on your other iOS devices and OS X computers. See
Browse the web on page 59.
Backup: Back up iPad to iCloud automatically when connected to power and Wi-Fi. iCloud data
and backups sent over the Internet are encrypted. See Back up iPad on page 163.
Find My iPad: Locate your iPad on a map, display a message, play a sound, lock the screen,
temporarily suspend or permanently remove your credit and debit cards in Passbook &
Apple Pay settings used for Apple Pay, or remotely wipe your iPad data. Find My iPad includes
Activation Lock, which requires your Apple ID and password in order to turn of Find My
iPad or erase your device. Your Apple ID and password are also required before anyone can
reactivate your iPad. See Find My iPad on page 44.
Chapter 2 Get started
16
•
•
Find My Friends: Share your location with people who are important to you. Download the free
app from the App Store.
iCloud Keychain: Keep your passwords and credit card information up to date across all your
designated devices. See iCloud Keychain on page 43.
You must have an iCloud account and be signed in to iCloud to use Apple Pay. See Apple Pay on
page 40.
With iCloud, you get a free email account and 5 GB of storage for your mail, documents, photos,
and backups. Your purchased music, apps, TV shows, and books, as well as your photo streams,
don’t count against your available space.
Upgrade your iCloud storage. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage, then tap Change Storage Plan.
For information about upgrading your iCloud storage, see help.apple.com/icloud/.
View and download previous purchases, or get purchases shared by your family.
•
iTunes Store: You can access your purchased songs and videos in the Music and Videos apps.
Or, in the iTunes Store, tap Purchased .
•
App Store: Go to the App Store, then tap Purchased
•
iBooks Store: Go to iBooks, then tap Purchased
.
.
Turn on Automatic Downloads for music, apps, or books. Go to Settings > iTunes & App Store.
For more information about iCloud, see www.apple.com/icloud/. For support information, see
www.apple.com/support/icloud/.
Set up other mail, contacts, and calendar accounts
iPad works with Microsoft Exchange, and many of the most popular Internet-based mail,
contacts, and calendar services.
Set up another account. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Add Account.
You can add contacts using an LDAP or CardDAV account, if your company or organization
supports it. See Add contacts on page 93.
You can add calendars using a CalDAV calendar account, and you can subscribe to iCalendar (.ics)
calendars or import them from Mail. See Use multiple calendars on page 78.
For information about setting up a Microsoft Exchange account in a corporate environment, see
Mail, Contacts, and Calendar on page 152.
Manage content on your iOS devices
You can transfer information and iles between iPad and your other iOS devices and computers,
using either iCloud or iTunes.
•
iCloud stores your photos and videos, documents, music, calendars, contacts, and more. It all
gets pushed wirelessly to your other iOS devices and computers, keeping everything up to
date. See iCloud on page 16.
•
iTunes syncs music, videos, photos, and more between your computer and iPad. Changes
you make on one device are copied to the other when you sync. You can also use iTunes to
copy a ile to iPad for use with an app, or to copy a document you’ve created on iPad to your
computer. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Chapter 2 Get started
17
You can use iCloud or iTunes, or both, depending on your needs. For example, you can use
iCloud Photo Stream to automatically keep your contacts and calendars up to date on all your
devices, and use iTunes to sync music from your computer to iPad.
Important: To avoid duplicates, keep contacts, calendars, and notes in sync using iCloud or
iTunes, but not both.
You can also choose to manually manage content from iTunes by selecting that option in the
iPad Summary pane. Then you can drag songs or videos from your iTunes library to iPad in
iTunes. This is useful if your iTunes library contains more items than can it on your iPad.
Note: If you use iTunes Match, you can manually manage only video.
Connect iPad to your computer
Connecting iPad to your computer lets you sync content using iTunes. You can also sync with
iTunes wirelessly. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
To use iPad with your computer, you need:
•
An Internet connection for your computer (broadband is recommended)
•
A Mac with a USB 2.0 or 3.0 port, or a PC with a USB 2.0 port, and one of the following
operating systems:
•
•
OS X version 10.6.8 or later
•
Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, or Windows XP Home or Professional with Service
Pack 3 or later
iTunes, available at www.itunes.com/download/
Connect iPad to your computer. Use the included Lightning to USB Cable or 30-pin to
USB Cable.
Unless iPad is actively syncing with your computer, you can disconnect it at any time. Look
at the top of the iTunes screen on your computer or on iPad to see if syncing is in progress. If
you disconnect iPad while it’s syncing, some data may not get synced until the next time you
connect iPad to your computer.
Chapter 2 Get started
18
Sync with iTunes
Syncing with iTunes copies information from your computer to iPad, and vice versa. You can sync
by connecting iPad to your computer, or you can set up iTunes to sync wirelessly using Wi-Fi. You
can set iTunes to sync music, videos, apps, photos, and more. For help syncing iPad, open iTunes
on your computer, choose Help > iTunes Help, then select Sync your iPod, iPhone, or iPad. iTunes
is available at www.itunes.com/download/.
Set up wireless syncing. Connect iPad to your computer. In iTunes on your computer, select your
iPad, click Summary, then select Sync with this iPad over Wi-Fi.
If Wi-Fi syncing is turned on, iPad syncs when it’s connected to a power source, both iPad and
your computer are on and connected to the same wireless network, and iTunes is open on
your computer.
Tips for syncing with iTunes on your computer
Connect iPad to your computer, select it in iTunes, then set options in the diferent panes.
•
If iPad doesn’t appear in iTunes, make sure you’re using the latest version of iTunes, check that
the included cable is correctly connected, then try restarting your computer.
•
In the Summary pane, you can set iTunes to sync iPad automatically when it’s attached to your
computer. To temporarily prevent syncing when you attach the device, hold down Command
and Option (Mac) or Shift and Control (PC) until you see iPad appear in the iTunes window.
•
If you want to encrypt the information stored on your computer when iTunes makes a backup,
select “Encrypt iPad backup” in the Summary pane. Encrypted backups are indicated by a lock
icon , and a password is required to restore the backup. If you don’t select this option, other
passwords (such as those for mail accounts) aren’t included in the backup and you’ll have to
reenter them if you use the backup to restore iPad.
•
In the Info pane, click Advanced to select options that let you replace the information on iPad
with the information from your computer during the next sync.
•
In the Music pane, you can sync music using your playlists.
•
In the Photos pane, you can sync photos and videos from a supported app or folder on
your computer.
•
If you use iCloud to store your contacts, calendars, and bookmarks, don’t also sync them to
iPad using iTunes.
•
If you turn on iCloud Photo Library, you can’t use iTunes to sync photos and videos to iPad.
Date and time
The date and time are usually set for you based on your location—take a look at the Lock screen
to see if they’re correct.
Set whether iPad updates the date and time automatically. Go to Settings > General > Date &
Time, then turn Set Automatically on or of. If you set iPad to update the time automatically, it
gets the correct time over the network and updates it for the time zone you’re in. Some networks
don’t support network time, so in some areas iPad may not be able to automatically determine
the local time.
Set the date and time manually. Go to Settings > General > Date & Time, then turn of Set
Automatically.
Set whether iPad shows 24-hour time or 12-hour time. Go to Settings > General > Date & Time,
then turn 24-Hour Time on or of. (24-Hour Time may not be available in all areas.)
Chapter 2 Get started
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International settings
Go to Settings > General > Language & Region to set:
•
The language for iPad
•
The preferred language order for apps and websites
•
The region format
•
The calendar format
•
Advanced settings for dates, times, and numbers
To add a keyboard for another language, go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards.
For more information, see Use international keyboards on page 154.
Your iPad name
The name of your iPad is used by iTunes and iCloud.
Change the name of your iPad. Go to Settings > General > About > Name.
View this user guide on iPad
You can view the iPad User Guide on iPad in Safari, and in the iBooks app.
View the user guide in Safari. In Safari, tap
help.apple.com/ipad/.
, then tap the iPad User Guide bookmark. Or go to
•
Add an icon for the guide to the Home screen: Tap
•
View the guide in a diferent language: Tap Change Language at the bottom of the home page.
, then tap Add to Home Screen.
View the user guide in iBooks. Open iBooks, then search for “iPad user” in the iBooks Store.
For more information about iBooks, see Chapter 24, iBooks, on page 120.
Tips for using iOS 8
The Tips app helps you get the most from iPad.
Get Tips. Open the Tips app. New tips are added weekly.
Get notiied when new tips arrive. Go to Settings > Notiications > Tips.
Chapter 2 Get started
20
Basics
3
Use apps
All the apps that come with iPad—as well as the apps you download from the App Store—are
on the Home screen.
Start at home
Tap an app to open it.
Press the Home button anytime to return to the Home screen. Swipe left or right to see
other screens.
21
Multitasking
iPad helps you manage several tasks at the same time.
View contacts and open apps. Double-click the Home button to reveal the multitasking
screen. Swipe left or right to see more. To switch to another app, tap it. To connect with a
recent or favorite contact, tap the contact’s picture or name, then tap your preferred method
of communication.
Close an app. If an app isn’t working properly, you can force it to quit. Drag the app up from the
multitasking screen. Then try opening the app again.
If you have lots of apps, you can use Spotlight to ind and open them. Drag down the center of
the Home screen to see the search ield. See Spotlight Search on page 32.
Look around
Drag a list up or down to see more. Swipe to scroll quickly; touch the screen to stop it. Some lists
have an index—tap a letter to jump ahead.
Drag a photo, map, or webpage in any direction to see more.
To quickly jump to the top of a page, tap the status bar at the top of the screen.
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Zoom in or out
Pinch open on a photo, webpage, or map for a close-up—then pinch closed to zoom back out. In
Photos, keep pinching to see the collection or album the photo’s in.
Or double-tap a photo or webpage to zoom in, then double-tap again to zoom out. In Maps,
double-tap to zoom in, then tap once with two ingers to zoom out.
Multitasking gestures
You can use multitasking gestures on iPad to return to the Home screen, reveal the multitasking
display, or switch to another app.
Return to the Home screen. Pinch four or ive ingers together.
Reveal the multitasking display. Swipe up with four or ive ingers.
Switch apps. Swipe left or right with four or ive ingers.
Turn multitasking gestures on or of. Go to Settings > General > Multitasking Gestures.
Change the screen orientation
Many apps give you a diferent view when you rotate iPad.
Lock the screen orientation. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control
Center, then tap .
The orientation lock icon
appears in the status bar when the screen orientation is locked.
You can also set the Side Switch to lock the screen orientation instead of silencing sound efects
and notiications. Go to Settings > General then, under “Use Side Switch to,” tap Lock Rotation.
Chapter 3 Basics
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App extensions
Some apps let you extend the functionality of your apps on iPad. An app extension may appear
as a sharing option, action option, a widget in Notiication Center, a ile provider, or a custom
keyboard. For example, if you download Pinterest to iPad, Pinterest becomes another option for
sharing when you click .
Sharing options
Action options
App extensions can also help you edit a photo or video in your Photos app. For example, you can
download a photo-related app that lets you apply ilters to photos from your Photos app.
Install app extensions. Download the app from the App Store, open the app, then follow the
onscreen instructions.
Turn sharing or action options on or of. Tap , then tap More (drag options to the left if
necessary). Turn of third-party sharing or action options (they are on by default).
Organize sharing and action options. Tap , then tap More (drag options to the left if
necessary). Touch and drag
to rearrange your options.
For more information about Notiication Center widgets, see Notiication Center on page 34. For
more information about Sharing options, see Share from apps on page 35.
Continuity
About Continuity features
Continuity features connect iPad with your iPhone, iPod touch, and Mac so they can work
together as one. You can start an email or document on iPad, for example, then pick up where
you left of on your iPod touch or Mac. Or let iPad use iPhone to make phone calls or send SMS
or MMS text messages.
Continuity features require iOS 8 or OS X Yosemite, and work with iPhone 5 or later, iPod touch
(5th generation) or later, iPad (4th generation) or later, and supported Mac computers. For more
information, see support.apple.com/kb/HT6337.
Handof
Pick up on one device where you left of on another. You can use Handof with Mail, Safari, Pages,
Numbers, Keynote, Maps, Messages, Reminders, Calendar, Contacts, and even some third-party
apps. For Handof to work, your devices must be signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID,
and they must be within Bluetooth range of one another (about 33 feet or 10 meters).
Chapter 3 Basics
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Switch devices. Swipe up from the bottom-left edge of the Lock screen (where you see the app’s
activity icon), or go to the multitasking screen, then tap the app. On your Mac, open the app you
were using on your iOS device.
Disable Handof on your devices. Go to Settings > General > Handof & Suggested Apps.
Disable Handof on your Mac. Go to System Preferences > General, then turn of Allow Handof
between this Mac and your devices set up with iCloud.
Phone calls
With Continuity, you can make and receive phone calls on your other iOS devices and Mac
computers (with iOS 8 or OS X Yosemite). Calls are relayed through your iPhone, which must be
turned on and connected to a cellular network. All devices must be on the same Wi-Fi network,
and signed in to FaceTime and iCloud using the same Apple ID. (On iPhone, make sure Allow
Wi-Fi Calls, if that setting appears, is turned of. Go to Settings > Phone > Wi-Fi Calls.)
Make a phone call on iPad. Tap a phone number in Contacts, Calendar, FaceTime, Messages,
Spotlight, or Safari. You can also tap a recent contact in the multitasking screen.
Disable iPhone Cellular Calls. On your iPhone, go to Settings > FaceTime, then turn of iPhone
Cellular Calls.
Messages
If your iPhone (with iOS 8) is signed into iMessage using the same Apple ID as your iPad, you
can also send and receive SMS and MMS messages on your iPad. Charges may apply to the text
messaging service for your iPhone.
Instant Hotspot
You can use Instant Hotspot on your iPhone (with iOS 8) or iPad (cellular models with iOS 8)
to provide Internet access to your other iOS devices and Mac computers (with iOS 8 or
OS X Yosemite) that are signed into iCloud using the same Apple ID. Instant Hotspot uses your
iPhone or iPad Personal Hotspot, without you having to enter a password or even turn on
Personal Hotspot.
Use Instant Hotspot. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi on your iOS device without cellular capabilities, then
simply choose your iPhone or iPad network under Personal Hotspots. On your Mac, choose your
iPhone or iPad network from your Wi-Fi settings.
When you’re not using using the hotspot, your devices disconnect to save battery life. For more
information about ways to set up a Personal Hotspot see Personal Hotspot on page 39.
Note: This feature may not be available with all carriers. Additional fees may apply. Contact your
carrier for more information.
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Customize iPad
Arrange your apps
Arrange apps. Touch and hold any app on the Home screen until it jiggles, then drag apps
around. Drag an app to the edge of the screen to move it to a diferent Home screen, or to the
Dock at the bottom of the screen. Press the Home button to save your arrangement.
Create a new Home screen. While arranging apps, drag an app to the right edge of the last
Home screen. The dots above the Dock show which of your Home screens you’re viewing.
When iPad is connected to your computer, you can customize the Home screen using iTunes. In
iTunes, select iPad, then click Apps.
Start over. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then tap Reset Home Screen Layout to return the Home
screen and apps to their original layout. Folders are removed and the original wallpaper is restored.
Organize with folders
Create a folder. While arranging apps, drag one app onto another. Tap the name of the folder to
rename it. Drag apps to add or remove them. Press the Home button when you inish.
You can have multiple pages of apps in a folder.
Delete a folder. Drag out all the apps—the folder is deleted automatically.
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Change the wallpaper
Wallpaper settings let you set an image or photo as wallpaper for the Lock screen or Home
screen. You can choose from dynamic and still images.
Change the wallpaper. Go to Settings > Wallpaper > Choose a New Wallpaper.
When choosing an image for new wallpaper, the Perspective Zoom button determines whether
your selected wallpaper is zoomed. For wallpaper you already set, go to the Wallpaper setting,
then tap the image of the Lock screen or Home screen to see the Perspective Zoom button.
Note: The Perspective Zoom button doesn’t appear if Reduce Motion (in Accessibility settings) is
turned on. See Reduce screen motion on page 143.
Adjust the screen brightness
Dim the screen to extend battery life, or use Auto-Brightness.
Adjust the screen brightness. Go to Settings > Display & Brightness, then drag the slider. If AutoBrightness is on, iPad adjusts the screen brightness for current light conditions using the built-in
ambient light sensor. You can also adjust the brightness in Control Center.
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Type text
The onscreen keyboard lets you enter text when needed.
Enter text
Tap a text ield to see the onscreen keyboard, then tap letters to type. If you touch the wrong
key, you can slide your inger to the correct key. The letter isn’t entered until you release your
inger from the key.
Tap Shift to type uppercase, or touch the Shift key and slide to a letter. Double-tap Shift for caps
lock. To enter numbers, punctuation, or symbols, tap the Number key
or the Symbol key
. If you haven’t added any keyboards, tap
to switch to the emoji keyboard. If you have
several keyboards, tap
to switch to the last one you used. Continue tapping to access other
enabled keyboards, or touch and hold , then slide to choose a diferent keyboard. To quickly
end a sentence with a period and a space, just double-tap the space bar.
Enter accented letters or other alternate characters. Touch and hold a key, then slide to choose
one of the options.
Hide the onscreen keyboard. Tap the Keyboard key
.
If you see a word underlined in red, tap it to see suggested corrections. If the word you want
doesn’t appear, type the correction.
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28
As you write, the keyboard predicts your next word (not available in all languages). Tap a word
to choose it, or accept a highlighted prediction by entering a space or punctuation. When you
tap a suggested word, a space appears after the word. If you enter a comma, period, or other
punctuation, the space is deleted. Reject a suggestion by tapping your original word (shown as
the predictive text option with quotation marks).
Predictive text
Hide predictive text. Pull down the suggested words. Drag the bar up when you want to see the
suggestions again.
Turn of predictive text. Touch and hold
or
, then slide to Predictive.
If you turn of predictive text, iPad may still try to suggest corrections for misspelled words.
Accept a correction by entering a space or punctuation, or by tapping return. To reject a
correction, tap the “x.” If you reject the same suggestion a few times, iPad stops suggesting it.
Set options for typing or add keyboards. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
You can also use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to enter text. See Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard on
page 30. To dictate instead of typing, see Dictate on page 32.
Chapter 3 Basics
29
Edit text
Revise text. Touch and hold the text to show the magnifying glass, then drag to position the
insertion point.
Select text. Tap the insertion point to display the selection options. Or double-tap a word
to select it. Drag the grab points to select more or less text. In read-only documents, such as
webpages, touch and hold to select a word.
Grab points
You can cut, copy, or paste over selected text. With some apps, you can also get bold, italic, or
underlined text (tap B/I/U); get the deinition of a word; or have iPad suggest an alternative. You
may need to tap to see all the options.
Undo the last edit. Shake iPad, then tap Undo.
Justify text. Select the text, then tap the left or right arrow (not always available).
Save keystrokes
A shortcut lets you enter a word or phrase by typing just a few characters. For example, type
“omw” to enter “On my way!” That one’s already set up for you, but you can also add your own.
Create a shortcut. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard, then tap Shortcuts.
Have a word or phrase you use and don’t want it corrected? Create a shortcut, but leave the
Shortcut ield blank.
Use iCloud to keep your personal dictionary up to date on your other devices. Go to Settings >
iCloud, then turn on iCloud Drive or Documents & Data.
Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard
You can use an Apple Wireless Keyboard (available separately) to enter text on your iPad. The
keyboard connects via Bluetooth, so you must irst pair it with iPad.
Note: The Apple Wireless Keyboard may not support keyboard features that are on your device.
For example, it doesn’t anticipate your next word or automatically correct misspelled words.
Pair an Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPad. Turn on the keyboard, go to Settings > Bluetooth
and turn on Bluetooth, then tap the keyboard when it appears in the Devices list.
Chapter 3 Basics
30
Once it’s paired, the keyboard reconnects to iPad whenever it’s in range—up to about 33 feet (10
meters). When it’s connected, the onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear.
Save your batteries. Turn of Bluetooth and the wireless keyboard when not in use. You can turn
of Bluetooth in Control Center. To turn of the keyboard, hold down the On/of switch until the
green light goes of.
Unpair a wireless keyboard. Go to Settings > Bluetooth, tap
tap Forget this Device.
next to the keyboard name, then
See Bluetooth devices on page 41.
Add or change keyboards
You can turn typing features, such as spell checking, on or of; add keyboards for writing in
diferent languages; and change the layout of your onscreen keyboard or Apple Wireless
Keyboard.
Set typing features. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
Add a keyboard for another language. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards >
Add New Keyboard.
Switch keyboards. If you haven’t added any keyboards, tap
to switch to the emoji keyboard.
If you have several keyboards, tap
to switch to the last one you used. Continue tapping to
access other enabled keyboards, or touch and hold , then slide to choose a diferent keyboard.
For information about international keyboards, see Use international keyboards on page 154.
Change the keyboard layout. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards, select a
keyboard, then choose a layout.
Keyboard layouts
On iPad, you can type with a split keyboard that’s at the bottom of the screen, or undocked and
in the middle of the screen.
Adjust the keyboard. Touch and hold
•
, then:
Use a split keyboard: Slide your inger to Split, then release. Or spread the keyboard apart from
the middle.
•
Move the keyboard to the middle of the screen: Slide your inger to Undock, then release.
•
Return to a full keyboard: Slide your inger to Dock and Merge, then release.
•
Return a full keyboard to the bottom of the screen: Slide your inger to Dock, then release.
Turn Split Keyboard on or of. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Split Keyboard.
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31
Dictate
If you like, you can dictate instead of typing. Make sure Enable Dictation is turned on (in
Settings > General > Keyboard) and iPad is connected to the Internet.
Note: Dictation may not be available in all languages or in all areas, and features may vary.
Cellular data charges may apply. See Cellular settings on page 164.
Dictate text. Tap
on the iPad keyboard, then speak. When you inish, tap Done.
Tap to begin dictation.
Add text. Tap again and continue dictating. To insert text, tap to place the insertion point irst.
You can also replace selected text by dictating.
Add punctuation or format text. Say the punctuation or format. For example, “Dear Mary
comma the check is in the mail exclamation mark” becomes “Dear Mary, the check is in the mail!”
Punctuation and formatting commands include:
•
quote … end quote
•
new paragraph
•
new line
•
cap—to capitalize the next word
•
caps on … caps of—to capitalize the irst character of each word
•
all caps—to make the next word all uppercase
•
all caps on … all caps of—to make the enclosed words all uppercase
•
no caps on … no caps of—to make the enclosed words all lowercase
•
no space on … no space of—to run a series of words together
•
smiley—to insert :-)
•
frowny—to insert :-(
•
winky—to insert ;-)
Search
Search apps
Many apps include a search ield where you can type to ind something within the app. For
example, in the Maps app, you can search for a speciic location.
Spotlight Search
Spotlight Search not only searches your iPad, but also shows suggestions from the App Store and
the Internet. You may see suggestions for movie showtimes, nearby locations, and more.
Search iPad. Drag down the middle of any Home screen to reveal the search ield. Results occur
as you type; to hide the keyboard and see more results on the screen, tap Search. Tap an item in
the list to open it.
Chapter 3 Basics
32
You can also use Spotlight Search to ind and open apps.
Choose which apps and content are searched. Go to Settings > General > Spotlight Search,
then tap to deselect apps or content. To change the search order, touch and drag
to a
new position.
Limit Spotlight Search to your iPad. Go to Settings > General > Spotlight Search, then tap
Spotlight Suggestions to deselect it.
Turn of Location Services for Spotlight Suggestions. Go to Settings > Privacy > Location
Services. Tap System Services, then turn of Spotlight Suggestions.
Control Center
Control Center gives you instant access to the camera, AirPlay, control and playback of currently
playing audio, and other handy features. You can also adjust the brightness, lock the screen in
portrait orientation, turn wireless services on or of, and turn on AirDrop. For more information
about AirDrop, see AirDrop on page 36.
Open Control Center. Swipe up from the bottom edge of any screen (even the Lock screen).
Open the currently playing audio app. Tap the song title.
Close Control Center. Swipe down, tap the top of the screen, or press the Home button.
Turn of access to Control Center in apps or on the Lock screen. Go to Settings > Control Center.
Chapter 3 Basics
33
Alerts and Notiication Center
Alerts
Alerts let you know about important events. They can appear briely at the top of the screen, or
remain in the center of the screen until you acknowledge them.
Some apps may include a badge on their Home screen icon, to let you know how many new
items await—for example, the number of new email messages. If there’s a problem—such as a
message that couldn’t be sent—an exclamation mark
appears on the badge. On a folder, a
numbered badge indicates the total number of notiications for all the apps inside.
Alerts can also appear on the Lock screen.
Respond to an alert without leaving your current app. Pull down on the alert when it appears
at the top of your screen.
Note: This feature works with text and email messages, calendar invitations, and more.
Respond to an alert when iPad is locked. Swipe the alert from right to left.
Silence your alerts. Go to Settings > Do Not Disturb. You can also use Siri to turn Do Not Disturb
on or of. Say “Turn on Do Not Disturb” or “Turn of Do Not Disturb.”
Set sounds. Go to Settings > Sounds.
Notiication Center
Notiication Center collects your notiications in one place, so you can review them whenever
you’re ready. View details about your day—such as the weather forecast, appointments,
birthdays, stock quotes, and even a quick summary of what’s coming up tomorrow. Tap the
Notiications tab to review all your alerts.
Open Notiication Center. Swipe down from the top edge of the screen.
Chapter 3 Basics
34
Set Today options. To choose what information appears, tap the Edit key at the end of your
information on the Today tab. Tap + or — to add or remove information. To arrange the order of
your information, touch
, then drag it to a new position.
Set notiication options. Go to Settings > Notiications. Tap an app to set its notiication options.
For example, choose to view a notiication from the Lock screen. You can also tap Edit to arrange
the order of app notiications. Touch
, then drag it to a new position.
Choose whether to show Today and Notiications View on a locked screen. Go to Settings >
Touch ID & Passcode (iPad models with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models), then
choose whether to allow access when locked.
Close Notiication Center. Swipe up, or press the Home button.
Sounds and silence
You can change or turn of the sounds iPad plays when you get a FaceTime call, text message,
email, tweet, Facebook post, reminder, or other event.
Set sound options. Go to Settings > Sounds for options such as alert tones and ringtones, and
ringer and alert volumes.
If you want to temporarily silence incoming FaceTime calls, alerts, and sound efects, see the
following section.
Do Not Disturb
Do Not Disturb is an easy way to silence iPad, whether you’re going to dinner or to sleep. It keeps
FaceTime calls and alerts from making any sounds or lighting up the screen.
Turn on Do Not Disturb. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center,
then tap . When Do Not Disturb is on,
appears in the status bar.
Note: Alarms still sound, even when Do Not Disturb is on. To make sure iPad stays silent, turn
it of.
Conigure Do Not Disturb. Go to Settings > Do Not Disturb.
You can schedule quiet hours, allow FaceTime calls from your Favorites or groups of contacts, and
allow repeated FaceTime calls to ring through for those emergency situations. You can also set
whether Do Not Disturb silences iPad only when it’s locked, or even when it’s unlocked.
Sharing
Share from apps
In many apps, you can tap Share or to choose how to share your information. The choices vary
depending on the app you’re using. Additional options may appear if you’ve downloaded apps
with sharing options. For more information, see App extensions on page 24.
Use Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Vimeo or other third-party apps with sharing options. Sign in to
your account in Settings. The third-party sharing buttons take you to the appropriate setting if
you’re not yet signed in.
Customize the diferent ways you share, view, and organize your information. Tap the More
button, then touch and drag
to move items to new positions.
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AirDrop
AirDrop lets you share your photos, videos, websites, locations, and other items wirelessly
with other nearby devices (iOS 7 or later). With iOS 8, you can share with Mac computers
with OS X Yosemite. AirDrop transfers information using Wi-Fi and Bluetooth—both must be
turned on. To use AirDrop, you need to be signed in to iCloud using your Apple ID. Transfers are
encrypted for security.
Tap to share with a nearby
friend using AirDrop.
Share an item using AirDrop. Tap Share
, then tap the name of a nearby AirDrop user.
Receive AirDrop items from others. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open
Control Center. Tap AirDrop, then choose to receive items from Contacts only or from Everyone.
You can accept or decline each request as it arrives.
Family Sharing
With Family Sharing, up to six family members can share their iTunes Store, iBooks Store, and
App Store purchases, a family calendar, and family photos, all without sharing accounts.
One adult in your household—the family organizer—invites family members to join the family
group and agrees to pay for any iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store purchases those family
members initiate while part of the family group. Once set up, family members get immediate
access to each other’s music, movies, TV shows, books, and eligible apps. In addition, family
members can easily share photos in a shared family album, add events to a family calendar,
share their location with other family members, and even help locate another family member’s
missing device.
Children under 13 can participate in Family Sharing, too. As a parent or legal guardian, the family
organizer can provide parental consent for a child to have his or her own Apple ID, and create it
on the child’s behalf. Once the account is created, it’s added to the family group automatically.
Family Sharing requires you to sign in to iCloud with your Apple ID. You will also be asked to
conirm the Apple ID you use for the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store. It is available on
devices with iOS 8, Mac computers with OS X Yosemite, and PCs with iCloud for Windows 4.0.
You can be part of only one family group at a time.
Set up Family Sharing. Go to Settings > iCloud > Set Up Family Sharing. Follow the onscreen
instructions to set up Family Sharing as the family organizer, then invite family members to join.
Create an Apple ID for a child. Go to Settings > iCloud > Family, scroll to the bottom of the
screen, then tap Create an Apple ID for a child.
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Accept an invitation to Family Sharing. Make sure you are signed in to iCloud, and that you can
accept a Family Sharing invitation from your iOS device (iOS 8 required), Mac (OS X Yosemite
required), or PC (iCloud for Windows 4.0 required). Or, if the organizer is nearby during the setup
process, he or she can simply ask you to enter the Apple ID and password you use for iCloud.
Access shared iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store purchases. Open iTunes Store, iBooks
Store, or App Store, tap Purchased, then choose a family member from the menu that appears.
When a family member initiates a purchase, it is billed directly to the family organizer’s account.
Once purchased, the item is added to the initiating family member’s account and is shared with
the rest of the family. If Family Sharing is ever disabled, each person keeps the items they chose
to purchase—even if they were paid for by the family organizer.
Turn on Ask to Buy. The family organizer can require young family members to request approval
for purchases or free downloads. Go to Settings > iCloud > Family, then tap the person’s name.
Note: Age restrictions for Ask to Buy vary by area. In the United States, the family organizer can
enable Ask to Buy for any family member under age 18; for children under age 13, it’s enabled
by default.
Hide your iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store purchases. To hide all your purchases from
family members, tap Settings > iCloud > Family > [your name], then turn of Share My Purchases.
On your computer, you can also hide speciic purchases so they aren’t available to other family
members. See support.apple.com/en-us/HT201322.
Share photos or videos with family members. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared album
called “Family” is automatically created in the Photos app on all family members’ devices. To share
a photo or video with family members, open the Photos app, then view a photo or video or
select multiple photos or videos. Tap , tap iCloud Photo Sharing, add comments, then share to
your shared family album. See iCloud Photo Sharing on page 83.
Add an event to the family calendar. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared calendar called
“Family” is automatically created in the Calendar app on all family members’ devices. To add a
family event, open the Calendar app, create an event, then choose to add the event to the family
calendar. See Share iCloud calendars on page 79.
Set up a family reminder. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared list is automatically created
in the Reminders app on all family members’ devices. To add a reminder to the family list, open
the Reminders app, tap the family list, then add a reminder to the list. See Reminders at a
glance on page 105.
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Share your location with family members. Family members can share their location by tapping
Settings > iCloud > Share My Location (under Advanced). To ind a family member’s location,
use the Find My Friends app (download it for free from the App Store). Or, use the Messages
app (iOS 8 required). For more information about using Messages to share or view locations, see
Share photos, videos, your location, and more on page 51.
Keep track of your family’s devices. If family members have enabled Share My Location in
iCloud, you can help them locate missing devices. Open Find My iPhone on your device or at
iCloud.com. For more information, see Find My iPad on page 44.
Leave Family Sharing. Go to Settings > iCloud > Family, then tap Leave Family Sharing. If you are
the organizer, go to Settings > iCloud > Family, tap your name, then tap Stop Family Sharing. For
more information, see support.apple.com/kb/HT201081.
iCloud Drive
About iCloud Drive
iCloud Drive stores your presentations, spreadsheets, PDFs, images, and any other kind of
document in iCloud so you can access these documents from any of your devices set up
with iCloud. It allows your apps to share documents so you can work on the same ile across
multiple apps.
iCloud Drive works with devices with iOS 8, Mac computers with OS X Yosemite, PCs with iCloud
for Windows 4.0, or on iCloud.com. To access iCloud Drive, you must be signed in to iCloud using
your Apple ID. iCloud Drive is integrated with Pages, Numbers, Keynote, GarageBand, and some
iCloud-enabled third-party apps. Storage limits are subject to your iCloud storage plan.
Note: iCloud Drive is automatically turned on for new accounts and users (iOS 8 or later).
Set up iCloud Drive
If iCloud Drive is not turned on, you can set it up using Setup Assistant when you install iOS 8,
or you can set it up later in Settings. iCloud Drive is an upgrade to Documents & Data. When
you upgrade to iCloud Drive, your documents are copied to iCloud Drive and become available
on your devices using iCloud Drive. You won’t be able to access the documents stored in iCloud
Drive on your other devices until they are also upgraded to iOS 8 or OS X Yosemite. For more
information about upgrading to iCloud Drive, see support.apple.com/kb/HT6345.
Set up iCloud Drive. Go to Settings > iCloud > iCloud Drive, turn on iCloud Drive, then follow the
onscreen instructions.
Transfer iles
There are several ways to transfer iles between iPad and your computer or other iOS device.
Transfer iles using iTunes. Connect iPad to your computer using the included cable. In iTunes on
your computer, select iPad, then click Apps. Use the File Sharing section to transfer documents
between iPad and your computer. Apps that support ile sharing appear in the Apps list. To
delete a ile, select it in the Documents list, then press the Delete key.
You can also view iles received as email attachments on iPad.
With some apps, you can transfer iles using AirDrop. See AirDrop on page 36.
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Personal Hotspot
Use Personal Hotspot to share your iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) Internet connection.
Computers can share your Internet connection using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or a USB cable. Other iOS
devices can share the connection using Wi-Fi. Personal Hotspot works only if iPad is connected to
the Internet over the cellular data network.
Note: This feature may not be available with all carriers. Additional fees may apply. Contact your
carrier for more information.
Share an Internet connection. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, then tap Personal Hotspot—if it
appears—to set up the service with your carrier.
After you turn on Personal Hotspot, other devices can connect in the following ways:
•
•
•
Wi-Fi: On the device, choose your iPad in the list of available Wi-Fi networks.
USB: Connect your iPad to your computer using the cable that came with it. In your
computer’s Network preferences, choose iPad, then conigure the network settings.
Bluetooth: On iPad, go to Settings > Bluetooth, then turn on Bluetooth. To pair and connect
iPad with your device, refer to the documentation that came with your device.
Note: When a device is connected, a blue band appears at the top of the iPad screen. The
Personal Hotspot icon
appears in the status bar of iOS devices using Personal Hotspot.
Change the Wi-Fi password for iPad. Go to Settings > Personal Hotspot > Wi-Fi Password, then
enter a password of at least eight characters.
Monitor your cellular data network usage. Go to Settings > Cellular. See Cellular settings on
page 164.
AirPlay
Use AirPlay to stream music, photos, and video wirelessly to Apple TV and other AirPlay-enabled
devices. If you don’t see your AirPlay-enabled devices when you tap , you may also need to
make sure everything is on the same Wi-Fi network.
Display the AirPlay controls. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control
Center, then tap .
Stream content. Tap
, then choose the device you want to stream to.
Switch back to iPad. Tap
, then choose iPad.
Mirror the iPad screen on a TV. Tap , choose an Apple TV, then tap Mirroring. A blue bar
appears at the top of the iPad screen when AirPlay mirroring is turned on.
You can also connect iPad to a TV, projector, or other external display using the appropriate
Apple cable or adapter. See support.apple.com/kb/HT4108.
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AirPrint
Use AirPrint to print wirelessly to an AirPrint-enabled printer from apps such as Mail, Photos, and
Safari. Many apps available on the App Store also support AirPrint.
iPad and the printer must be on the same Wi-Fi network. For more information about AirPrint,
see support.apple.com/kb/HT4356.
Print a document. Tap
or
(depending on the app you’re using).
See the status of a print job. Double-click the Home button, then tap Print Center. The badge on
the icon shows how many documents are in the queue.
Cancel a job. Select it in Print Center, then tap Cancel Printing.
Apple Pay
On iPad models with Touch ID, you can use Apple Pay to make payments within supporting
apps (not available in all areas). These apps sell physical goods and services such as apparel,
electronics, health and beauty products, tickets, reservations, and more.
Set up Apple Pay. Go to Settings > Passbook & Apple Pay, then enter information for up to
eight supported credit or debit cards, your shipping and billing details, and your contact
information. When you add a card to use with Apple Pay, the card issuer determines if your
card is eligible to be added and may ask you to provide additional information to complete the
veriication process.
Note: Many U.S. credit and debit cards can be used with Apple Pay. For information about
Apple Pay availability and current card issuers, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT6288.
Pay in an app. Tap the Apple Pay button, then review the information that appears (for example,
the card you’re using for the payment, your email, and the shipping method). Make any changes
before using Touch ID or your passcode to complete the payment.
You may receive a notiication with the merchant name, and the amount authorized for the
purchase. Your zip code may be provided to the merchant to calculate tax and shipping costs.
Payment information—such as billing and shipping addresses, email address, and phone
number—may also be provided to the merchant once you authorize the payment with Touch ID
or a passcode.
View Apple Pay activity. Your Apple Pay activity will appear on the statement you receive from
your card issuer. You may also be able to view Apple Pay activity on supported credit cards by
going to Settings > Passbook & Apple Pay.
Suspend and remove cards. You have several options for removing or suspending credit and
debit cards. To remove a credit or debit card from Apple Pay, go to Settings > Passbook &
Apple Pay, tap an existing credit or debit card, then scroll to the bottom and tap Remove. If your
iPad is lost or stolen, and you have enabled Find My iPad, you can use it to help you locate and
secure your iPad—including suspending the use of, or removing, your credit and debit cards
used for Apple Pay. See Find My iPad on page 44. You can log in to your account at iCloud.com
and remove your cards in Settings > My Devices. You can also call the issuers of your cards.
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40
Bluetooth devices
You can use Bluetooth devices with iPad, such as stereo headphones or an Apple Wireless
Keyboard. For supported Bluetooth proiles, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT3647.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss and avoiding distractions
that could lead to dangerous situations, see Important safety information on page 157.
Note: The use of certain accessories with iPad may afect wireless performance. Not all iPhone
and iPod touch accessories are fully compatible with iPad. Turning on Airplane Mode may
eliminate audio interference between iPad and an accessory. Reorienting or relocating iPad and
the connected accessory may improve wireless performance.
Turn Bluetooth on or of. Go to Settings > Bluetooth. You can also turn Bluetooth
Control Center.
on or of in
Connect to a Bluetooth device. Tap the device in the Devices list, then follow the onscreen
instructions to connect to it. See the documentation that came with the device for information
about Bluetooth pairing. For information about using an Apple Wireless Keyboard, see Use an
Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 30.
iPad must be within about 33 feet (10 meters) of the Bluetooth device.
Return audio output to iPad. Turn of or unpair the device, turn of Bluetooth in Settings >
Bluetooth, or use AirPlay
to switch audio output to iPad. See AirPlay on page 39. Audio output
returns to iPad if the Bluetooth device moves out of range.
Unpair a device. Go to Settings > Bluetooth, tap
next to the device, then tap Forget this
Device. If you don’t see the Devices list, make sure Bluetooth is on.
Restrictions
You can set restrictions for some apps, and for purchased content. For example, parents can
restrict explicit music from appearing in playlists, or disallow changes to certain settings. Use
restrictions to prevent the use of certain apps, the installation of new apps, or changes to
accounts or the volume limit.
Turn on restrictions. Go to Settings > General > Restrictions, then tap Enable Restrictions. You’ll
be asked to deine a restrictions passcode that’s necessary to change the settings you make. This
can be diferent from the passcode for unlocking iPad.
Important: If you forget your restrictions passcode, you must restore the iPad software. See
Restore iPad on page 164.
Privacy
Privacy settings let you see and control which apps and system services have access to Location
Services, and to contacts, calendars, reminders, and photos.
Location Services lets location-based apps such as Reminders, Maps, and Camera gather and
use data indicating your location. Your approximate location is determined using available
information from local Wi-Fi networks, if you have Wi-Fi turned on. The location data collected
by Apple isn’t collected in a form that personally identiies you. When an app is using Location
Services, appears in the status bar.
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41
Turn Location Services on or of. Go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services. You can turn it of
for some or for all apps and services. If you turn of Location Services, you’re prompted to turn it
on again the next time an app or service tries to use it.
Turn Location Services of for system services. Several system services, such as location-based
ads, use Location Services. To see their status, turn them on or of, or show in the status
bar when these services use your location, go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services >
System Services.
Turn of access to private information. Go to Settings > Privacy. You can see which apps and
features have requested and been granted access to the following information:
•
Contacts
•
Calendar
•
Reminders
•
Photos
•
Bluetooth Sharing
•
Microphone
•
Camera
•
HomeKit
•
Motion Activity
•
Twitter
•
Facebook
You can turn of each app’s access to each category of information. Review the terms and privacy
policy for each third-party app to understand how it uses the data it’s requesting. For more
information, see support.apple.com/kb/HT6338.
Security
Security features help protect the information on your iPad from being accessed by others.
Use a passcode with data protection
For better security, you can set a passcode that must be entered each time you turn on or wake
up iPad.
Set a passcode. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad models with Touch ID) or Settings >
Passcode (other models), then set a 4-digit passcode.
Setting a passcode turns on data protection, using your passcode as a key to encrypt Mail
messages and attachments stored on iPad, using 256-bit AES encryption. (Other apps may also
use data protection.)
Increase security. Turn of Simple Passcode and use a longer passcode. To enter a passcode that’s
a combination of numbers and letters, you use the keyboard. If you prefer to unlock iPad using
the numeric keypad, set up a longer passcode using numbers only.
Add ingerprints and set options for the Touch ID sensor. (iPad models with Touch ID) Go to
Settings > Touch ID & Passcode. See Touch ID, below.
Allow access to features when iPad is locked. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad
models with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models). Optional features include:
•
Today (see Notiication Center on page 34)
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42
•
Notiications View (see Notiication Center on page 34)
•
Siri (if enabled, see Siri settings on page 48)
Allow access to Control Center when iPad is locked. Go to Settings > Control Center. See Control
Center on page 33.
Erase data after ten failed passcode attempts. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad
models with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models), then tap Erase Data. After ten
failed passcode attempts, all settings are reset, and all your information and media are erased by
removing the encryption key to the data.
If you forget your passcode, you must restore the iPad software. See Restore iPad on page 164.
Touch ID
On iPad models with Touch ID, you can unlock iPad by placing a inger on the Home button.
Touch ID also lets you:
•
Use your Apple ID password to make purchases in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store
•
Provide debit and credit card info, billing and shipping addresses, and contact info when
paying in an app that ofers Apple Pay as a method of payment
Set up the Touch ID sensor. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode. Set whether you want to
use a ingerprint to unlock iPad, and to make purchases. Tap Add a Fingerprint, then follow the
onscreen instructions. You can add more than one ingerprint (your thumb and foreinger, for
example, or one for your spouse).
Note: If you turn iPad of after setting up the Touch ID sensor, you’ll be asked to conirm your
passcode when you turn iPad back on and unlock it the irst time. You’ll also be asked for your
Apple ID password for the irst purchase you make in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store.
Delete a ingerprint. Tap the ingerprint, then tap Delete Fingerprint. If you have more than one
ingerprint, place a inger on the Home button to ind out which ingerprint it is.
Name a ingerprint. Tap the ingerprint, then enter a name, such as “Thumb.”
Use the Touch ID sensor to make a payment in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store.
When purchasing from the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store, follow the prompts to enable
purchases with your ingerprint. Or go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode, then turn on iTunes &
App Store.
Use Touch ID to make a payment within an app that supports Apple Pay. Go to Settings >
Touch ID & Passcode to ensure that Apple Pay is enabled with your Touch ID. For more
information, see Apple Pay on page 40.
iCloud Keychain
iCloud Keychain keeps your Safari website user names and passwords, credit card information,
and Wi-Fi network information up to date. iCloud Keychain works on all your approved devices
(iOS 7 or later) and Mac computers (OS X Mavericks or later).
iCloud Keychain works with Safari Password Generator and AutoFill. When you’re setting up a
new account, Safari Password Generator suggests unique, hard-to-guess passwords. You can
use AutoFill to have iPad enter your user name and password info, making login easy. See Fill in
forms on page 62.
Note: Some websites do not support AutoFill.
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iCloud Keychain is secured with 256-bit AES encryption during storage and transmission, and
cannot be read by Apple.
Set up iCloud Keychain. Go to Settings > iCloud > Keychain. Turn on iCloud Keychain, then
follow the onscreen instructions. If you set up iCloud Keychain on other devices, you need to
approve use of iCloud Keychain from one of those devices, or use your iCloud Security Code.
Important: Your iCloud Security Code cannot be retrieved by Apple. If you forget your security
code, you have to start over and set up your iCloud Keychain again.
Set up AutoFill. Go to Settings > Safari > Passwords & AutoFill. Make sure Names and Passwords,
and Credit Cards, are turned on (they’re on by default). To add credit card info, tap Saved
Credit Cards.
The security code for your credit card is not saved—you have to enter that manually.
To automatically ill in names, passwords, or credit card info on sites that support it, tap a text
ield, then tap AutoFill.
To protect your personal information, set a passcode if you turn on iCloud Keychain and AutoFill.
Limit Ad Tracking
Restrict or reset Ad Tracking. Go to Settings > Privacy > Advertising. Turn on Limit Ad Tracking
to prevent apps from accessing your iPad advertising identiier. For more information, tap About
Advertising & Privacy.
Find My iPad
Find My iPad can help you locate and secure your iPad using the free Find My iPhone app
(available through the App Store) on another iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch, or using a Mac or PC
web browser signed in to www.icloud.com/ind. Find My iPhone includes Activation Lock, which
is designed to prevent anyone else from using your iPad if you ever lose it. Your Apple ID and
password are required to turn of Find My iPad or to erase and reactivate your iPad.
Turn on Find My iPad. Go to Settings > iCloud > Find My iPad.
Important: To use these features, Find My iPad must be turned on before your iPad is lost. iPad
must be able to connect to the Internet for you to locate and secure the device. iPad sends its
last location prior to the battery running out when Send Last Location in Settings is turned on.
Use Find My iPhone. Open the Find My iPhone app on an iOS device, or go to
www.icloud.com/ind on your computer. Sign in, then select your device.
•
•
•
Play Sound: Play a sound at full volume for two minutes, even if the ringer is set to silent.
Lost Mode: Immediately lock your missing iPad with a passcode and send it a message
displaying a contact number. iPad tracks and reports its location, so you can see where it’s
been when you check the Find My iPhone app. Lost Mode also suspends the use of your credit
and debit cards used for Apple Pay (iPad models with Touch ID). See Apple Pay on page 40.
Erase iPad: Protect your privacy by erasing all the information and media on your iPad and
restoring it to its original factory settings. Erase iPad also removes your ability to make
payments using your credit and debit cards used for Apple Pay (iPad models with Touch ID).
See Apple Pay on page 40.
Note: Before selling or giving away your iPad, you should erase it completely to remove all of
your personal data and turn of Find My iPad to ensure the next owner can activate and use the
device normally. Go to Settings > General > Reset > Erase All Content and Settings. See Sell or
give away iPad on page 165.
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Charge and monitor the battery
iPad has an internal, lithium-ion rechargeable battery. For more information about the battery—
including tips for maximizing battery life—see www.apple.com/batteries/.
WARNING: For important safety information about the battery and charging iPad, see
Important safety information on page 157.
Charge the battery. The best way to charge the iPad battery is to connect iPad to a power outlet
using the included cable and USB power adapter.
Note: Connecting iPad to a power outlet can start an iCloud backup or wireless iTunes syncing.
See Back up iPad on page 163 and Sync with iTunes on page 19.
iPad may also charge slowly when you connect it to a USB 2.0 port on your computer. If your
Mac or PC doesn’t provide enough power to charge iPad, a “Not Charging” message appears in
the status bar.
Important: The iPad battery may drain instead of charge if iPad is connected to a computer
that’s turned of or is in sleep or standby mode, to a USB hub, or to the USB port on a keyboard.
See proportion of battery used by each app. Go to Settings > General > Usage, then tap
Battery Usage.
The battery icon in the upper-right corner of the status bar shows the battery level or
charging status.
Display the percentage of battery charge. Go to Settings > General > Usage, then turn on
Battery Percentage.
Important: If iPad is very low on power, it may display an image of a nearly depleted battery,
indicating that iPad needs to charge for up to twenty minutes before you can use it. If iPad is
extremely low on power, the display may be blank for up to two minutes before the low-battery
image appears.
Rechargeable batteries have a limited number of charge cycles and may eventually need to
be replaced. The iPad battery isn’t user replaceable; it should be replaced only by Apple or an
authorized service provider. See www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/.
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Travel with iPad
Some airlines let you keep your iPad turned on if you switch to Airplane Mode. Wi-Fi and
Bluetooth are disabled so you can’t make or receive FaceTime calls or use features that require
wireless communication, but you can listen to music, play games, watch videos, or use other
apps that don’t require Internet access. If your airline allows it, you can turn Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
back on to enable those services, even while in Airplane Mode.
Turn on Airplane Mode. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center,
then tap . You can also turn Airplane Mode on or of in Settings. When Airplane Mode is on,
appears in the status bar at the top of the screen.
You can also turn Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on or of in Control Center. See Control Center on page 33.
When you travel abroad, you may be able to sign up for cellular service with a carrier in the
country you’re visiting, right from your iPad (available on iPad models with cellular and Touch ID).
For more information see Sign up for cellular service on page 14.
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4
Siri
Use Siri
Siri (iPad 3rd generation or later) lets you speak to iPad to send messages, schedule meetings, make
FaceTime calls, and much more. Siri understands natural speech, so you don’t have to learn special
commands or keywords. Ask Siri anything, from “set the timer for 3 minutes” to “what movies are
showing tonight?” Open apps, and turn features like Airplane Mode, Bluetooth, Do Not Disturb, and
VoiceOver on or of. Siri is great for keeping you updated with the latest sports info, helping you
decide on a restaurant, and searching the iTunes Store or App Store for purchases.
Note: To use Siri, iPad must be connected to the Internet. See Connect to Wi-Fi on page 15.
Cellular charges may apply.
Summon Siri. Press and hold the Home button until Siri beeps, then make your request.
Control when Siri listens. Instead of letting Siri notice when you stop talking, you can continue
to hold down the Home button while you speak, then release it when you inish.
Hey Siri. With iPad connected to a power source (or if you’ve already started a conversation with
Siri), you can use Siri without even pressing the Home button. Just say “Hey Siri,” then make your
request. To turn Hey Siri on or of, go to Settings > General > Siri > Allow “Hey Siri”.
If you’re using a headset, you can use the center or call button in place of the Home button.
Response from Siri
Often you can tap the
screen for additional
info or further action.
Tap to speak to Siri.
For hints, ask Siri “what can you do,” or tap
.
Depending on your request, the onscreen response from Siri often includes information or
images that you can tap for additional detail, or to perform some other action like searching the
web or opening a related app.
Change the voice gender for Siri. Go to Settings > General > Siri (may not be available in all areas).
Adjust the volume for Siri. Use the volume buttons while you’re interacting with Siri.
47
Siri and apps
Siri works with many of the apps on iPad, including FaceTime, Messages, Maps, Clock, Calendar,
and more. For example, you can say things like:
•
“FaceTime Mom”
•
“Do I have any new texts from Rick?”
•
“I’m running low on gas”
•
“Set an alarm for 8 a.m.”
•
“Cancel all my meetings on Friday”
More examples of how you can use Siri with apps appear throughout this guide.
Tell Siri about yourself
If you tell Siri about yourself—including things like your home and work addresses, and your
relationships—you can get personalized service like, “remind me to call my wife when I get
home.”
Tell Siri who you are. Fill out your contact card in Contacts, go to Settings > General > Siri >
My Info, then tap your contact card.
To let Siri know about a relationship, say something like “Emily Parker is my wife.”
Note: Siri uses Location Services when your requests require knowing your location. See
Privacy on page 41.
Make corrections
If Siri doesn’t get something right, you can tap to edit your request.
Tap an icon to start
a FaceTime call.
Or tap
again, then clarify your request verbally.
Want to cancel that last command? Say “cancel,” tap the Siri icon, or press the Home button.
Siri settings
To set options for Siri, go to Settings > General > Siri. Options include:
•
Turning Siri on or of
•
Turning Allow “Hey Siri” on or of
•
Language
•
Voice gender (may not be available in all areas)
•
Voice feedback
•
My Info card
Prevent access to Siri when iPad is locked. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad models
with Touch ID) or Settings > Passcode (other models). You can also disable Siri by turning on
restrictions. See Restrictions on page 41.
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Messages
5
iMessage service
With the Messages app and the built-in iMessage feature, you can send text messages over
Wi-Fi to others using iOS 5 or later, or OS X Mountain Lion or later. Messages can include photos,
videos, and other info. You can see when people are typing, and let them know when you’ve read
their messages. If you’re signed in to iMessage using the same Apple ID on other iOS devices or
a Mac (OS X Mavericks or later), you can start a conversation on one device and continue it on
another. For security, messages you send with iMessage are encrypted before they’re sent.
With Continuity (iOS 8 or later), you can also send and receive SMS and MMS messages on your
iPad, relayed through your iPhone. Both your iPad and iPhone must be signed in to iMessage
using the same Apple ID. Charges may apply to the text messaging service for your iPhone. See
About Continuity features on page 24.
Sign in to iMessage. Go to Settings > Messages, then turn on iMessage.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions that could lead to dangerous
situations, see Important safety information on page 157.
Note: Cellular data charges or additional fees may apply for you, and for the iPhone and iPad
users you exchange messages with over their cellular data network.
49
Send and receive messages
Tap the compose button to
start a new conversation.
Get info, make a voice
or FaceTime call,
share your location,
or mute notifications.
Blue indicates an
iMessage conversation.
Send a photo or video.
Add your voice to
the conversation.
Start a conversation. Tap , then enter a phone number or email address, or tap , then
choose a contact. You can also start a conversation by tapping a phone number in Contacts,
Calendar, or Safari, or from a recent contact in the multitasking screen.
Note: An alert
appears if a message can’t be sent. Tap the alert in a conversation to try
sending the message again.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Send a message to Emily saying how about tomorrow”
•
“Read my messages”
•
“Read my last message from Bob”
•
“Reply that’s great news”
Resume a conversation. Tap the conversation in the Messages list.
Hide the keyboard. Tap
in the lower-right corner.
Use picture characters. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards > Add New Keyboard,
then tap Emoji to make that keyboard available. Then while typing a message, tap
to bring up
the Emoji keyboard. See Special input methods on page 155.
Tap to Talk. Touch and hold
swipe left.
to record a message, then swipe up to send it. To delete it,
To save space, Tap to Talk audio messages that you receive are deleted automatically two
minutes after you listen to them, unless you tap Keep. To keep them automatically, go to
Settings > Messages > Expire (under Audio Messages), then tap Never.
See what time a message was sent or received. Drag any bubble to the left.
See a person’s contact info. In a conversation, tap Details, then tap
perform actions, such as making a FaceTime call.
Send messages to a group. Tap
Chapter 5 Messages
. Tap the info items to
, then enter multiple recipients.
50
Give a group a name. While viewing the conversation, tap Details, drag down, then enter the
name in the Subject line.
Add someone to a group. Tap the To ield, then tap Add Contact.
Leave a group. Tap Details, then tap Leave this Conversation.
Keep it quiet. Tap Details, then turn on Do Not Disturb to mute notiications for the conversation.
Block unwanted messages. On a contact card, tap Block this Caller. You can see someone’s
contact card while viewing a message by tapping Details, then tapping . You can also block
callers in Settings > Messages > Blocked. You won’t receive FaceTime calls or text messages from
blocked callers. For more information about blocking calls, see support.apple.com/kb/HT5845.
Manage conversations
Conversations are saved in the Messages list. A blue dot
conversation to view or continue it.
indicates unread messages. Tap a
Forward a message or attachment. Touch and hold a message or attachment, tap More, select
additional items if desired, then tap
.
Delete a message or attachment. Touch and hold a message or attachment, tap More, select
additional items if desired, then tap .
Delete a conversation. In the Messages list, swipe the conversation from right to left, then
tap Delete.
Search conversations. In the Messages list, tap the top of the screen to display the search ield,
then enter the text you’re looking for. You can also search conversations from the Home screen.
See Spotlight Search on page 32.
Share photos, videos, your location, and more
You can send photos, videos, locations, contact info, and voice memos. The size limit of
attachments is determined by your service provider—iPad may compress photo and video
attachments when necessary.
Quickly take and send a photo or video. Touch and hold . Then slide to
or
to take a
photo or video. Photos are sent immediately. Tap to preview your video. To send your Video
Message, tap .
To save space, Video Messages that you receive are deleted automatically two minutes after you
view them, unless you tap Keep. To keep them automatically, go to Settings > Messages > Expire
(under Video Messages), then tap Never.
Chapter 5 Messages
51
Send photos and videos from your Photos library. Tap . Recent shots are right there; tap
Photo Library for older ones. Select the items you want to send.
View attachments. While viewing a conversation, tap Details. Attachments are shown in reverse
chronological order at the bottom of the screen. Tap an attachment to see it in full screen. In fullscreen mode, tap
to view the attachments as a list.
Send your current location. Tap Details, then tap Send My Current Location to send a map that
shows where you are.
Share your location. Tap Details, tap Share My Location, then specify the length of time. The
person you’re texting can see your location by tapping Details. To turn Share My Location on
or of, or to select the device that determines your location, go to Settings > iCloud > Share My
Location (under Advanced).
Send items from another app. In the other app, tap Share or
, then tap Message.
Share, save, or print an attachment. Tap the attachment, then tap
.
Copy a photo or video. Touch and hold the attachment, then tap Copy.
Messages settings
Go to Settings > Messages, where you can:
•
Turn iMessage on or of
•
Notify others when you’ve read their messages
•
Specify phone numbers, Apple IDs, and email addresses to use with Messages
•
Show the Subject ield
•
Block unwanted messages
•
Set how long to keep messages
•
Filter unknown senders
•
Manage the expiration of audio messages and video messages created within Messages
(audio or video attachments created outside of Messages are kept until you delete them
manually)
Manage notiications for messages. See Notiication Center on page 34.
Set the alert sound for incoming text messages. See Sounds and silence on page 35.
Chapter 5 Messages
52
6
Mail
Write messages
Mail lets you access all of your email accounts, on the go.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding distractions that could lead to dangerous
situations, see Important safety information on page 157.
Change mailboxes
or accounts.
Search for
messages.
Delete, move, or mark
multiple messages.
Compose a
message.
Change the preview length in
Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
Insert a photo or video. Double-tap, then tap Insert Photo or Video. Also see Edit text on
page 30.
Quote some text when you reply. Tap the insertion point, then select the text you want to
include. Tap
, then tap Reply. You can turn of the indentation of the quoted text in Settings >
Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Increase Quote Level.
Send a message from a diferent account. Tap the From ield to choose an account.
53
Change a recipient from Cc to Bcc. After you enter recipients, you can drag them from one ield
to another or change their order.
Mark addresses outside certain domains. When you’re addressing a message to a recipient
that’s not in your organization’s domain, Mail can color the recipient’s name red to alert you.
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Mark Addresses, then deine the domains that you
don’t want marked. You can enter multiple domains separated by commas, such as “apple.com,
example.org.”
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“New email to Susan Conway”
•
“Email Dr. Patrick and say I got the forms, thanks”
Get a sneak peek
See a longer preview. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Preview. You can show up to
ive lines.
Is this message for me? Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then turn on Show To/Cc
Label. If the label says Cc instead of To, you were just copied. You can also use the To/Cc mailbox,
which gathers all mail addressed to you. To show it, tap Edit while viewing the Mailboxes list.
Finish a message later
Look at another message while you’re writing one. Swipe down on the title bar of a message
you’re writing. When you’re ready to return to your message, tap its title at the bottom of the
screen. If you have more than one message waiting to be inished, tap the bottom of the screen
to see them all.
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54
Save a draft for later. If you’re writing a message and want to inish it later, tap Cancel, then tap
Save Draft. To get it back, touch and hold Compose.
With OS X Yosemite, you can also hand of uninished messages with your Mac. See About
Continuity features on page 24.
See important messages
Get notiied of replies to a message or thread. Tap , then tap Notify Me. While you’re writing
a message, you can also tap in the Subject ield. To change how notiications appear, go to
Settings > Notiications > Mail > Thread Notiications.
Gather important messages. Add important people to your VIP list, so all their messages appear
in the VIP mailbox. Tap the sender’s name in a message, then tap Add to VIP. To change how
notiications appear, go to Settings > Notiications > Mail > VIP.
Get notiied of important messages. Notiication Center lets you know when you receive
messages in favorite mailboxes or messages from your VIPs. Go to Settings > Notiications > Mail.
Flag a message so you can ind it later. Tap while reading the message. To change the
appearance of the lagged message indicator, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars >
Flag Style. To see the Flagged smart mailbox, tap Edit while viewing the Mailboxes list, then
tap Flagged.
Search for a message. Scroll to or tap the top of the message list to reveal the search ield.
Searching looks at the address ields, the subject, and the message body. To search multiple
accounts at once, search from a smart mailbox, such as All Sent.
Search by timeframe. Scroll to or tap the top of the message list to reveal the search ield,
then type something like “February meeting” to ind all messages from February with the
word “meeting.”
Search by message state. To ind all lagged, unread messages from people in your VIP list, type
“lag unread vip.” You can also search for other message attributes, such as “attachment.”
Junk be gone! Tap while you’re reading a message, then tap Move to Junk to ile it in the Junk
folder. If you accidentally move a message, shake iPad immediately to undo.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Any new mail from Jonah today?”
Make a favorite mailbox. Favorite mailboxes appear at the top of the Mailboxes list. To add a
favorite, tap Edit while viewing the Mailboxes list. Tap Add Mailbox, then select the mailbox to
add. You’ll also get push notiications for your favorite mailboxes.
Show draft messages from all of your accounts. While viewing the Mailboxes list, tap Edit, tap
Add Mailbox, then turn on the All Drafts mailbox.
Chapter 6 Mail
55
Attachments
Save a photo or video to Photos. Touch and hold the photo or video until a menu appears, then
tap Save Image.
Open an attachment with another app. Touch and hold the attachment until a menu appears,
then tap the app you want to use to open the attachment. Some attachments automatically
show a banner with buttons you can use to open other apps.
See messages with attachments. The Attachments mailbox shows messages with attachments
from all accounts. To add it, tap Edit while viewing the Mailboxes list.
Work with multiple messages
Delete, move, or mark a message. While viewing a list of messages, swipe a message to the left
to reveal a menu of actions. Swipe all the way to the left to select the irst action. You can also
swipe a message to the right to reveal another action. Choose the actions you want to appear in
Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Swipe Options.
Delete, move, or mark multiple messages. While viewing a list of messages, tap Edit. Select
some messages, then choose an action. If you make a mistake, shake iPad immediately to undo.
Organize your mail with mailboxes. Tap Edit in the mailboxes list to create a new one, or rename
or delete one. (Some built-in mailboxes can’t be changed.) There are several smart mailboxes,
such as Unread, that show messages from all your accounts. Tap the ones you want to use.
Recover a deleted message. Go to the account’s Trash mailbox, open the message, then tap
and move the message. Or, if you just deleted it, shake iPad to undo. To see deleted messages
across all your accounts, add the Trash mailbox. To add it, tap Edit in the mailboxes list, then
select it in the list.
Archive instead of delete. Instead of deleting messages, you can archive them so they’re still
around if you need them. Select Archive Mailbox in Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars >
account name > Account > Advanced. To delete a message instead of archiving it, touch and
hold , then tap Delete.
Stash your trash. You can set how long deleted messages stay in the Trash mailbox. Go to
Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > account name > Account > Advanced.
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56
See and save addresses
See who received a message. While viewing the message, tap More in the To ield.
Add someone to Contacts or make them a VIP. Tap the person’s name or email address, then tap
Add to VIP. You can also add their address to a new or existing contact.
Mark person
as a VIP.
Print messages
Print a message. Tap
, then tap Print.
Print an attachment or picture. Tap to view it, tap
, then choose Print.
See AirPrint on page 40.
Mail settings
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, where you can:
•
Create a diferent mail signature for each account
•
Add mail accounts
•
Set Out of Oice replies for Exchange email accounts
•
Bcc yourself on every message you send
•
Turn on Organize by Thread to group related messages together
•
Turn of conirmation for deleting a message
•
Turn of Push delivery of new messages, to save on battery power
•
Temporarily turn of an account
Chapter 6 Mail
57
7
Safari
Safari at a glance
Use Safari on iPad to browse the web, use Reading List to collect webpages to read later, and add
page icons to the Home screen for quick access. Use iCloud to see pages you have open on other
devices, and to keep your bookmarks, history, and reading list up to date on your other devices.
See your bookmarks,
reading list, and
shared links.
Enter a web address or search item,
or get quick access to your Favorites.
View open tabs.
Your open tabs
Open a new tab.
Share, print, and more.
To zoom, double tap
an item or pinch.
Search the web
Search the web. Enter a URL or search term in the search ield at the top of the page, then tap a
search suggestion, or tap Go on the keyboard to search for exactly what you typed. If you don’t
want to see suggested search terms, go to Settings > Safari, then (under Search) turn of Search
Engine Suggestions.
Quickly search a site you’ve visited before. Enter the name of the site, followed by your search
term. For example, enter “wiki einstein” to search Wikipedia for “einstein.” Go to Settings > Safari >
Quick Website Search to turn this feature on or of.
Have your favorites top the list. Select them at Settings > Safari > Favorites.
58
Search the page. Scroll to the bottom of the suggested results list, then tap the entry under
On This Page. Tap in the bottom left to see the next occurrence on the page. To search the
page for a diferent term, enter it in the ield at the bottom of the page. To continue browsing,
tap Done.
Choose your search tool. Go to Settings > Safari > Search Engine.
Browse the web
Look before you leap. To see the URL of a link before you go there, touch and hold the link.
Touch and hold a link
to see these options.
Open a link in a new tab. Touch and hold the link, then tap Open in New Tab. If you’d like to
switch to a new tab when you open it, go to Settings > Safari, then turn of Open New Tabs
in Background.
Browse open tabs. Tap , or pinch with three ingers to view all your open tabs. If you have
several open tabs, tabs for the same site are stacked. To close a tab, tap in the upper-left
corner, or swipe the tab to the left. To return to a single tab, tap a tab, tap Done, or spread
three ingers.
View tabs open on your other devices. If you turn on Safari in Settings > iCloud, you can view
tabs that you have open on your other devices. Tap , then scroll to the lists at the bottom of
the page.
Note: If you close the tab on iPad, the tab also closes on your other devices.
View recently closed tabs. Touch and hold
.
Get back to the top. Tap the top edge of the screen to quickly return to the top of a long page.
See more. Turn iPad to landscape orientation.
See the latest. Tap
next to the address in the search ield to update the page.
See a tab’s history. Touch and hold
or .
View the desktop version of a site. If you want to see the full desktop version of a site instead of
the mobile version, tap the search ield, pull down the display of your favorites, then tap Request
Desktop Site.
Chapter 7 Safari
59
Keep bookmarks
Bookmark the current page. Tap
View your bookmarks. Tap
(or touch and hold
, then tap
), then tap Add Bookmark.
.
Get organized. To create a folder for bookmarks, tap
, then tap Edit.
Add a webpage to your favorites. Open the page, tap the search ield, drag down, then tap
Add to Favorites.
Quickly see your favorite and frequently visited sites. Tap the search ield to see your favorites.
Scroll down to see frequently visited sites.
Edit your favorites. Tap the search ield, then touch and hold a page or folder until the icon gets
larger. Then you can delete the item, or tap edit to rename or move it.
Choose which favorites appear when you tap the search ield. Go to Settings > Safari >
Favorites.
Bookmarks bar on your Mac? Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Safari if you want items from
the bookmarks bar in Safari on your Mac to appear in Favorites on iPad.
Save an icon for the current page on your Home screen. Tap
The icon appears only on the device where you create it.
Chapter 7 Safari
, then tap Add to Home Screen.
60
Save a reading list for later
Save interesting items in your reading list so you can revisit them later. You can read pages in
your reading list even when you’re not connected to the Internet.
Add the current page to your reading list. Tap
, then tap Add to Reading List.
Add a linked page without opening it. Touch and hold the link, then tap Add to Reading List.
View your reading list. Tap
, then tap
.
Delete something from your reading list. Swipe left on the item in your reading list.
Don’t want to use cellular data to download reading list items? Go to Settings > Safari, then
turn of Use Cellular Data.
Shared links and subscriptions
You can view links shared from social media, such as Twitter, or feeds from your subscriptions.
View shared links and subscriptions. Tap
, then tap
.
Subscribe to a feed. Go to a site that provides a subscription feed, tap
Links, then conirm by tapping Add to Shared Links.
, tap Add to Shared
Delete a subscription. Tap , tap , tap Subscriptions below the list of your shared links, then
tap
next to the subscription you want to delete.
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61
Spread the news. Tap
.
Tap to share with
someone nearby
using AirDrop.
Other sharing options
Fill in forms
Whether you’re logging in to a website, signing up for a service, or making a purchase, you can
ill in a web form using the onscreen keyboard or have Safari ill it in for you using AutoFill.
Tap AutoFill
instead of
typing your
contact info.
Tired of always having to log in? When you’re asked if you want to save the password for the
site, tap Yes. The next time you visit, your user name and password will be illed in for you.
Fill in a form. Tap any ield to bring up the onscreen keyboard. Tap
move from ield to ield.
or
above the keyboard to
Fill it in automatically. Go to Settings > Safari > Passwords & AutoFill, then turn on Use Contact
Info. Then, tap AutoFill above the onscreen keyboard when you’re illing in the form. Not all
websites support AutoFill.
Add a credit card for purchases. Go to Settings > Safari > Passwords & AutoFill > Saved Credit
Cards > Add Credit Card. To enter the information without typing it, tap Use Camera, then hold
iPad above the card so that the image of the card its in the frame. You can also add a credit
card by accepting when Safari ofers to save it when you make an online purchase. See iCloud
Keychain on page 43.
Use your credit card information. Look for the AutoFill Credit Card button above the onscreen
keyboard whenever you’re in a credit card ield. Your card’s security code isn’t stored, so you still
enter that yourself. If you’re not using a passcode for iPad, you might want to start; see Use a
passcode with data protection on page 42.
Submit a form. Tap Go, Search, or the link on the webpage.
Chapter 7 Safari
62
Avoid clutter with Reader
Use Safari Reader to focus on a page’s primary content.
Tap to view the page in Reader.
Focus on content. Tap
at the left end of the address ield. If you don’t see the icon, Reader
isn’t available for the page you’re looking at.
Share just the good stuf. To share just the article text and a link to it, tap
page in Reader.
while viewing the
Return to the full page. Tap the Reader icon in the address ield again.
Privacy and security
You can adjust Safari settings to keep your browsing activities to yourself and protect yourself
from malicious websites.
Want to keep a low proile? Go to Settings > Safari, then turn on Do Not Track. Safari will ask
websites you visit not to track your browsing, but beware—a website can choose not to honor
the request.
Control cookies. Go to Settings > Safari > Block Cookies. To remove cookies already on iPad, go
to Settings > Safari > Clear History and Website Data.
Let Safari create secure passwords and store them for you. Tap the password ield when
creating a new account and Safari will ofer to create a password for you.
Erase your browsing history and data from iPad. Go to Settings > Safari > Clear History, and
Settings > Safari > Clear History and Website Data.
Visit sites without making history. Tap , then tap Private. Sites you visit won’t appear in
iCloud Tabs or be added to History on your iPad. To put away your private sites, tap , then tap
Private again. You can close the pages, or keep them for viewing the next time you use Private
Browsing Mode.
Watch for suspicious websites. Go to Settings > Safari, then turn on Fraudulent Website Warning.
Chapter 7 Safari
63
Safari settings
Go to Settings > Safari, where you can:
•
Choose your search engine and conigure search results
•
Provide AutoFill information
•
Choose which favorites are displayed when you search
•
Have new tabs open in the background
•
Display your Favorites at the top of the page
•
Block pop-ups
•
Tighten privacy and security
•
Clear your history and website data
•
Choose whether to use cellular data for Reading List items (Wi-Fi + Cellular models)
•
Conigure advanced settings and more
Chapter 7 Safari
64
Music
8
Music at a glance
Use Music to enjoy music stored on iPad as well as music streamed over the Internet, including
the live worldwide station Beats 1. With an optional Apple Music membership, listen to millions
of tracks and connect with your favorite artists.
Note: You need a Wi-Fi or cellular connection to stream Apple Music, Radio, and Connect
content. In some cases an Apple ID is also required. Services and features are not available
in all areas, and features may vary by area. Additional charges may apply when using a
cellular connection.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information on page 157.
Access music
Play music and other audio content on iPad in the following ways:
•
Become an Apple Music member: With a membership and Wi-Fi or cellular connection, stream
as much music as you like from the Apple Music catalog and make songs, albums, and playlists
available for oline play. See Apple Music below.
Note: If you end your Apple Music membership, you can no longer stream Apple Music tracks
or play Apple Music tracks saved for oline play.
•
•
•
•
•
Listen to Beats 1: Ad-supported radio is available in the U.S. and Australia. Everyone around the
world can tune in to Beats 1 for free.
Purchase music from the iTunes Store: Go to iTunes Store. See iTunes Store at a glance on
page 113.
iCloud Music Library: iCloud Music Library includes all your music from Apple Music, your
iTunes purchases, and songs uploaded from your computer, along with your iTunes Match
library. Find this music in My Music. See My Music on page 72.
Family Sharing: Purchase an Apple Music Family Membership and everyone in your Family
Sharing group can enjoy Apple Music. If you aren’t an Apple Music member, you can still
listen to songs purchased by other members of your family who have chosen to share their
purchases. Go to iTunes Store, tap More, tap Purchased, then choose a family member. See
Family Sharing on page 36.
Sync content with iTunes on your computer: See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
65
Apple Music
As an Apple Music member you can listen to dozens of hand-curated ad-free radio stations
and create your own stations, all with unlimited skips. You can also access millions of songs
for streaming and oline play, receive recommendations from music experts and artists, share
playlists among friends, and enjoy content posted directly by artists.
Just like nonmembers, you can also listen to music stored on iPad, access iTunes purchases
available through Family Sharing, stream previous iTunes purchases to iPad, and listen to
Beats 1 radio. (You can also play tracks identiied by iTunes Match if you have an iTunes Match
subscription.)
You can join Apple Music when you irst open Music. Or go to Settings > Music > Join
Apple Music.
Note: You can play Apple Music and Radio tracks on only one device at a time unless you
have an Apple Music Family Membership, which lets you play music simultaneously on
multiple devices.
Get personalized recommendations
Apple Music can suggest songs you might enjoy, with a little guidance from you about your
genre and artist preferences.
Select your favorite genres and artists. When you irst tap For You, you are prompted to tell
Music about your preferences. Tap the genres you like. (Double-tap those you love, and touch
and hold the genres you don’t care for.) Tap Next, then do the same with the artist names that
appear. Apple Music uses these preferences when recommending music to you.
Update genre and artist preferences. Tap
, then tap Choose Artists for You.
For You
Discover expertly selected playlists and albums based on your tastes.
Play recommended
playlists or albums.
Miniplayer
Chapter 8 Music
Tap to view the contents
of a playlist or album.
66
View music tweaked to your taste. Tap to play an album or playlist. Tap an album or a
playlist’s album art to view its contents. If you ind a recommendation you don’t care for, tap and
hold it and tell Music that it’s not to your taste. To get more recommendations, pull down.
Tell Music what you love. Tap
when viewing an album’s contents or an artist’s screen, or from
Now Playing to help improve future recommendations
Reorder a For You playlist. Play the playlist, tap the Miniplayer to show the Now Playing screen,
then tap
. Drag
to rearrange the song order.
Add For You playlists. Tap
, then tap Add to My Playlists. The playlist remains in your library
and updates automatically if the playlist changes. (Go to Settings > Music, then turn on iCloud
Music Library to enable this feature.)
Do more with your music. When viewing an album’s contents tap
to add music to the Up
Next queue, create a station based on the currently selected music, or share music with a friend.
Search for and add music
Find your music. Tap , tap My Music, then enter a song, album, playlist, artist, compilation, or
genre. Results include music on iPad as well as music in your iCloud Music Library. Tap a result to
play it.
Search Apple Music. Tap , tap Apple Music, then select a trending search or enter a song,
album, playlist, artist, curator, music video, activity, radio station, or genre. Tap a result to play it.
Add Apple Music. To add music, tap
next to any result, then tap Add to My Music. To stream
an added song to iPad, tap it within My Music. To save music to iPad so that you can play it when
you don’t have a Wi-Fi or cellular connection, tap Make Available Oline.
To see the progress of tracks being saved to iPad, and to access options for pausing tracks or
removing them from the Downloads window, tap the Downloads bar.
Note: Settings > Music > iCloud Music Library must be turned on to add and save Apple Music
to your library.
Play music
Tap to hide Now Playing.
Playhead
Chapter 8 Music
Volume
Up Next
67
Control playback. Tap a song to play it and show the Miniplayer. Tap the Miniplayer to show the
Now Playing screen, where you can do the following:
•
Tap
to skip to the next song.
•
Tap
to return to the song’s beginning.
•
Double-tap
to play an album or playlist’s previous song.
Skip to any point in a song. Drag the playhead. Decrease the scrubbing speed by sliding your
inger down the screen.
Share music. Tap
, then choose a sharing option.
Shule. Tap
to play your songs in random order.
Repeat. Tap
to repeat an album or playlist. Double-tap
More. Tap
to repeat a single song.
for additional options.
See what’s up next. Tap
the list.
. Tap a song to play it and the songs that follow. Drag
Stream music to an AirPlay-enabled device. Tap
AirPlay on page 39.
to reorder
in Now Playing, then choose a device. See
New
Music experts pick today’s best music. Tap New to browse their recommendations.
Play featured music.
Play other songs and
albums recommended
by Apple’s experts.
Browse expert recommendations. Tap New, then tap a featured album, song, artist, or playlist.
Browse your favorite genres. Tap All Genres, choose a genre, then tap a featured album, song,
artist, or playlist to hear music handpicked by music experts.
Fit the music to the mood. Tap Activities to play music that its with what you’re doing (or how
you’re feeling).
Get expert advice. Tap Apple Editors or Curators to discover music recommended by music
experts. Tap Follow to keep up with your favorite experts.
See what’s hot. Tap Top Charts to view top songs, top albums, and other popular content.
Chapter 8 Music
68
Radio
Radio ofers the always-on Beats 1, featuring top DJs playing today’s best music. The featured
stations created by experts provide a great way to explore and enjoy new music in a variety of
genres. You can also create your own custom stations, based on your pick of artist, song, or genre.
Tap to play the station.
Listen to live radio. Tap Listen Now to tune in to Beats 1.
Listen to your favorite music genre. Tap a station or, if you already listened to a station, tap a
recently played station.
Create a station. When browsing an artist, song, or genre, tap
Chapter 8 Music
, then tap Start Station.
69
Connect
Even if you’re not an Apple Music member you can follow your favorite artists, learn more about
them, read their recent posts, and comment on what you ind.
View posts from your
favorite artists.
Follow an artist. Music automatically follows the artists found in your music library. To follow
other artists, navigate to an artist’s page, then tap Follow. To stop following an artist, go to
the artist’s page, then tap Unfollow. Or tap , tap Following, then tap Unfollow next to the
artist’s name.
View an artist’s content. Tap Connect to view the content shared by artists you follow. You can
also navigate to any artist’s page to see what that artist is sharing.
Make a comment. Tap
a comment.
Share an artist post. Tap
Chapter 8 Music
to write a comment. Create a nickname the irst time you make
, then choose a sharing option.
70
Playlists
Create playlists to organize your music. Tap Playlists, then tap New. Enter a title, then tap
Add Songs. Select songs and albums to add to the playlist. (If you chose to hide the Apple Music
features, you can tap Playlists to create a new playlist.)
To customize your playlist’s artwork, tap
photo library.
and take a photo or choose an image from your
View particular playlists. In addition to playlists you create, Playlists includes playlists you added
from Apple Music, as well as those shared with you. To view just the playlists you created, tap All
Playlists, then tap My Playlists. You can also choose to see just Apple Music Playlists or only the
playlists saved on iPad.
Create a Genius playlist. In My Music tap
next to a song, then tap Create Genius Playlist.
Edit a playlist you created on iPad. Select the playlist, then tap Edit.
•
•
Add more songs: Tap Add Songs.
Delete a song: Tap
from iPad.
, then tap Delete. Deleting a song from a playlist doesn’t delete it
Change the song order: Drag
.
New and changed playlists are added to iCloud Music Library and appear on all your devices if
you’re an Apple Music member or iTunes Match subscriber. If you’re not a member or subscriber,
they’re copied to your music library the next time you sync iPad with your computer.
•
Delete a playlist you created on iPad. Tap
Create a new playlist.
next to the playlist, then tap Delete.
Tap to reorder or delete playlists.
iTunes Match
If you have an iTunes Match subscription and an Apple Music membership, your iTunes Match
library will be accessible in iCloud Music Library.
Subscribe to iTunes Match. Go to Settings > Music > Subscribe to iTunes Match.
Turn on iTunes Match. Go to Settings > iTunes & App Store. Sign in if you haven’t already.
Chapter 8 Music
71
My Music
My Music includes any Apple Music content you added, music and music videos synced to iPad,
iTunes purchases, and the music you make available through iTunes Match.
Choose a sorting method.
Tap to play a recently
added album or songs.
Tap to view an album’s
contents.
Browse and play your music. Tap the sorting menu to display your music by Artists, Albums,
Songs, and more. Tap the album art to play a song or album. Tap the Miniplayer to display the
Now Playing screen.
Save music to iPad. Tap
next to an album or track, then tap Make Available Oline.
View only music stored on iPad. Tap My Music, tap the sorting menu, then turn on Music
Available Oline.
Remove a song stored on iPad. Tap
next to the song, then tap Remove Download. The song
is deleted from iPad, but not from iCloud Music Library.
To manage music storage on iPad, go to Settings > General > Usage > Manage Storage > Music.
Add music to a playlist. Tap
a playlist.
next to an album or track, tap Add to a Playlist, then choose
Siri
You can use Siri to control music playback. To activate Siri, press and hold the Home button. See
Use Siri on page 47.
•
•
•
•
Play or pause music: Say “play,” “play music,” or “play Radio.” To pause, say “pause,” “pause music,”
or “stop.” You can also say “next song” or “previous song.”
Play a speciic album, artist, song, playlist, or Radio station: Say “play” followed by the name of
the artist, album, song, playlist, or station that you want to play. If Siri doesn’t ind what you
asked for, be more speciic. For example, say “play the radio station ‘Pure Pop’” rather than
saying “play ‘Pure Pop.’”
Find out more about the current song: Say “what’s playing,” “who sings this song,” or “who is this
song by.”
Play music in random order: Say “shule play” followed by the name of the artist or album you’d
like to play in random order. Say “shule” to shule the current playlist.
Chapter 8 Music
72
•
•
•
Play similar music: While music is playing, say “play more songs like this one” or “create a radio
station based on this song.”
Browse Apple Music: You can play any Apple Music track by title (“play ‘Happy’ by Pharrell
Williams”), by artist (“play Echosmith”), by movie (“play that song from Into the Woods”), by
chart (“play the top song from March 1981”), and then change versions (“play the live version
of it”).
Add music from Apple Music to your collection (Apple Music membership required): Say, for
example, “add ‘Lifted Up’ by Passion Pit to My Music” or, while playing something, say “add this
to my collection.”
Siri can also help you ind music in the iTunes Store. See “Find it with Siri” in Browse or search on
page 114.
Music settings
Go to Settings > Music to set options for Music. The options you see depend on your
membership status.
•
Apple Music: If you’re not currently an Apple Music member you can choose to show
Apple Music features as well as become a member.
•
Connect: Show or hide Connect and show artist posts and shares in Now Playing and on the
Lock screen.
•
Sort Albums: You can choose to sort by artist or title.
•
•
iCloud Music Library: With this option of, all Apple Music content is removed from iPad. Music
you purchased or synced, and music identiied by iTunes Match that you added for oline
play remains.
Equalization (EQ): EQ settings generally apply only to music played from the Music
app, but they afect all sound output, including the headset jack, AirPlay, and Bluetooth
audio connections.
Note: The Late Night setting compresses the dynamic range of the audio output, reducing the
volume of loud passages and increasing the volume of quiet passages. You might want to use
this setting when listening to music on an airplane or in some other noisy environment. (The
Late Night setting applies to all audio output—video as well as music.)
•
Volume Limit: In some European Union (EU) countries, iPad may indicate when you’re setting
the volume above the EU-recommended level for hearing safety. To increase the volume
beyond this level, you may need to briely release the volume control. To limit the maximum
headset volume to this level, go to Settings > Music > Volume Limit, then turn on EU
Volume Limit.
Note: To prevent changes to the volume limit, go to Settings > General > Restrictions >
Volume Limit, then tap Don’t Allow Changes.
•
Sound Check: Sound Check normalizes the volume level of your audio content.
Chapter 8 Music
73
9
FaceTime
FaceTime at a glance
Use FaceTime to make video or audio calls to other iOS devices or computers that support
FaceTime. The FaceTime camera lets you talk face-to-face; switch to the rear iSight camera (not
available on all models) to share what you see around you.
Note: FaceTime may not be available in all areas.
Drag your image
to any corner.
Switch between cameras.
Mute (you can hear
and see; the caller
can see but not hear).
With a Wi-Fi connection and an Apple ID, you can make and receive FaceTime calls (irst sign
in using your Apple ID, or create a new account). On iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular models, you can
also make FaceTime calls over a cellular data connection, which may incur additional charges
(FaceTime over cellular data or LTE isn't available on iPad 2). See Cellular settings on page 164.
74
Make and answer calls
Make a FaceTime call. Make sure FaceTime is turned on in Settings > FaceTime. Tap FaceTime,
then type the name or number you want to call in the entry ield at the top left. Tap
to make
a video call, or tap
to make a FaceTime audio call. Or tap to open Contacts and start your
call from there.
Tap an icon to start
a FaceTime call.
Use your voice to start the call. Press and hold the Home button, then say “FaceTime,” followed
by the name of the person to call.
Want to call again? Tap FaceTime to see your call history in the left panel. Tap Audio or Video to
reine your search, then tap a name or number to call again. Tap
to open the name or number
in Contacts.
Delete a call from call history. Tap FaceTime to see your call history on the screen. Swipe to the
left, then tap Delete to delete the name or number from your call history.
Can’t take a call right now? When a FaceTime call comes in, you can answer, decline, or choose
another option.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Make a FaceTime call.”
Set up a reminder to return the call later.
Send the caller
a text message.
See the whole gang. Rotate iPad to use FaceTime in landscape orientation. To avoid unwanted
orientation changes, lock iPad in portrait orientation. See Change the screen orientation on
page 23.
Manage calls
Multitask during a call. Press the Home button, then tap an app icon. You can still talk with
your friend, but you can’t see each other. To return to the video, tap the green bar at the top of
the screen.
Juggle calls. FaceTime calls aren’t forwarded. If another call comes in while you’re on a FaceTime
call, you can either end the FaceTime call and answer the incoming call, decline the incoming
call, or reply with a text message. You can use call waiting with FaceTime audio calls only.
Use call waiting for audio calls. If you’re on a FaceTime audio call and another call comes in, you
can decline the call, end the irst call and accept the new one, or put the irst call on hold and
respond to the new call.
Block unwanted callers. Go to Settings > FaceTime > Blocked > Add New. You won’t receive
FaceTime calls or text messages from blocked callers. For more information about blocking calls,
see support.apple.com/kb/HT5845.
Chapter 9 FaceTime
75
Settings
Go to Settings > FaceTime, where you can:
•
Turn FaceTime on or of
•
Specify a phone number, Apple ID, or email address to use with FaceTime
•
Set your caller ID
Chapter 9 FaceTime
76
10
Calendar
Calendar at a glance
Change views.
Search for events.
View invitations.
Change calendars or accounts.
Add an event. Tap , then ill in the event details. If you add a location and choose Alert > Time
to leave, Calendar reminds you of the event based on the current travel time to get there.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Set up a meeting with Zack at 9.”
Search for events. Tap , then enter text in the search ield. The titles, invitees, locations, and
notes for the calendars you’re viewing are searched.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “What’s on my calendar for Friday?”
Change your view. Tap Day, Week, Month, or Year. Tap
week or day view, pinch to zoom in or out.
to view upcoming events as a list. In
Change the color of a calendar. Tap Calendars, tap
next to the calendar, then choose a color
from the list. For some calendar accounts, such as Google, the color is set by the server.
Adjust an event. Touch and hold the event, then drag it to a new time, or adjust the grab points.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Reschedule my appointment with Barry to next Monday at 9 a.m.”
77
Invitations
iCloud, Microsoft Exchange, and some CalDAV servers let you send and receive
meeting invitations.
Invite others to an event. Tap an event, tap Edit, then tap Invitees. Type names, or tap
to pick
people from Contacts. If you don’t want to be notiied when someone declines a meeting, go to
Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendar > Show Invitee Declines.
RSVP. Tap an event you’ve been invited to, or tap Inbox, then tap an invitation. If you add
comments (which may not be available for all calendars), your comments can be seen by the
organizer but not by other attendees. To see events you declined, tap Calendars, then turn on
Show Declined Events.
Schedule a meeting without blocking your schedule. Tap the event, tap Availability, then tap
“free.” If it’s an event you created, tap “Show As,” then tap “free.” The event stays on your calendar,
but it doesn’t appear as busy to others who send you invitations.
Quickly send an email to attendees. Tap the event, tap Invitees, then tap
.
Use multiple calendars
Select which
calendars to view.
Turn on Facebook
Events in Settings >
Facebook.
Turn on iCloud, Google, Exchange, or Yahoo! calendars. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts,
Calendars, tap an account, then turn on Calendar.
Subscribe to a calendar. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then tap Add Account. Tap
Other, then tap Add Subscribed Calendar. Enter the URL of the .ics ile to subscribe to. You can
also subscribe to an iCalendar (.ics) calendar by tapping a link to the calendar.
Add a CalDAV account. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, tap Add Account, then tap
Other. Under Calendars, tap Add CalDAV Account.
View the Birthdays calendar. Tap Calendars, then tap Birthdays to include birthdays from
Contacts with your events. If you set up a Facebook account, you can also include your Facebook
friends’ birthdays.
View the Holidays calendar. Tap Calendars, then tap Holidays to include national holidays with
your events.
See multiple calendars at once. Tap Calendars, then select the calendars you want to view.
Move an event to another calendar. Tap the event, tap Edit, tap Calendars, then select a calendar
to move it to.
Chapter 10 Calendar
78
Share iCloud calendars
With Family Sharing, a calendar shared with all the members of your family is created
automatically. See Family Sharing on page 36. You can also share an iCloud calendar with other
iCloud users. When you share a calendar, others can see it, and you can let them add or change
events. You can also share a read-only version that anyone can view.
Create an iCloud calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap Add Calendar in the iCloud section.
Share an iCloud calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap the iCloud calendar you want to
share. Tap Add Person, then enter a name, or tap
to browse your Contacts. Those you invite
receive an email invitation to join the calendar, but they need an iCloud account to accept.
Change a person’s access to a shared calendar. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, tap the shared calendar,
then tap the person. You can turn of his or her ability to edit the calendar, resend the invitation
to join the calendar, or stop sharing the calendar with that person.
Turn of notiications for shared calendars. When someone modiies a shared calendar,
you’re notiied of the change. To turn of notiications for shared calendars, go to Settings >
Notiications > Calendar > Shared Calendar Changes.
Share a read-only calendar with anyone. Tap Calendars, tap Edit, then tap the iCloud calendar
you want to share. Turn on Public Calendar, then tap Share Link to copy or send the URL for your
calendar. Anyone can use the URL to subscribe to the calendar using a compatible app, such as
Calendar for OS X.
Calendar settings
Several settings in Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars afect Calendar and your calendar
accounts. These include:
•
Syncing of past events (future events are always synced)
•
Alert tone played for new meeting invitations
•
Default calendar for new events
•
Default time for alerts
•
Time zone support, to show dates and times using a diferent time zone
•
Which day starts the week
•
Display of Chinese, Hebrew, or Islamic dates
Chapter 10 Calendar
79
11
Photos
View photos and videos
The Photos app lets you view the photos and videos:
•
Taken with Camera on iPad
•
Stored in iCloud (see iCloud Photo Library on page 82)
•
Shared from others (see iCloud Photo Sharing on page 83)
•
Synced from your computer (see Sync with iTunes on page 19)
•
Saved from an email, text message, webpage, or screenshot
•
Imported from your camera
Tap to view
full screen.
The Photos app includes tabs for Photos, Shared, and Albums.
•
Tap Photos to see all your photos and videos, organized by Years, Collections, and Moments. To
quickly browse the photos in a collection or year, touch and hold for a moment, then drag.
•
Tap Shared to see photos and videos you shared with others or that others shared with you.
See iCloud Photo Sharing on page 83.
•
Tap Albums to see how photos and videos are organized into albums on your iPad. See
Organize photos and videos, next.
View all your photos and videos. By default, Photos displays a representative subset of your
photos when you view by year or by collection. To see all your photos, go to Settings > Photos &
Camera, then turn of Summarize Photos.
View by location. While viewing by year or by collection, tap . Photos and videos that include
location information appear on a map, showing where they were taken.
80
While viewing a photo or video, tap to show and hide the controls. Swipe left or right to go
forward or backward.
Search photos. From Albums or Photos, tap
to search by date (month and year), or place
(city and state). Search also keeps your Recent Searches on hand and gives you a list of
suggested searches.
Zoom in or out. Double-tap, or pinch a photo. When you zoom in, you can drag to see other
parts of the photo.
Play a video. Tap
. To toggle between full screen and it-to-screen, double-tap the screen.
Play a slideshow. While viewing a photo, tap , then tap Slideshow. Select options, then tap
Start Slideshow. To stop the slideshow, tap the screen. To set other slideshow options, go to
Settings > Photos & Camera.
To stream a slideshow or video to a TV, see AirPlay on page 39.
Organize photos and videos
The Album tab includes albums you create yourself and some albums that are created for you,
depending on how you use Photos. For example, videos are automatically added to the Videos
album and you see a My Photo Stream album if you use that feature (see My Photo Stream, next).
All your photos in iCloud are in the All Photos album if you use iCloud Photo Library (see iCloud
Photo Library on page 82). If you don’t use iCloud Photo Library, you see the Camera Roll album
instead, which includes photos and videos you took with iPhone and from other sources.
Note: If you use iCloud Photo Library, albums are stored in iCloud and are up to date and
accessible on any iOS 8.1 or later device, Mac with OS X Yosemite v10.10.3 or later, and on
iCloud.com using the same Apple ID. See iCloud Photo Library on page 82.
Create a new album. Tap Albums, tap
to add to the album, then tap Done.
, enter a name, then tap Save. Select photos and videos
Add items to an existing album. While viewing thumbnails, tap Select, select items, tap Add To,
then select the album.
Manage albums. While viewing your album list, tap Edit.
•
Rename an album: Select the album, then enter a new name.
•
Rearrange albums: Touch, then drag the album to another location.
•
Delete an album: Tap
.
With iCloud Photo Library, you can manage all your albums from any iOS 8.1 or later device set
up with iCloud Photo Library.
Mark your favorites. While viewing a photo or video, tap
to automatically add it to the
Favorites album. A photo or video can be part of another album as well as Favorites.
Hide photos you want to keep but not show. Touch and hold a photo, then choose Hide. The
photo is moved to the Hidden album. Touch and hold a hidden photo to Unhide it.
Remove a photo or video from an album. Tap the photo or video, tap , then tap Delete Photo.
The photo or video is removed from the album and from the Photos tab.
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81
Delete a photo or video from Photos. Tap the Photos tab, tap the photo or video, tap , then
tap Delete Photo or Delete Video. Deleted photos and videos are kept in the Recently Deleted
album on iPad, with a badge showing the remaining days until the item is permanently removed
from iPad. To delete the photo or video permanently before the days expire, tap the item, tap
Delete, then tap Delete Photo or Delete Video. If you use iCloud Photo Library, deleted photos
and videos are permanently removed from all your devices using iCloud Photo Library with the
same Apple ID.
Recover a deleted photo or video. In the Recently Deleted album, tap the photo or video, tap
Recover, then tap Recover Photo or Recover Video to move the item to the Camera Roll or, if you
use iCloud Photo Library, the All Photos album.
iCloud Photo Library
iCloud Photo Library gives you access to your photos and videos on any iOS 8.1 or later device,
Mac with OS X Yosemite v10.10.3 or later, and on iCloud.com using the same Apple ID. You can
make changes to photos and videos in the Photos app, preserve both the original and edited
versions, and see the changes updated across your devices (see Edit photos and trim videos on
page 85). Store as many photos and videos as your iCloud storage plan allows.
Note: If you turn on iCloud Photo Library, you can’t use iTunes to sync photos and videos to iPad.
Turn on iCloud Photo Library. Go to Settings > iCloud > Photos. Or go to Settings > Photos &
Camera.
View photos and videos in iCloud Photo Library. In addition to viewing your photos and videos
in the Photos tab, organized by Years, Collections, and Moments, you can also view them as a
continuous stream, organized by date added, in the All Photos album.
Choose to optimize your storage or keep all your photos and videos in full-resolution on
iPad. If your iCloud storage plan is over 5 GB, Optimize iPad Storage is on by default. It manages
your storage by automatically keeping your full-resolution photos and videos in iCloud and
lightweight versions on your iPad, as space is needed. Tap Download and Keep Originals to keep
your full-resolution originals on your iPad. Your originals are always stored in iCloud.
Download a full-resolution photo or video. If you’re not storing original versions on iPad, simply
pinch to zoom in to 100%, or tap Edit.
Note: To upload photos and videos to iCloud Photo Library, iPad must be connected to the
Internet. Using a cellular connection on iPad cellular models, you can download up to 100 MB at
a time.
If your uploaded photos and videos exceed your storage plan, you can upgrade your
iCloud storage. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage > Change Storage Plan to learn about the
available options.
My Photo Stream
My Photo Stream, turned on by default, automatically uploads new photos and videos to your
other devices that use My Photo Stream.
Turn My Photo Stream on or of. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera, or Settings > iCloud > Photos.
Note: Photos stored in iCloud count against your total iCloud storage, but photos uploaded to
My Photo Stream don’t count additionally against your iCloud storage.
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82
Use My Photo Stream without iCloud Photo Library. Photos and videos you take with iPad are
added to the My Photo Stream album when you leave the Camera app and iPad is connected to
Wi-Fi. Any photos you add—including screenshots and photos saved from email, for example—
also appear in your My Photo Stream album.
Photos and videos added to My Photo Stream on your other devices appear in your My Photo
Stream album on iPad. iOS devices can keep up to 1000 of your most recent photos in iCloud for
30 days; you can choose to automatically import these photos to your computer, if you want to
keep them permanently.
Manage My Photo Stream contents. In the My Photo Stream album, tap Select.
•
Save your best shots on iPad: Select the photos, then tap Add To.
•
Share, print, or copy: Select the photos, then tap
•
Delete photos: Select the photos, then tap
.
.
Note: Although deleted photos are removed from My Photo Stream on all your devices,
the original photos remain in Photos on the device on which they were originally taken.
Photos that you save to another album on a device or computer are also not deleted. See
support.apple.com/kb/HT4486.
Use My Photo Stream with iCloud Photo Library. If you use iCloud Photo Library on iPad, you
can use My Photo Stream to upload recent photos and videos and view them on other devices
that do not have iCloud Photo Library enabled.
iCloud Photo Sharing
With iCloud Photo Sharing, you can create albums of photos and videos to share, and subscribe
to other people’s shared albums. You can invite others using iCloud Photo Sharing (iOS 6 or later
or OS X Mountain Lion or later) to view your albums, and they can leave comments if they wish.
If they’re using iOS 7 or OS X Mavericks or later, they can add their own photos and videos. You
can also publish your album to a website for anyone to view. iCloud Photo Sharing works with or
without iCloud Photo Library and My Photo Stream.
Note: To use iCloud Photo Sharing, iPad must be connected to Wi-Fi. iCloud Photo Sharing works
over both Wi-Fi and cellular networks. Cellular data charges may apply. See Usage information on
page 162.
Create new
shared albums
or add photos
to existing
ones.
Turn on iCloud Photo Sharing. Go to Settings > iCloud > Photos. Or go to Settings > Photos &
Camera.
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83
Share photos and videos. While viewing a photo or video, or when you’ve selected multiple
photos or videos, tap , tap iCloud Photo Sharing, add comments, then share to an existing
shared album or select a new one. You can invite people to view your shared album using their
email address or the mobile phone number they use for iMessage.
Enable a public website. Select the shared album, tap People, then turn on Public Website. Tap
Share Link if you want to announce the site.
Add items to a shared album. View a shared album, tap
add a comment, then tap Post.
, select items, then tap Done. You can
Delete photos from a shared album. Select the shared album, tap Select, select the photos
or videos you want to delete, then tap . You must be the owner of the shared album, or the
owner of the photo.
Delete comments from a shared album. Select the photo or video that contains the comment.
Touch and hold the comment, then tap Delete. You must be the owner of the shared album, or
the owner of the comment.
Rename a shared album. Tap Shared, tap Edit, then tap the name and enter a new one.
Add or remove subscribers, or turn Notiications on or of. Select the shared album, then
tap People.
Subscribe to a shared album. When you receive an invitation, tap the Shared tab
Accept. You can also accept an invitation in an email.
, then tap
Add items to a shared album you subscribed to. View the shared album, then tap
items, then tap Done. You can add a comment, then tap Post.
. Select
See your Family album. When Family Sharing is set up, a shared album called “Family” is
automatically created in Photos on all family members’ devices. Everyone in the family can
contribute photos, videos, and comments to the album, and be notiied whenever something new
is added. For more information about setting up Family Sharing, see Family Sharing on page 36.
Other ways to share photos and videos
You can share photos and videos in Mail or Messages, or through other apps you install.
Share or copy a photo or video. View a photo or video, then tap
screen to show the controls.
. If you don’t see
, tap the
Tap More in Sharing to turn on the apps you want to use for sharing.
The size limit of attachments is determined by your service provider. iPad may compress photo
and video attachments, if necessary.
You can also copy a photo or video, then paste it into an email or text message (MMS or iMessage).
Share or copy multiple photos and videos. While viewing by moment, tap Share.
Save or share a photo or video you receive.
•
•
Email: Tap to download it if necessary, then touch and hold the item to see sharing and
other options.
Text message: Tap the item in the conversation, then tap
.
Photos and videos that you receive in messages or save from a webpage are saved to your
Photos tab. They can also be viewed in the Camera Roll or, if you’re using iCloud Photo Library,
the All Photos album.
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84
Edit photos and trim videos
You can edit photos right on iPad. If your photos are stored in iCloud, your edits are updated
across all your devices set up with iCloud, and both your original and edited versions are saved.
If you delete a photo, it’s deleted from all your devices and iCloud. Photo app extensions can
provide special editing options. See App extensions on page 24.
Edit a photo. View the photo full screen, tap Edit, then tap one of the tools. To edit a photo not
taken with iPad, tap the photo, tap Edit, then tap Duplicate and Edit.
•
Auto-enhance
improves a photo’s exposure, contrast, saturation, and other qualities.
•
With the Remove Red-eye tool
•
Tap , and Photos suggests an optimal crop, but you can drag the corners of the grid tool to set
your own crop. Move the wheel to tilt or straighten the photo. Tap Auto to align the photo with
the horizon, and tap Reset to undo alignment changes. Tap to rotate the photo 90 degrees.
Tap
to choose a standard crop ratio, such as 2:3 or Square.
Rotate photo.
, tap each eye that needs correcting.
Move the wheel to
tilt or straighten.
Choose a standard
photo format.
•
•
Photo ilters
let you apply diferent color efects, such as Mono or Chrome.
Tap Adjustments
to set Light, Color, and B&W (black & white) options. Tap the down arrow,
then tap
next to Light, Color, or B&W to choose the element you want to adjust. Move the
slider to the desired efect.
Compare the edited version to the original. Touch and hold the photo to view the original.
Release to see your edits.
Don’t like the results? Tap Cancel, then tap Discard Changes. Tap Done to save changes.
Revert to original. After you edit a photo and save your edits, you can revert to the original
image. Tap the image, tap Edit, then tap Revert.
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85
Trim a video. Tap the screen to display the controls, drag either end of the frame viewer, then
tap Trim.
Important: If you choose Trim Original, the trimmed frames are permanently deleted from the
original video. If you choose Save as New Clip, a new trimmed video clip is saved in your Videos
album and the original video is unafected.
Print photos
Print to an AirPrint-enabled printer.
•
Print a single photo: Tap
, then tap Print.
Print multiple photos: While viewing a photo album, tap Select, select the photos, tap
tap Print.
See AirPrint on page 40.
•
, then
Import photos and videos
You can import photos and videos directly from a digital camera, from another iOS device
with a camera, or from an SD memory card. For iPad (4th generation or later) or iPad mini, use
the Lightning to SD Card Camera Reader or the Lightning to USB Camera Adapter (both sold
separately). For earlier iPad models, use the iPad Camera Connection Kit (sold separately), which
includes both an SD card reader and a camera connector.
Import photos
1 Insert the SD card reader or camera connector into the iPad Lightning connector or 30-pin
dock connector.
•
Use an SD memory card: Insert the card in the slot on the SD card reader. Don’t force the card
into the slot; it its only one way.
•
Connect a camera or iOS device: Use the USB cable that came with the camera or iOS device,
and connect it to the USB port on the camera connector. If you’re using an iOS device, make
sure it’s turned on and unlocked. To connect a camera, make sure the camera is turned on and
in transfer mode. For more information, see the documentation that came with the camera.
2 Unlock iPad.
3 The Photos app opens and displays the photos and videos available for importing.
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86
4 Select the photos and videos to import.
•
Import all items: Tap Import All.
•
Import just some items: Tap the items you want to import (a checkmark appears for each), tap
Import, then tap Import Selected.
5 After the photos are imported, keep or delete the photos and videos on the card, camera, or
iOS device.
6 Disconnect the SD card reader or camera connector.
A new event in the Last Import album contains all the photos you just imported.
To transfer the photos to your computer, connect iPad to your computer and import the images
with a photo app such as iPhoto or Adobe Elements.
Photos settings
Settings for Photos are in Settings > Photos & Camera. These include:
•
iCloud Photo Library, My Photo Stream, iCloud Photo Sharing, and Upload Burst Photos
•
Photos Tab
•
Slideshow
•
Camera Grid
•
HDR (High Dynamic Range)
Chapter 11 Photos
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12
Camera
Camera at a glance
Quick! Get the camera! From the Lock screen, just swipe
edge of the screen to open Control Center, then tap .
up. Or swipe up from the bottom
Note: When you open Camera from the Lock screen, you can view and edit photos and videos
you take while the device is locked by tapping the thumbnail at the lower-left corner of the
screen. To share photos and videos, irst unlock iPad.
With iPad, you can take both still photos and videos using the front FaceTime camera or the back
camera.
Switch between cameras.
Turn on HDR.
Take a photo.
View the photos and
videos you’ve taken.
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Take photos and videos
Camera ofers several modes, which let you shoot stills, square-format photos, time-lapse, videos,
and panoramas.
Choose a mode. Drag up or down, or tap the camera mode labels to choose Time-Lapse, Video,
Photo, Square, or Pano.
Take a photo. Choose Photo, then tap the white Take Picture button or press either
volume button.
•
•
Take Burst shots: (iPad Air 2) Touch and hold the Take Picture button to take rapid-ire photos
in bursts (available while in Square or Photo mode). The shutter sound is diferent, and the
counter shows how many shots you’ve taken, until you lift your inger. To see the suggested
shots and select the photos you want to keep, tap the thumbnail, then tap Select. The gray
dot(s) mark the suggested photos. To copy a photo from the burst as a separate photo in your
Bursts album in Photos, tap the circle in the lower-right corner of the photo. To delete the
burst of photos, tap it, then tap .
Apply a ilter: Tap
to apply diferent color efects, such as Mono or Chrome. To turn of a
ilter, tap , then tap None. You can also apply a ilter later, when you edit the photo. See Edit
photos and trim videos on page 85.
A rectangle briely appears where the exposure is set. When you photograph people, face
detection (iPad 3rd generation or later) balances the exposure across up to 10 faces. A rectangle
appears for each face detected.
Exposure is automatic, but you can set the exposure manually for the next shot by tapping an
object or area on the screen. With an iSight camera, tapping the screen sets the focus and the
exposure, and face detection is temporarily turned of. To lock the exposure and focus, touch
and hold until the rectangle pulses. Take as many photos as you want. When you tap the screen
again, the automatic settings and face detection turn back on.
Adjust the exposure. Tap to see
adjust the exposure.
next to the exposure rectangle, then slide up or down to
Take a panorama photo. (iSight camera) Choose Pano, tap the Take Picture button, then pan slowly
in the direction of the arrow. To pan in the other direction, irst tap the arrow. To pan vertically, irst
rotate iPad to landscape orientation. You can reverse the direction of a vertical pan, too.
Chapter 12 Camera
89
Capture an experience with time-lapse. Choose Time-Lapse, set up iPad where you want, then
tap the Record Time-Lapse Video button to start capturing a sunset, a lower opening, or other
experiences over a period of time. Tap the Record Time-Lapse Video button again to stop. The
time-lapse photos are compiled into a short video that you can watch and share.
Shoot some video. Choose Video, then tap the Record Video button or press either volume
button to start and stop recording. Video records at 30 fps (frames per second).
Take it slow. (iPad Air 2) Choose Slo-Mo to shoot slow motion video at 120 fps. You can set which
section to play back in slow-motion when you edit the video.
Set the slow-motion section of a video. Tap the thumbnail, then use the vertical bars beneath
the frame viewer to set the section you want to play back in slow motion.
Zoom in or out. (iSight camera) Pinch the image on the screen. With iPad Air (all models) and
iPad mini 2 and later, zooming works in video mode as well as photo mode.
If Location Services is turned on, photos and videos are tagged with location data that can be
used by apps and photo-sharing websites. See Privacy on page 41.
Use the capture timer to put yourself in the shot. Avoid “camera shake” or add yourself to a
picture by using the capture timer. To include yourself, irst stabilize iPad and frame your shot.
Tap , tap 3s (seconds) or 10s, then tap the Take Picture button.
Want to capture what’s displayed on your screen? Simultaneously press and release the Sleep/
Wake and Home buttons. The screenshot is added to the Photos tab in Photos and can also be
viewed in the Camera Roll album or All Photos album (if you’re using iCloud Photo Library).
Make it better. You can edit photos and trim videos, right on iPad. See Edit photos and trim
videos on page 85.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Open Camera”
•
“Take a picture”
HDR
HDR (High Dynamic Range) helps you get great shots in high-contrast situations. iPad takes
multiple photos in rapid succession, at diferent exposure settings—and blends them together.
The resulting photo has better detail in the bright and midtone areas.
Use HDR. (iSight camera on iPad 3rd generation or later) Tap HDR. For best results, keep iPad
steady and avoid subject motion.
Keep the normal photo and the HDR version. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera > Keep Normal
Photo. Both the normal and HDR versions of the photo appear in Photos. HDR versions of photos
in your albums are marked with “HDR” in the corner.
Chapter 12 Camera
90
View, share, and print
Photos and videos you take on iPad are saved in Photos. With iCloud Photo Library enabled, all
new photos and videos are automatically uploaded and available in Photos on all your iOS 8.1 or
later devices set up with iCloud Photo Library. See iCloud Photo Library on page 82. When iCloud
Photo Library is turned of, you can still collect up to 1,000 of your most recent photos in the My
Photo Stream album from your devices set up with iCloud. See My Photo Stream on page 82.
View your photos. Tap the thumbnail image, then swipe left or right to see the photos you’ve
taken recently. Tap All Photos to see everything in the Photos app.
Tap the screen to show or hide the controls.
Get sharing and printing options. Tap
. See Share from apps on page 35.
Upload photos and videos. Use iCloud Photo Library to upload photos and videos from your
iPad to iCloud and access them on your iOS 8.1 or later devices signed in to iCloud using the
same Apple ID. You can also upload and download your photos and videos from the Photos app
on iCloud.com. See iCloud Photo Library on page 82.
Sync photos and videos to iPad from your Mac. Use the Photos settings pane in iTunes. See
Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Camera settings
Go to Settings > Photos & Camera for camera options, which include:
•
iCloud Photo Library, My Photo Stream, and iCloud Photo Sharing
•
Slideshow
•
Grid
•
HDR
Adjust the volume of the shutter sound with the Ringer and Alerts settings in Settings > Sounds.
Or mute the sound using the Ring/Silent switch. (In some countries muting is disabled.)
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13
Contacts
Contacts at a glance
iPad lets you access and edit your contact lists from personal, business, and other accounts.
Open in
Messages.
Open in
FaceTime.
Open in Maps.
Set your My Info card for Safari, Siri, and other apps. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars,
tap My Info, then select the contact card with your name and information.
Let Siri know who’s who. While editing your My Info card, tap Add Related Name to deine
relationships you want Siri to know about, so you can say things like “send a message to my
sister.” You can also add relationships using Siri. Say, for example, “John Appleseed is my brother.”
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Sarah Castelblanco is my sister.”
Find a contact. Use the search ield at the top of the contacts list. You can also search your
contacts using Spotlight Search (see Spotlight Search on page 32).
Use Siri. Say, for example, “What’s my brother’s work address?”
Share a contact. Tap a contact, then tap Share Contact. See Share from apps on page 35.
Change a label. If a ield has the wrong label, such as Home instead of Work, tap Edit. Then tap
the label and choose one from the list, or tap Custom Field to create one of your own.
Add your friends’ social proiles. While viewing a contact, tap Edit, then tap “add social proile.”
You can add Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Flickr, Myspace, and Sina Weibo accounts, or create a
custom entry.
Delete a contact. Go to the contact’s card, then tap Edit. Scroll down, then tap Delete Contact.
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Add contacts
Besides entering contacts, you can:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Use your iCloud contacts: Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Contacts.
Import your Facebook Friends: Go to Settings > Facebook, then turn on Contacts in the “Allow
These Apps to Use Your Accounts” list. This creates a Facebook group in Contacts.
Use your Google contacts: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, tap your Google account,
then turn on Contacts.
Access a Microsoft Exchange Global Address List: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, tap
your Exchange account, then turn on Contacts.
Set up an LDAP or CardDAV account to access business or school directories: Go to Settings >
Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Add Account > Other. Tap Add LDAP account or Add CardDAV
account, then enter the account information.
Sync contacts from your computer: In iTunes on your computer, turn on contact syncing in the
device info pane. For information, see iTunes Help.
Import contacts from a vCard: Tap a .vcf attachment in an email or message.
Search a directory. Tap Groups, tap the GAL, CardDAV, or LDAP directory you want to search,
then enter your search. To save a person’s info to your contacts, tap Add Contact.
Show or hide a group. Tap Groups, then select the groups you want to see. This button appears
only if you have more than one source of contacts.
Update your contacts using Twitter, Facebook, and Sina Weibo. Go to Settings > Twitter,
Settings > Facebook, or Settings > Sina Weibo, then tap Update Contacts. This updates contact
photos and social media account names in Contacts.
Unify contacts
When you have contacts from multiple sources, you might have multiple entries for the same
person. To keep redundant contacts from appearing in your All Contacts list, contacts from
diferent sources that have the same name are linked and displayed as a single uniied contact.
When you view a uniied contact, the title Uniied Info appears.
Unify contacts. If two entries for the same person aren’t linked automatically, you can unify them
manually. Edit one of the contacts, tap Link Contact, then choose the other contact to link to.
Linked contacts aren’t merged. If you change or add information in a uniied contact, the
changes are copied to each source account where that information already exists.
If you link contacts with diferent irst or last names, the names on the individual cards won’t
change, but only one name appears on the uniied card. To choose which name appears when
you view the uniied card, tap Edit, tap the linked card with the name you prefer, then tap Use
This Name For Uniied Card.
Chapter 13 Contacts
93
Contacts settings
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, where you can:
•
Change how contacts are sorted
•
Display contacts by irst or last name
•
Change how long names are shortened in lists
•
Choose to show recent contacts in the multitasking screen
•
Set a default account for new contacts
•
Set your My Info card
Chapter 13 Contacts
94
14
Clock
Clock at a glance
The irst clock displays the time based on your location when you set up iPad. Add other clocks
to show the time in other major cities and time zones.
Delete clocks or
change their order.
Add a clock.
View clocks, set an alarm,
time an event, or set a timer.
95
Alarms and timers
Want iPad to wake you? Tap Alarm, then tap
give the alarm a name (like “Good morning”).
. Set your wake-up time and other options, then
View and change alarms.
Add an alarm.
Turn the alarm on/off.
Selected alarm
Additional alarm
Keep track of time. Use the stopwatch to keep time, record lap times, or set a timer to alert you
when time’s up.
Want to fall asleep to music or a podcast? Tap Timer, tap When Timer Ends, then choose Stop
Playing at the bottom.
Get quick access to clock features. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open
Control Center, then tap . You can access Timer from Control Center even when iPad is locked.
You can also navigate to the other clock features.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Set the timer for 3 minutes”
•
“Wake me up tomorrow at 7 a.m.”
•
“What alarms do I have set?”
Chapter 14 Clock
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15
Maps
Find places
WARNING: For important information about navigation and avoiding distractions that could
lead to dangerous situations, see Important safety information on page 157. See also Privacy on
page 41.
Get directions.
Enter a search.
Quick driving directions
Get more info.
Tap a pin to display
the banner.
Double-tap to zoom in;
tap with two fingers to
zoom out. Or pinch.
Choose the view, drop a
pin, or show traffic.
Show your current location.
Move around Maps by dragging the screen. To face a diferent direction, rotate with two ingers.
To return to north, tap the compass
in the upper right.
Zoom in or out. Double-tap with one inger to zoom in, and tap with two ingers to zoom out—or
pinch open or closed. The scale appears in the upper left while zooming, or if you touch the screen
with two ingers. To change how distance is shown (miles or kilometers), go to Settings > Maps.
Search for a location. Tap the search ield. You can search for a location in diferent ways.
For example:
•
Intersection (“8th and market”)
•
Area (“greenwich village”)
•
Landmark (“guggenheim”)
97
•
Zip code
•
Business (“movies,” “restaurants san francisco ca,” “apple inc new york”)
Maps may also list recent locations, searches, or directions that you can choose from.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Find cofee near me.”
Find the location of a contact, or of a favorite or recent search. Tap Favorites.
Choose your view. Tap
, then choose Standard, Hybrid, or Satellite.
Manually mark a location. Touch and hold the map until the dropped pin appears.
Get more info
Get info about a location. Tap a pin to display its banner, then tap . Info might include Yelp
reviews and photos, a webpage link, directions, and more.
To share the location, add the location to your Favorites, or use another app you install, tap
See Share from apps on page 35.
.
Get directions
Note: To get directions, iPad must be connected to the Internet. To get directions involving your
current location, Location Services must also be on.
Get directions. Tap Directions, enter the starting and ending locations, then tap Route. Or,
choose a location or a route from the list, if available. Tap to select driving or walking directions,
or to use an app for public or other modes of transportation.
If a location banner is showing, directions to that location from your current location appear. To
get other directions, tap the search ield.
If multiple routes appear, tap the one you want to take.
•
Hear turn-by-turn directions (iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular): Tap Start.
Maps follows your progress and speaks turn-by-turn directions to your destination. To show or
hide the controls, tap the screen.
If iPad auto-locks, Maps stays onscreen and continues to announce instructions. You can also
open another app and continue to get turn-by-turn directions. To return to Maps, tap the
banner across the top of the screen.
With turn-by-turn directions, night mode automatically adjusts the screen image for easier
viewing at night.
•
View turn-by-turn directions (iPad Wi-Fi only): Tap Start, then swipe left to see the
next instruction.
•
See the route overview: Tap Overview.
•
View the directions as a list: Tap List Steps.
•
Stop turn-by-turn directions: Tap End. Or ask Siri to “stop navigating.”
Get directions from your current location. Tap
on the banner of your destination. Tap to
select driving or walking directions, or to use an app for public or other modes of transportation.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Give me directions home”
•
“Directions to my dad’s work”
Chapter 15 Maps
98
•
“What’s my ETA?”
•
“Find a gas station”
Use Maps on your Mac to get directions. Open Maps on your Mac (OS X Mavericks or later), get
directions for your trip, then choose File > Share > Send to your device. Your Mac and iPad must
both be signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID.
Find out about traic conditions. Tap , then tap Show Traic. Orange dots show slowdowns,
and red dots show stop-and-go traic. To see an incident report, tap a marker.
Report a problem. Tap
, then tap Report a Problem.
3D and Flyover
With 3D and Flyover, on iPad 3rd generation or later, you can see three-dimensional views and
even ly over many of the world’s major cities.
View 3D map. Tap , then tap Show 3D Map. Or, drag two ingers up. (Zoom in for a closer look
if Show 3D Map doesn’t appear.)
Adjust the angle. Drag two ingers up or down.
Take a Flyover Tour. An aerial tour is available for select cities, indicated by
next to the city
name. (Zoom out if you don’t see any
markers.) Tap the name of the city to display its banner,
then tap Tour to begin the tour. To stop the tour, tap the screen to display the controls, then tap
End Flyover Tour. To return to standard view, tap .
Maps settings
Go to Settings > Maps. Settings include:
•
Navigation voice volume (iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular)
•
Distances in miles or kilometers
•
Map labels (these appear in the language speciied in Settings > General > International >
Language)
Chapter 15 Maps
99
16
Videos
Videos at a glance
Open the Videos app to watch movies, TV shows, and music videos. To watch video podcasts,
open the Podcasts app—see Podcasts at a glance on page 125. To watch videos you record using
Camera on iPad, open the Photos app.
Add to your library.
Choose a category.
Tap to play.
This video hasn’t been
downloaded to iPad.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety
information on page 157.
Watch a video. Tap the video in the list of videos.
What about videos you shot with iPad? Open the Photos app.
Stream or download? If
appears on a video thumbnail, you can watch it without
downloading it to iPad, if you have an Internet connection. To download the video to iPad so you
can watch without using a Wi-Fi or cellular connection, tap
in the video details.
Looking for podcasts or iTunes U videos? Open the Podcasts app or download the free iTunes U
app from the App Store.
Set a sleep timer. Open the Clock app and tap Timer, then swipe to set the number of hours and
minutes. Tap When Timer Ends and choose Stop Playing, tap Set, then tap Start.
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Add videos to your library
Buy or rent videos from the iTunes Store. Tap Store in the Videos app, or open the iTunes Store
app on iPad, then tap Movies or TV Shows. The iTunes Store is not available in all areas. See
Chapter 22, iTunes Store, on page 113.
Transfer videos from your computer. Connect iPad, then sync videos from iTunes on your
computer. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Stream videos from your computer. Turn on Home Sharing in iTunes on your computer. Then,
on iPad, go to Settings > Videos and enter the Apple ID and password you use for Home Sharing
on your computer. Then open Videos on iPad, and tap Shared at the top of the list of videos.
Convert a video for iPad. If you try to sync a video from iTunes and a message says the video
can’t play on iPad, try converting the video. Select the video in iTunes on your computer, then
choose File > Create New Version > Create iPad or Apple TV Version. Then sync the converted
video to iPad.
Delete a video. Tap Edit in the upper right of your collection, then tap on the video thumbnail.
If you don’t see the Edit button, look for
on your video thumbnails—those videos haven’t
been downloaded to iPad, so you can’t delete them. To delete an individual episode of a series,
tap the series, then swipe left on the episode in the Episodes list.
Deleting a video (other than a rented movie) from iPad doesn’t delete it from the iTunes library
on your computer or from your purchased videos in iCloud, and you can sync the video or
download it to iPad again later. If you don’t want to sync a deleted video back to iPad, set iTunes
to not sync the video. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Important: If you delete a rented movie from iPad, it’s deleted permanently and cannot be
transferred back to your computer.
Control playback
Drag to adjust
the volume.
Drag to skip
forward or back.
Tap to show
or hide the
controls.
Select audio
language,
subtitles,
or closed
captions.
Watch on a
TV with
Apple TV.
The Grand Budapest Hotel is available on iTunes.
The Grand Budapest Hotel © 2014 TGBH LLC, Twentieth Century Fox Film
Corporation and TSG Entertainment Finance LLC. All rights reserved.
Scale the video to ill the screen or it to the screen. Tap
or . Or double-tap the video. If
you don’t see the scaling controls, your video already its the screen perfectly.
Start over from the beginning. If the video contains chapters, drag the playhead along the
scrubber bar all the way to the left. If there are no chapters, tap .
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101
Skip to the next or previous chapter. Tap
or . You can also press the center button or
equivalent on a compatible headset two times (skip to next) or three times (skip to previous).
Rewind or fast-forward. Touch and hold
or . Or drag the playhead left or right. Move your
inger toward the bottom of the screen as you drag for iner control.
Select a diferent audio language. If the video ofers other languages, tap
language from the Audio list.
Show subtitles or closed captions. Tap
, then choose a
. Not all videos ofer subtitles or closed captions.
Customize the appearance of closed captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Subtitles & Captioning.
See closed captions and subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing. Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning, then turn on Closed Captions + SDH.
Watch the video on a TV. Tap
AirPlay on page 39.
. For more about AirPlay and other ways to connect, see
Videos settings
Go to Settings > Videos, where you can:
•
Choose where to resume playback the next time you open a video
•
Choose to show only videos that are downloaded to this device
•
Log in to Home Sharing
Chapter 16 Videos
102
17
Notes
Notes at a glance
Type notes on iPad, and iCloud makes them available on your other iOS devices and Mac
computers. You can also read and create notes in other accounts, such as Gmail or Yahoo!.
Tap a note to view it.
Delete the note.
Print or share the note.
Add a
new note.
Tap the text
to edit it.
See your notes on your other devices. If you use an icloud.com, me.com, or mac.com email
address for iCloud, go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Notes. If you use Gmail or another IMAP
account for iCloud, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then turn on Notes for the account.
Your notes appear in Notes on all your iOS devices and Mac computers that use the same Apple ID.
See just the note. Use iPad in portrait orientation. To see the notes list again in portrait
orientation, swipe from left to right.
Search for a note. Tap the Search ield at the top of the notes list, then type what you’re
looking for. You can also search for notes from the Home screen—just drag down the middle of
the screen.
Share or print a note. Tap
or AirDrop.
Delete a note. Tap
at the bottom of the note. You can share via Messages, Mail,
, or swipe left over the note in the notes list.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Create new note travel items.”
•
“Add toothbrush to travel items.”
•
“Add umbrella.”
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Use notes in multiple accounts
Share notes with other accounts. You can share notes with other accounts, such as Google,
Yahoo!, or AOL. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, add the account if it’s not already
there, then turn on Notes for the account.
Create a note in a speciic account. Tap Accounts, select the account, then tap
see the Accounts button, tap the Notes button irst.
. If you don’t
Choose the default account for new notes. Go to Settings > Notes.
See all the notes in an account. Tap Accounts at the top of the notes list, then choose
the account.
Chapter 17 Notes
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18
Reminders
Reminders at a glance
Reminders lets you keep track of all the things you need to do.
Mark the reminder
as completed.
Scheduled items
Add a reminder.
Add a list.
Add a reminder. Tap a list, then tap a blank line.
Share a list. Tap a list, then tap Edit. Tap Sharing, then tap Add Person. The people you share with
also need to be iCloud users. After they accept your invitation to share the list, you’ll all be able
to add, delete, and mark items as completed. Family members can also share a list. See Family
Sharing on page 36.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Remember to take an umbrella”
•
“Add artichokes to my groceries list”
•
“Read my work to-do list”
Delete a list. While viewing a list, tap Edit, then tap Delete List. All of the reminders in the list are
also deleted.
Delete a reminder. Swipe the reminder left, then tap Delete.
Change the order of lists or reminders. Tap Edit, then touch
and move the item.
105
What list was that in? When you enter text in the search ield, reminders in all lists are searched
by the reminder name. You can also use Siri to search reminders. For example say, “Find the
reminder about milk.”
With OS X Yosemite, you can hand of reminders you’re editing between your Mac and iPad. See
About Continuity features on page 24.
Scheduled reminders
Scheduled reminders notify you when they’re due.
Scheduled
reminder
Schedule a reminder. While editing a reminder, tap , then turn on “Remind me on a
day.” Tap Alarm to set the date and time. Tap Repeat to schedule the reminder for regularly
occurring intervals.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Remind me to take my medicine at 6 a.m. tomorrow.”
See all scheduled reminders. Tap Scheduled to show the list of reminders that have a due date.
Don’t bother me now. You can turn of Reminders notiications in Settings > Notiications. To
silence notiications temporarily, turn on Do Not Disturb.
Location reminders
On iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular models, Reminders can alert you when you arrive at or leave a location.
Find an address.
Adjust the
geofence.
Be reminded when you arrive at or leave a location. While editing a reminder, tap , then
turn on “Remind me at a location.” Tap Location, then choose a location from the list or enter
an address. After you deine a location, you can drag to change the size of the geofence on the
map, which sets the approximate distance at which you want reminded. You can’t save a location
reminder in Outlook or Microsoft Exchange calendars.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Remind me to stop at the grocery store when I leave here.”
Chapter 18 Reminders
106
Add common locations to your My Info card. When you set a location reminder, locations in
the list include addresses from your My Info card in Contacts. Add your work, home, and other
favorite addresses to your card for easy access in Reminders.
Reminders settings
Go to Settings > Reminders, where you can:
•
Set a default list for new reminders
•
Sync past reminders
Keep your reminders up to date on other devices. Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on
Reminders. To keep up to date with Reminders on OS X, turn on iCloud on your Mac, too. Some
other types of accounts, such as Exchange, also support Reminders. Go to Settings > Mail,
Contacts, Calendars, then turn on Reminders for the accounts you want to use.
Chapter 18 Reminders
107
19
Photo Booth
Take photos
It’s easy to take a photo with Photo Booth and spice it up with efects.
Tap an option to change the effect.
Tap the center image to
return to Normal view.
When you take a photo, iPad makes a shutter sound. You can use the volume buttons on the side
of iPad to control the volume of the shutter sound, or mute it by setting the Side Switch to silent.
See Volume buttons and the Side Switch on page 11.
Note: In some regions, sound efects are played even if the Side Switch is set to silent.
Take a photo. Aim iPad and tap the shutter button.
Select an efect. Tap
, then tap the efect you want.
•
Change a distortion efect: Drag your inger across the screen.
•
Alter a distortion: Pinch, swipe, or rotate the image.
What have you done? Tap the thumbnail of your last shot. To display the controls again, tap
the screen.
Switch between cameras. Tap
at the bottom of the screen.
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Manage photos
The photos you take with Photo Booth are saved to your Recently Added album in the Photos
app on iPad.
Delete a photo. Select a thumbnail, then tap
.
Share or copy a photo. Tap a thumbnail, tap
Twitter, or Facebook) or Copy.
, then tap a share option (Message, Mail, iCloud,
View photos in the Photos app. In Photos, tap Photos, then tap Today, or tap Albums, then
Recently Added, then tap a thumbnail. To see the next or previous photo, swipe left or right. See
View photos and videos on page 80.
Share photos on all your devices. If you use iCloud Photo Library, you can share your photos
with any iOS 8.1 or later device, Mac with OS X Yosemite v10.10.3 or later, and on iCloud.com
using the same Apple ID. See iCloud Photo Library on page 82.
Upload photos to your computer. Connect iPad to your computer using the included USB cable.
•
•
Mac: Select the photos to upload, then click the Import or Download button in iPhoto or
other supported photo app on your computer.
PC: Follow the instructions that came with your photo app.
If you delete the photos from iPad when you upload them to your computer, they’re removed
from Photos. You can use the Photos settings pane in iTunes to sync photos to the Photos app
on iPad.
Chapter 19 Photo Booth
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20
Game Center
Game Center at a glance
Game Center lets you play your favorite games with friends who have an iOS device or a
Mac (OS X Mountain Lion or later). You must be connected to the Internet to use Game Center.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding repetitive motion injuries, see Important
safety information on page 157.
See who’s the best.
Find someone to play against.
Play, share,
or remove
this game.
Explore
game goals.
Is it your turn?
Declare your
status or change
your photo.
It’s on!
Choose a game.
Invite friends to play.
Get started. Open Game Center. If you see your nickname at the top of the screen, you’re already
signed in. Otherwise, you’ll be asked for your Apple ID and password.
Get some games. Tap Games, then tap a recommended game, browse for games in the
App Store (look for Supports Game Center in the game details), or get a game one of your
friends has. See Play games with friends on page 111.
Play! Tap Games, choose a game, tap
in the upper right, then tap Play.
Sign out? No need to sign out when you quit Game Center, but if you want to, go to Settings >
Game Center, then tap your Apple ID.
110
Play games with friends
Invite friends to a multiplayer game. Tap Friends, choose a friend, choose a game, then tap
in the upper right. If the game allows or requires additional players, choose the players to invite,
then tap Next. Send your invitation, then wait for the others to accept. When everyone is ready,
start the game. If a friend isn’t available or doesn’t respond, you can tap Auto-Match to have
Game Center ind another player for you, or tap Invite Friend to invite someone else.
Send a friend request. Tap Friends, tap , then enter your friend’s email address or Game Center
nickname. To browse your contacts, tap . (To add several friends with one request, type Return
after each address.) Or, tap any player you see anywhere in Game Center.
Challenge someone to outdo you. Tap one of your scores or achievements, then tap
Challenge Friends.
What are your friends playing and how are they doing? Tap Friends, tap your friend’s name,
then tap the Games or Points bubble.
Want to purchase a game your friend has? Tap Friends, then tap your friend’s name. Tap his or
her Games bubble, tap the game in the list, then tap
in the upper right.
Make new friends. To see a list of your friend’s friends, tap Friends, tap your friend’s name, then
tap his or her Friends bubble.
Unfriend a friend. Tap Friends, tap the friend’s name, then tap
in the upper right.
Keep your email address private. Turn of Public Proile in your Game Center account settings.
See Game Center settings on page 111.
Turn of multiplayer activity or friend requests. Go to Settings > General > Restrictions, then
turn of Multiplayer Games or Adding Friends. If the switches are dimmed, tap Enable Restrictions
at the top irst.
Keep it friendly. To report ofensive or inappropriate behavior, tap Friends, tap the person’s name,
tap
in the upper right, then tap Report a Problem.
Game Center settings
Go to Settings > Game Center, where you can:
•
Sign out (tap your Apple ID)
•
Allow invites
•
Let nearby players ind you
•
Edit your Game Center proile (tap your nickname)
•
Get friend recommendations from Contacts or Facebook
Specify which notiications you want for Game Center. Go to Settings > Notiications > Game
Center. If Game Center doesn’t appear, turn on Notiications.
Change restrictions for Game Center. Go to Settings > General > Restrictions.
Chapter 20 Game Center
111
21
Newsstand
Newsstand organizes your magazine and newspaper apps, and automatically updates them
when iPad is connected to Wi-Fi.
Touch and hold
a publication to
rearrange.
Find Newsstand apps.
Note: You need an Internet connection and an Apple ID to download Newsstand apps, but you
can read downloaded content without an Internet connection. Newsstand is not available in
all areas.
Find Newsstand apps. Tap Newsstand to reveal the shelf, then tap Store. When you purchase a
Newsstand app, it’s added to the shelf. After the app is downloaded, open it to view its issues
and subscription options. Subscriptions are In-App purchases, billed to your Apple ID account.
Turn of automatic updates. Apps update automatically over Wi-Fi, unless you turn of the option
in Settings > General > Background App Refresh.
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iTunes Store
22
iTunes Store at a glance
Use the iTunes Store to add music, movies, TV shows, and more to iPad.
Browse
Download
purchases
again.
Change categories.
Note: You need an Internet connection and an Apple ID to use the iTunes Store. The iTunes Store
is not available in all areas.
113
Browse or search
Browse by category or genre. Tap one of the categories (Music, Movies, TV Shows, or
Audiobooks). Tap Genres to see a list of genres to choose from.
Tap a genre to
see more about it.
If you know what you’re looking for, tap Search. You can tap a search term that’s trending
among other iTunes users, or enter info in the search ield, then tap Search on the keyboard.
Access family members’ purchases. With Family Sharing turned on, you can view and download
songs, TV shows, and movies purchased by other family members. Tap Purchased, tap your name
or My Purchases, then select a family member from the menu.
Find it with Siri. Siri can search for items and make purchases in the iTunes Store. For example,
you can say “Get a new ring tone” or “Purchase song name by band name.” You can ask Siri to
download a podcast or redeem a gift card. For best results, say “purchase” instead of “buy” at the
beginning of a Siri command.
Ask Siri to tag it. When you hear music playing around you, ask Siri “What song is playing?” Siri
tells you what the song is and gives you an easy way to purchase it. It also saves it to the Siri tab
in the iTunes Store so you can buy it later. Tap Music, tap
, then tap the Siri tab to see a list of
tagged songs available for preview or purchase.
Tap to see your
Wish List and
recommendations.
Chapter 22 iTunes Store
114
Discover great new music on Radio. When you listen to Radio, songs you play appear in the
Radio tab in the iTunes Store so you can preview or purchase them. Tap Music, tap
, then
tap Radio.
Preview a song or video. Tap it.
Add to your Wish List. When you hear something you hope to buy from the iTunes Store,
tap , then tap Add to Wish List. To view your Wish List in the iTunes Store, tap Music, Movies,
or TV Shows, tap
, then tap Wish List.
Purchase, rent, or redeem
Tap an item’s price (or tap Free), then tap again to buy it. If you see
instead of a price, you’ve
already purchased the item and you can download it again without a charge.
Approve purchases with Family Sharing. With Family Sharing set up, the family organizer can
review and approve purchases made by family members under the age of 18. For example, if
Parent/Guardian > Ask to Buy is set for speciic minor family members, when those members try
to make a purchase, a message is sent to the family organizer for approval. For more information
about setting up Family Sharing, see Family Sharing on page 36.
Note: Age restrictions for Ask to Buy vary by area. In the United States, the family organizer can
enable Ask to Buy for any family member under age 18; for children under age 13, it’s enabled
by default.
Hide individual purchases. Using iTunes on a computer, family members can hide any of their
purchases so other family members can’t view or download them. For more information, see
Family Sharing on page 36.
Use a gift card or code. Tap a category (for example, Music), scroll to the bottom, then tap
Redeem. Or tell Siri “Redeem an iTunes Store gift card.”
Send a gift. View the item you want to give, tap , then tap Gift. Or tap one of the categories
(Music, Movies, or TV Shows), scroll to the bottom, then tap Send Gift to send an iTunes gift
certiicate to someone.
Bought something on another device? Go to Settings > iTunes & App Store to set up automatic
downloads on your iPad. You can always view your purchased music, movies, and TV shows in
the iTunes Store (just tap Purchased).
Watch your time with rentals. In some areas, you can rent movies. You have 30 days to begin
watching a rented movie. After you start watching it, you can play it as many times as you want
in the allotted time (24 hours in the U.S. iTunes Store; 48 hours in other countries). Once your
time’s up, the movie is deleted. Rentals can’t be transferred to another device; however, you can
use AirPlay and Apple TV to view a rental on your television.
Chapter 22 iTunes Store
115
iTunes Store settings
To set options for the iTunes Store, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store.
View or edit your account. Tap your Apple ID, then tap View Apple ID. To change your password,
tap the Apple ID ield, then tap Password.
Sign in using a diferent Apple ID. Tap your account name, then tap Sign Out. You can then enter
a diferent Apple ID.
Subscribe to or turn on iTunes Match. You can subscribe to iTunes Match, a service that stores
your music and more in iCloud. See iTunes Match on page 71. If you’re a subscriber, turn on
iTunes Match to access your music on iPad from anywhere.
Turn on automatic downloads. Tap Music, Books, or Updates. Content updates automatically
over Wi-Fi, unless you turn of the option in Automatic Downloads.
Chapter 22 iTunes Store
116
App Store
23
App Store at a glance
Use the App Store to browse, purchase, and download apps speciically designed for iPad, or
for iPhone and iPod touch. Your apps update automatically over Wi-Fi (unless you turn of this
feature), so you can keep up with the latest improvements and features.
See your Wish List and
other suggestions for you.
Download purchases again.
Note: You need an Internet connection and an Apple ID to use the App Store. The App Store is
not available in all areas.
Find apps
If you know what you’re looking for, tap Search. Or tap Categories to browse by type of app.
Ask Siri to ind it. Siri can search for items and make purchases in the App Store. For example,
tell Siri to “Find apps by Apple” or “Purchase app name.”
Access family members’ apps. With Family Sharing turned on, you can view and download apps
purchased by other family members. Tap Purchased, tap your name or My Purchases, then select
a family member from the menu. For more information, see Family Sharing on page 36.
Want to tell a friend about an app? Find the app, tap
from apps on page 35.
, then choose the method. See Share
117
Use Wish List. To track an app you might want to purchase later, tap
tap Add to Wish List.
See your Wish List. After you add items to your Wish List, tap
on the app page, then
on the Purchased screen.
Search apps by category. Tap Explore, then tap Categories to focus on the apps you want, for
example, Education, Medical, or Sports. Tap subcategories to further reine your results.
What apps are being used nearby? Tap Explore to ind out the most popular apps others around
you are using (Location Services must be on in Settings > Privacy > Location Services). Try this at
a museum, sporting event, or when you’re traveling, to dig deeper into your experience.
Check out apps in
your areas of interest.
Tap to learn more,
download, or purchase.
Purchase, redeem, and download
Tap the app’s price, then tap Buy to purchase it. If it’s free, tap Free, then tap Install.
If you see
instead of a price, you’ve already purchased the app and you can download it
again, free of charge. While the app is downloading or updating, its icon appears on the Home
screen with a progress indicator.
Approve purchases with Family Sharing. With Family Sharing set up, the family organizer can
review and approve purchases made by other family members under the age of 18. For example,
if Parent/Guardian > Ask to Buy is set for speciic minor family members, when those members
try to make a purchase, a message is sent to the family organizer for approval. For more
information about setting up Family Sharing, see Family Sharing on page 36.
Note: Age restrictions for Ask to Buy vary by area. In the United States, the family organizer can
enable Ask to Buy for any family member under age 18; for children under age 13, it’s enabled
by default.
Hide individual purchases. Using iTunes on a computer, family members can hide any of their
purchases so other family members can’t view or download them. For more information, see
Family Sharing on page 36.
Use a gift card or code. Tap Featured, scroll to the bottom, then tap Redeem. Or tell Siri “Redeem
an iTunes Store gift card.”
Send a gift. View the item you want to give, tap , then tap Gift. Or tap Featured, scroll to the
bottom, then tap Send Gift to send an iTunes gift certiicate to someone.
Chapter 23 App Store
118
Restrict in-app purchases. Many apps provide extra content or enhancements for a fee. To limit
purchases that can be made from within an app, go to Settings > General > Restrictions (make
sure Restrictions is enabled), then set options (for example, restrict by age rating or require a
password immediately or every 15 minutes). You can turn of In-App Purchases to prevent all
purchases. See Restrictions on page 41.
Delete an app. Touch and hold the app icon on the Home screen until the icon jiggles, then
tap . When you inish, press the Home button. You can’t delete built-in apps. Deleting an app
also deletes its data. You can download any app you’ve purchased from the App Store again, free
of charge.
For information about erasing all of your apps, data, and settings, see Reset iPad settings on
page 161.
App Store settings
To set options for App Store, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store.
View or edit your account. Tap your Apple ID, then tap View Apple ID. To change your password,
tap the Apple ID ield, then tap the Password ield.
Sign in using a diferent Apple ID. Tap your account name, then tap Sign Out. Then enter the
other Apple ID.
Turn of automatic downloads. Tap Apps in Automatic Downloads. Apps update automatically
over Wi-Fi, unless you turn of the option.
Download apps using the cellular network (Wi-Fi + Cellular models). Turn on Use Cellular Data.
Downloading apps over the cellular network may incur carrier charges. See Cellular settings on
page 164. Newsstand apps update only over Wi-Fi.
Chapter 23 App Store
119
24
iBooks
Get books
Get books from the iBooks Store. In iBooks, use the buttons at the bottom of the screen to
access the iBooks Store. Tap Featured to browse the latest releases, or Top Charts to view the
most popular. To ind a speciic book, tap the Search ield that appears after you access the
iBooks Store.
Use Siri. Say, for example, “Find books by author name.”
Read a book
Contents, bookmarks, and notes
Bookmark
Search in book.
Go to a page.
Open a book. Tap the book you want to read. If you don’t see it in on the bookshelf, swipe left or
right to see other collections.
Show the controls. Tap near the center of a page. Not all books have the same controls, but
some of the things you can do include searching, viewing the table of contents, and sharing
what you’re reading.
Close a book. Tap Library, or pinch the page.
120
Enlarge an image. Double-tap the image. In some books, touch and hold to display a magnifying
glass you can use to view an image.
Read by columns. In books that support it, double-tap a column of text to zoom in, then swipe
up or to the left to move to the next column.
Go to a speciic page. Use the page navigation controls at the bottom of the screen. Or tap
and enter a page number, then tap the page number in the search results.
Get a deinition. Double-tap a word, then tap Deine in the menu that appears. Deinitions aren’t
available for all languages.
Remember your place. Tap to add a bookmark, or tap again to remove it. You can have
multiple bookmarks—to see them all, tap
, then tap Bookmarks. You don’t need to add a
bookmark when you close the book, because iBooks remembers where you left of.
Remember the good parts. Some books let you add notes and highlights. To add a highlight,
touch and hold a word, then move your inger to draw the highlight. To add a note, double-tap a
word to select it, move the grab points to adjust the selection, then tap Note or Highlight in the
menu that appears. To see all the notes and highlights you’ve made, tap
, then tap Notes.
Share the good parts. Tap some highlighted text, then, in the menu that appears, tap . If the
book is from the iBooks Store, a link to the book is included automatically. (Sharing may not be
available in all regions.)
Share a link to a book. Tap near the center of a page to display the controls, then tap
then tap Share Book.
. Tap
,
Change the way a book looks. Some books let you change the font, font size, and color of the
page. (Tap .) You can change justiication and hyphenation in Settings > iBooks. These settings
apply to all books that support them.
Brightness
Page color
Turn off pagination.
Change the brightness. Tap
. If you don’t see
, tap
irst.
Dim the screen when it’s dark. Turn on Auto-Night Theme to automatically change the
bookshelf, page color, and brightness when using iBooks in low-light conditions. (Not all books
support Auto-Night Theme.)
Interact with multimedia
Some books have interactive elements, such as movies, diagrams, presentations, galleries, and
3D objects. To interact with a multimedia object, tap, swipe, or pinch it. To view an element full
screen, pinch open with two ingers. When you inish, pinch it closed.
Chapter 24 iBooks
121
Study notes and glossary terms
In books that support it, you can review all of your highlights and notes as study cards.
See all your notes. Tap
that chapter.
Delete notes. Tap
. You can search your notes, or tap a chapter to see notes you made in
, select some notes, then tap Delete.
Review your notes as study cards. Tap Study Cards. Swipe to move between cards. Tap Flip Card
to see its back.
Shule your study cards. Tap
, then turn on Shule.
Study glossary terms. If a book includes a glossary, tap
study cards.
to include those words in your
Listen to an audiobook
View chapters.
Slide to skip back
or forward.
Drag the playhead.
Skip back or forward.
Open an audiobook. Audiobooks are identiied by a on the cover. Tap the book you want to
listen to. If you don’t see it in the library, swipe left or right to view other collections.
Skip farther forward or back. Touch and hold the arrows, or slide and hold the cover. To change
the number of seconds that skipping moves, go to Settings > iBooks.
Speed it up, or slow it down. Tap Speed, then choose a playback rate. 1x is normal speed, 0.75x is
three-quarters speed, and so on.
Go to a chapter. Tap
, then tap a chapter. Some books don’t deine chapter markers
Go to a speciic time. Drag the playhead, located underneath the book cover. Where you started
listening during this session is marked on the timeline. Tap the mark to jump to that spot.
Set a sleep timer. Before starting playback, tap Sleep Timer, then choose a duration until the
audio automatically stops.
Download a previously purchased audiobook. You can download a book again from the
Purchased list in the iBooks Store anytime, free of charge.
Chapter 24 iBooks
122
Organize books
Change views.
View collections.
Sort the list.
Download from iCloud.
View on the
iBooks Store
View books by title or cover. Tap
or
.
View only audiobooks or PDFs. Tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the screen)
then choose PDFs or Audiobooks.
Organize your books with collections. Tap Select, then select some books to move them into a
collection. To edit or create collections, tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the
screen). Some built-in collections, such as PDFs, can’t be renamed or deleted.
Rearrange books. While viewing books by cover, touch and hold a cover then drag it to a new
location. While viewing books by title, sort the list using the buttons at the top of the screen. The
All Books collection is automatically arranged for you; switch to another collection if you want to
manually arrange your books.
Search for a book. Pull down to reveal the Search ield at the top of the screen. Searching looks
for the title and the author’s name.
Hide purchased books you haven’t downloaded. Tap the name of the current collection (at the
top of the screen), then turn on Hide iCloud Books.
Read PDFs
Sync a PDF. On a Mac, add the PDF to iBooks for OS X, open iTunes, select the PDF, then sync. In
iTunes on your Windows computer, choose File > Add to Library, select the PDF, then sync. See
iTunes Help for more info about syncing.
Add a PDF email attachment to iBooks. Open the email message, then touch and hold its PDF
attachment. Choose Open in iBooks from the menu that appears.
Print a PDF. With the PDF open, tap then choose Print. You’ll need an AirPrint-compatible
printer. For more about AirPrint, see AirPrint on page 40.
Email a PDF. With the PDF open, tap
Chapter 24 iBooks
, then choose Email.
123
iBooks settings
Restrict access to books and audiobooks with explicit content. Go to Settings > General >
Restrictions then select an option for Books.
Go to Settings > iBooks, where you can:
•
Sync collections and bookmarks (including notes and current page information) with your
other devices.
•
Display online content within a book. Some books might access video or audio that’s stored
on the web.
•
Change the direction pages turn when you tap in the left margin.
Chapter 24 iBooks
124
25
Podcasts
Podcasts at a glance
Open the Podcasts app, then browse, subscribe to, and play your favorite audio or video podcasts
on iPad.
Delete or rearrange podcasts.
New
episodes
Tap a podcast
to view and
play episodes.
Swipe down
to update
or search.
See your
subscriptions
and downloaded
podcasts.
Organize and
automatically
update your
favorites.
Browse for
podcasts.
125
Get podcasts and episodes
Discover more podcasts. Tap Featured or Top Charts at the bottom of the screen.
Search for new podcasts. Tap Search at the bottom of the screen.
Search your library. Tap My Podcasts, then drag down the center of the screen to reveal the
Search ield.
Preview or stream an episode. Tap the podcast, then tap an episode.
View unplayed
episodes.
View available
episodes.
Subscribe
or adjust
subscription
preferences.
Download
the episode.
Select episodes to
mark, delete, or save.
Get more info. Tap
open them in Safari.
to get episode details. Tap any link in podcast or episode descriptions to
Find new episodes. Tap Unplayed to ind episodes you haven’t yet heard.
Browse episodes. Tap Feed to see episodes available to download or stream.
Download an episode to iPad. Tap
next to the episode.
Get new episodes as they're released. Subscribe to the podcast. If you’re browsing Featured
podcasts or Top Charts, tap the podcast, then tap Subscribe. If you’ve already downloaded
episodes, tap My Podcasts, tap the podcast, tap Settings at the top of the episode list, then turn
on Subscription.
Save episodes. Tap
a saved episode.
next to an episode, then tap Save Episode. Tap Delete Download to delete
Chapter 25 Podcasts
126
Control playback
Use the playback controls to go forward and back in a podcast, set the speed, skip episodes,
and more.
Tap to speed up or slow down.
See a list of
episodes.
Tap to see
more info.
Drag to skip
forward or
back.
Tap to start over, or
double-tap to go to
the previous episode.
Skip to the
next episode.
See podcast info while you listen. Tap the podcast image on the Now Playing screen.
Skip forward or back with greater accuracy. Move your inger toward the top of the screen as
you drag the playhead left or right. When you’re close to the playback controls, you can scan
quickly through the entire episode. When you’re close to the top of the screen, you can scan one
second at a time.
Use Siri. Say something like:
•
“Play podcasts”
•
“Play it twice as fast”
•
“Skip ahead 10 seconds”
Chapter 25 Podcasts
127
Organize your favorites into stations
Organize your favorite podcasts into custom stations, and update episodes automatically across
all your devices.
Delete or rearrange stations or podcasts.
Download
the episode.
Play the
latest
episode.
Organize selected podcasts
and episodes into stations.
Pull together episodes from diferent podcasts. To add episodes to your On-The-Go station, tap
My Stations, tap On-The-Go, then tap Add. Or tap
next to any episode in your library. You can
also touch and hold any episode, then tap Add to On-The-Go.
Create a station. Tap My Stations, then tap
.
Change the order of the station list or the podcasts in a station. Tap My Stations, tap Edit above
the station list or the episode list, then drag
up or down.
Change the playback order for episodes in a station. Tap the station, then tap Settings.
Rearrange your podcast library. Tap My Podcasts, tap list view in the upper right, tap Edit, then
drag
up or down.
List oldest episodes irst. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, then tap Settings.
Play podcasts from the station list. Tap
next to the station name.
Podcasts settings
Go to Settings > Podcasts, where you can:
•
Choose to keep your podcast subscriptions up to date on all your devices
•
Choose how frequently Podcasts checks your subscriptions for new episodes
•
Have episodes downloaded automatically
•
Choose whether to keep episodes after you inish them
Chapter 25 Podcasts
128
A
Accessibility features
iPad ofers many accessibility features:
Vision
• VoiceOver
•
Support for braille displays
•
Zoom
•
Invert Colors and Grayscale
•
Speak Selection
•
Speak Screen
•
Speak Auto-Text
•
Large, bold, and high-contrast text
•
Button Shapes
•
Reduce screen motion
•
On/of switch labels
•
Assignable tones
•
Video Descriptions
Hearing
• Hearing aids
•
Mono audio and balance
•
Subtitles and closed captions
Interaction
• Siri
•
Widescreen keyboards
•
Guided Access
•
Switch Control
•
AssistiveTouch
Turn on accessibility features. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, or use the Accessibility
Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut on page 130.
With your voice, you can also use Siri to open apps, invert colors, read the screen in some apps,
and work with VoiceOver. For information, see Use Siri on page 47.
Use iTunes on your computer to conigure accessibility on iPad. You can choose some
accessibility options in iTunes on your computer. Connect iPad to your computer, then select
iPad in the iTunes device list. Click Summary, then click Conigure Accessibility at the bottom of
the Summary screen.
For more information about iPad accessibility features, go to www.apple.com/accessibility/.
129
Appendix
Accessibility
Accessibility Shortcut
Use the Accessibility Shortcut. Press the Home button quickly three times to turn any of these
features on or of:
•
VoiceOver
•
Invert Colors
•
Grayscale
•
Zoom
•
Switch Control
•
AssistiveTouch
•
Guided Access (The shortcut starts Guided Access if it’s already turned on. See Guided
Access on page 145.)
•
Hearing Aid Control (if you have paired Made for iPhone hearing aids)
Choose the features you want to control. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Accessibility
Shortcut, then select the accessibility features you use.
Not so fast. To slow down the triple-click speed, go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Home-click Speed. (This also slows down double-clicks.)
VoiceOver
VoiceOver describes aloud what appears onscreen, so you can use iPad without seeing it.
VoiceOver tells you about each item on the screen as you select it. The VoiceOver cursor (a
rectangle) encloses the item and VoiceOver speaks its name or describes it.
Touch the screen or drag your inger over it to hear the items on the screen. When you select
text, VoiceOver reads the text. If you turn on Speak Hints, VoiceOver may tell you the name of the
item and provide instructions—for example, “double-tap to open.” To interact with items, such as
buttons and links, use the gestures described in Learn VoiceOver gestures on page 133.
When you go to a new screen, VoiceOver plays a sound, then selects and speaks the irst item
on the screen (typically in the upper-left corner). VoiceOver also lets you know when the display
changes to landscape or portrait orientation, and when the screen becomes dimmed or locked.
Note: VoiceOver speaks in the language speciied in Settings > General > Language & Region.
VoiceOver is available in many languages, but not all.
VoiceOver basics
Important: VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control iPad. When VoiceOver is on, you
must use VoiceOver gestures—even to turn VoiceOver of.
Turn VoiceOver on or of. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, or use the
Accessibility Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut above.
Use Siri. Say:
•
“Turn VoiceOver on”
•
“Turn VoiceOver of”
Explore. Drag your inger over the screen. VoiceOver speaks each item you touch. Lift your inger
to leave an item selected.
•
Select an item: Tap it, or lift your inger while dragging over it.
Appendix A Accessibility
130
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Select the next or previous item: Swipe right or left with one inger. Item order is left-to-right,
top-to-bottom.
Select the item above or below: Set the rotor to Vertical Navigation, then swipe up or down
with one inger. If you don’t ind Vertical Navigation in the rotor, you can add it; see Use the
VoiceOver rotor on page 134.
Select the irst or last item on the screen: Tap with four ingers at the top or bottom of the screen.
Select an item by name: Triple-tap with two ingers anywhere on the screen to open the Item
Chooser. Then type a name in the search ield, or swipe right or left to move through the list
alphabetically, or tap the table index to the right of the list and swipe up or down to move
quickly through the list of items. You can also use handwriting to select an item by writing its
name; see Write with your inger on page 136. To dismiss the Item Chooser without making a
selection, do a two-inger scrub (move two ingers back and forth three times quickly, making
a “z”).
Change an item’s name so it’s easier to ind: Select the item, then double-tap and hold with two
ingers anywhere on the screen.
Speak the text of the selected item: Set the rotor to characters or words, then swipe down or up
with one inger.
Turn spoken hints on or of: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speak Hints.
Use phonetic spelling: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Phonetic Feedback.
•
Speak the entire screen, from the top: Swipe up with two ingers.
•
Speak from the current item to the bottom of the screen: Swipe down with two ingers.
•
•
•
Pause speaking: Tap once with two ingers. Tap again with two ingers to resume, or select
another item.
Mute VoiceOver: Double-tap with three ingers; repeat to unmute. If you’re using an external
keyboard, press the Control key.
Silence sound efects: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn of Use
Sound Efects.
Use a larger VoiceOver cursor. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn on
Large Cursor.
Adjust the speaking voice. You can adjust the VoiceOver speaking voice:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Change the volume: Use the volume buttons on iPad. You can also add volume to the rotor,
then swipe up and down to adjust; see Use the VoiceOver rotor on page 134.
Change the speech rate: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then drag the
Speaking Rate slider. You can also set the rotor to Speech Rate, then swipe up or down
to adjust.
Use pitch change: VoiceOver uses a higher pitch when speaking the irst item of a group (such
as a list or table) and a lower pitch when speaking the last item of a group. Go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Use Pitch Change.
Speak punctuation: Set the rotor to Punctuation, then swipe up or down to to select how much
you want to hear.
Control audio ducking: To choose whether audio that’s playing is turned down while VoiceOver
speaks, set the rotor to Audio Ducking, then swipe up or down.
Change the language for iPad: Go to Settings > General > Language & Region. VoiceOver
pronunciation of some languages is afected by the Region Format you choose there.
Appendix A Accessibility
131
•
•
•
•
Change pronunciation: Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Language is
available in the rotor only if you add a language at Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Speech > Rotor Languages.
Choose which dialects are available in the rotor: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Speech > Rotor Languages. To adjust voice quality or speaking rate, tap
next
to the language. To remove languages from the rotor or change their order, tap Edit, tap the
delete button or drag
up or down, then tap Done.
Set the default dialect for the current iPad language: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Speech.
Download an enhanced quality reading voice: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Speech, tap a language, then tap Enhanced Quality. If you’re using English, you
can choose to download Alex (869 MB), the same high-quality U.S. English voice used for
VoiceOver on Mac computers.
Use iPad with VoiceOver
Unlock iPad. Press either the Home button or the Sleep/Wake button, swipe to select the Unlock
button, then double-tap the screen.
Enter your passcode silently. To avoid having your passcode spoken as you enter it, use
handwriting; see Write with your inger on page 136.
Open an app, toggle a switch, or tap an item. Select the item, then double-tap the screen.
Double-tap the selected item. Triple-tap the screen.
Adjust a slider. Select the slider, then swipe up or down with one inger.
Use a standard gesture. Double-tap and hold your inger on the screen until you hear three
rising tones, then make the gesture. When you lift your inger, VoiceOver gestures resume. For
example, to drag a volume slider with your inger instead of swiping up and down, select the
slider, double-tap and hold, wait for the three tones, then slide left or right.
Scroll a list or area of the screen. Swipe up or down with three ingers.
•
•
•
Scroll continuously through a list: Double-tap and hold until you hear three rising tones, then
drag up or down.
Use the list index: Some lists have an alphabetical table index along the right side. Select the
index, then swipe up or down to move through the index. You can also double-tap, hold, then
slide your inger up or down.
Reorder a list: You can change the order of items in some lists, such as the Rotor items in
Accessibility settings. Select
to the right of an item, double-tap and hold until you hear
three rising tones, then drag up or down.
Open Notiication Center. Select any item in the status bar, then swipe down with three ingers.
To dismiss Notiication Center, do a two-inger scrub (move two ingers back and forth three
times quickly, making a “z”).
Open Control Center. Select any item in the status bar, then swipe up with three ingers. To
dismiss Control Center, do a two-inger scrub.
Switch apps. Double-click the Home button to see open apps, swipe left or right with one inger
to select an app, then double-tap to switch to it. Or, set the rotor to Actions while viewing open
apps, then swipe up or down.
Appendix A Accessibility
132
Rearrange your Home screen. Select an icon on the Home screen, double-tap and hold, then
drag. Lift your inger when the icon is in its new location. Drag an icon to the edge of the screen
to move it to another Home screen. You can continue to select and move items until you press
the Home button.
Speak iPad status information. Tap the status bar at the top of the screen, then swipe left or
right to hear information about the time, battery state, Wi-Fi signal strength, and more.
Speak notiications. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn on Always
Speak Notiications. Notiications, including the text of incoming text messages, are spoken
as they occur, even if iPad is locked. Unacknowledged notiications are repeated when you
unlock iPad.
Turn the screen curtain on or of. Triple-tap with three ingers. When the screen curtain is on, the
screen contents are active even though the display is turned of.
Learn VoiceOver gestures
When VoiceOver is on, standard touchscreen gestures have diferent efects, and additional
gestures let you move around the screen and control individual items. VoiceOver gestures
include two-, three-, and four-inger taps and swipes. For best results using multi-inger gestures,
relax and let your ingers touch the screen with some space between them.
You can use diferent techniques to enter a particular VoiceOver gesture. For example, you can
perform a two-inger tap using two ingers on one hand, or one inger on each hand. You can
even use your thumbs. Some people use a split-tap gesture: instead of selecting an item and
double-tapping, touch and hold an item with one inger, then tap the screen with another inger.
Try diferent techniques to discover which works best for you. If a gesture doesn’t work, try a
quicker movement, especially for a double-tap or swipe gesture. To swipe, try brushing the
screen quickly with your inger or ingers.
In VoiceOver settings, you can enter a special area where you can practice VoiceOver gestures
without afecting iPad or its settings.
Practice VoiceOver gestures. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then tap
VoiceOver Practice. When you inish practicing, tap Done. If you don’t see the VoiceOver Practice
button, make sure VoiceOver is turned on.
Here are some key VoiceOver gestures:
Navigate and read
• Tap: Select and speak the item.
•
Swipe right or left: Select the next or previous item.
•
Swipe up or down: Depends on the rotor setting. See Use the VoiceOver rotor on page 134.
•
Two-inger swipe up: Read all from the top of the screen.
•
Two-inger swipe down: Read all from the current position.
•
Two-inger tap: Stop or resume speaking.
•
•
•
Two-inger scrub: Move two ingers back and forth three times quickly (making a “z”) to dismiss
an alert or go back to the previous screen.
Three-inger swipe up or down: Scroll one page at a time.
Three-inger swipe right or left: Go to the next or previous page (on the Home screen, for
example).
Appendix A Accessibility
133
•
Three-inger tap: Speak additional information, such as position within a list or whether text
is selected.
•
Four-inger tap at top of screen: Select the irst item on the page.
•
Four-inger tap at bottom of screen: Select the last item on the page.
Activate
• Double-tap: Activate the selected item.
•
•
•
•
Triple-tap: Double-tap an item.
Split-tap: As an alternative to selecting an item and double-tapping to activate it, touch and
hold an item with one inger, then tap the screen with another.
Double-tap and hold (1 second) + standard gesture: Use a standard gesture. The double-tap and
hold gesture tells iPad to interpret the next gesture as standard. For example, you can doubletap and hold, then without lifting your inger, drag your inger to slide a switch.
Two-inger double-tap: Play or pause in Music, Videos, or Photos. Take a photo or start or pause
recording in Camera. Start or stop the stopwatch.
•
Two-inger double-tap and hold: Change an item’s label to make it easier to ind.
•
Two-inger triple-tap: Open the Item Chooser.
•
Three-inger double-tap: Mute or unmute VoiceOver.
•
Three-inger triple-tap: Turn the screen curtain on or of.
Use the VoiceOver rotor
Use the rotor to choose what happens when you swipe up or down with VoiceOver turned on, or
to select special input methods such as Braille Screen Input or Handwriting.
Operate the rotor. Rotate two ingers on the screen around a point between them.
Choose your rotor options. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then
select the options you want to include in the rotor.
The available rotor options and their efects depend on what you’re doing. For example, if you’re
reading an email, you can use the rotor to switch between hearing text spoken word-by-word or
character-by-character when you swipe up or down. If you’re browsing a webpage, you can set
the rotor to speak all the text (either word-by-word or character-by-character), or to jump from
one item to another of a certain type, such as headers or links.
When you use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to control VoiceOver, the rotor lets you adjust settings
such as volume, speech rate, use of pitch or phonetics, typing echo, and reading of punctuation.
See Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 137.
Use the onscreen keyboard
When you activate an editable text ield, the onscreen keyboard appears (unless you have an
Apple Wireless Keyboard attached).
Activate a text ield. Select the text ield, then double-tap. The insertion point and the onscreen
keyboard appear.
Appendix A Accessibility
134
Enter text. Type characters using the onscreen keyboard:
•
•
•
•
Standard typing: Select a key on the keyboard by swiping left or right, then double-tap to enter
the character. Or move your inger around the keyboard to select a key and, while continuing
to touch the key with one inger, tap the screen with another inger. VoiceOver speaks the key
when it’s selected, and again when the character is entered.
Touch typing: Touch a key on the keyboard to select it, then lift your inger to enter the
character. If you touch the wrong key, slide your inger to the key you want. VoiceOver
speaks the character for each key as you touch it, but doesn’t enter a character until you lift
your inger.
Direct Touch typing: VoiceOver is disabled for the keyboard only, so you can type just as you do
when VoiceOver is of.
Choose typing style: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Typing Style. Or, set
the rotor to Typing Mode, then swipe up or down.
Move the insertion point. Swipe up or down to move the insertion point forward or backward in
the text. Use the rotor to choose whether you want to move the insertion point by character, by
word, or by line. To jump to the beginning or end, double-tap the text.
VoiceOver makes a sound when the insertion point moves, and speaks the character, word, or
line that the insertion point moves across. When moving forward by words, the insertion point
is placed at the end of each word, before the space or punctuation that follows. When moving
backward, the insertion point is placed at the end of the preceding word, before the space or
punctuation that follows it.
Move the insertion point past the punctuation at the end of a word or sentence. Use the rotor
to switch back to character mode.
When moving the insertion point by line, VoiceOver speaks each line as you move across it.
When moving forward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the next line (except
when you reach the last line of a paragraph, when the insertion point is moved to the end of the
line just spoken). When moving backward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the
line that’s spoken.
Change typing feedback. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Typing Feedback.
Use phonetics in typing feedback. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Phonetic Feedback. Text is read character by character. VoiceOver irst speaks the character, then
its phonetic equivalent—for example, “f” and then “foxtrot.”
Delete a character. Use
with any of the VoiceOver typing styles. VoiceOver speaks each
character as it’s deleted. If Use Pitch Change is turned on, VoiceOver speaks deleted characters in
a lower pitch.
Select text. Set the rotor to Edit, swipe up or down to choose Select or Select All, then doubletap. If you choose Select, the word closest to the insertion point is selected when you doubletap. To increase or decrease the selection, do a two-inger scrub to dismiss the pop-up menu,
then pinch.
Cut, copy, or paste. Set the rotor to Edit, select the text, swipe up or down to choose Cut, Copy,
or Paste, then double-tap.
Undo. Shake iPad, swipe left or right to choose the action to undo, then double-tap.
Appendix A Accessibility
135
Enter an accented character. In standard typing style, select the plain character, then double-tap
and hold until you hear a sound indicating alternate characters have appeared. Drag left or right
to select and hear the choices. Release your inger to enter the current selection. In touch typing
style, touch and hold a character until the alternate characters appear.
Change the keyboard language. Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Choose
“default language” to use the language speciied in Language & Region settings. The Language
rotor item appears only if you select more than one language in Settings > General >
Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech.
Write with your inger
Handwriting mode lets you enter text by writing characters on the screen with your inger. In
addition to normal text entry, use handwriting mode to enter your iPad passcode silently or open
apps from the Home screen.
Enter handwriting mode. Use the rotor to select Handwriting. If Handwriting isn’t in the rotor, go
to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then add it.
Choose a character type. Swipe up or down with three ingers to choose lowercase, numbers,
uppercase, or punctuation.
Hear the currently selected character type. Tap with three ingers.
Enter a character. Trace the character on the screen with your inger.
Enter a space. Swipe right with two ingers.
Go to a new line. Swipe right with three ingers.
Delete the character before the insertion point. Swipe left with two ingers.
Select an item on the Home screen. Start writing the name of the item. If there are multiple
matches, continue to spell the name until it’s unique, or swipe up or down with two ingers to
choose from the current matches.
Enter your passcode silently. Set the rotor to Handwriting on the passcode screen, then write
the characters of your passcode.
Use a table index to skip through a long list. Select the table index to the right of the table (for
example, next to your Contacts list or in the VoiceOver Item Chooser), then write the letter.
Set the rotor to a web browsing element type. Write the irst letter of a page element type. For
example, write “l” to have up or down swipes skip to links, or “h” to skip to headings.
Exit handwriting mode. Do a two-inger scrub, or turn the rotor to a diferent selection.
Type onscreen braille
With Braille Screen Input enabled, you can use your ingers to enter 6-dot, 8-dot, or contracted
braille codes directly on the iPad screen. Tap codes with iPad laying lat in front of you (tabletop
mode), or hold iPad with the screen facing away so your ingers curl back to tap the screen
(screen away mode).
Turn on Braille Screen Input. Use the rotor to select Braille Screen Input. If you don’t ind it in the
rotor, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then add it.
Enter braille codes. Place iPad lat in front of you or hold it with the screen facing away, then tap
the screen with one or several ingers at the same time.
Adjust entry dot positions. To move the entry dots to match your natural inger positions,
double-tap six or eight ingers at the same time.
Appendix A Accessibility
136
Switch between 6-dot, 8-dot, and contracted braille. Swipe to the right with three ingers. To set
the default, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille > Braille Screen Input.
Enter a space. Swipe right with one inger. (In screen away mode, swipe to your right.)
Delete the previous character. Swipe left with one inger.
Move to a new line (typing). Swipe right with two ingers.
Cycle through spelling suggestions. Swipe up or down with one inger.
Select an item on the Home screen. Start entering the name of the item. If there are multiple
matches, continue to spell the name until it is unique, or swipe up or down with one inger to
select a partial match.
Open the selected app. Swipe right with two ingers.
Turn braille contractions on or of. Swipe to the right with three ingers.
Translate immediately (when contractions are enabled). Swipe down with two ingers.
Stop entering braille. Do a two-inger scrub, or set the rotor to another setting.
Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard
You can control VoiceOver using an Apple Wireless Keyboard paired with iPad. See Bluetooth
devices on page 41.
Use VoiceOver keyboard commands to navigate the screen, select items, read screen contents,
adjust the rotor, and perform other VoiceOver actions. Most commands use the Control-Option
key combination, abbreviated in the list that follows as “VO.”
You can use VoiceOver Help to learn the keyboard layout and the actions associated with various
key combinations. VoiceOver Help speaks keys and keyboard commands as you type them,
without performing the associated action.
VoiceOver keyboard commands
VO = Control-Option
•
Turn on VoiceOver Help: VO–K
•
Turn of VoiceOver Help: Escape
•
Select the next or previous item: VO–Right Arrow or VO–Left Arrow
•
Double-tap to activate the selected item: VO–Space bar
•
Press the Home button: VO–H
•
Touch and hold the selected item: VO–Shift–M
•
Move to the status bar: VO–M
•
Read from the current position: VO–A
•
Read from the top: VO–B
•
Pause or resume reading: Control
•
Copy the last spoken text to the clipboard: VO–Shift–C
•
Search for text: VO–F
•
Mute or unmute VoiceOver: VO–S
•
Open Notiication Center: Fn–VO–Up Arrow
•
Open Control Center: Fn–VO–Down Arrow
•
Open the Item Chooser: VO–I
Appendix A Accessibility
137
•
Change the label of the selected item: VO–/
•
Double-tap with two ingers: VO–”-”
•
Adjust the rotor: Use Quick Nav (see below)
•
Swipe up or down: VO–Up Arrow or VO–Down Arrow
•
Adjust the speech rotor: VO–Command–Left Arrow or VO–Command–Right Arrow
•
Adjust the setting speciied by the speech rotor: VO–Command–Up Arrow or VO–Command–
Down Arrow
•
Turn the screen curtain on or of: VO–Shift–S
•
Return to the previous screen: Escape
•
Switch apps: Command–Tab or Command–Shift–Tab
Quick Nav
Turn on Quick Nav to control VoiceOver using the arrow keys.
•
Turn Quick Nav on or of: Left Arrow–Right Arrow
•
Select the next or previous item: Right Arrow or Left Arrow
•
Select the next or previous item speciied by the rotor: Up Arrow or Down Arrow
•
Select the irst or last item: Control–Up Arrow or Control–Down Arrow
•
Tap an item: Up Arrow–Down Arrow
•
Scroll up, down, left, or right: Option–Up Arrow, Option–Down Arrow, Option–Left Arrow, or
Option–Right Arrow
•
Adjust the rotor: Up Arrow–Left Arrow or Up Arrow–Right Arrow
Single-key Quick Nav for web browsing
When you view a webpage with Quick Nav enabled, you can use the following keys on the
keyboard to navigate the page quickly. Typing the key moves to the next item of the indicated
type. To move to the previous item, hold the Shift key as you type the letter.
•
Turn on Single-key Quick Nav: VO-Q
•
Heading: H
•
Link: L
•
Text ield: R
•
Button: B
•
Form control: C
•
Image: I
•
Table: T
•
Static text: S
•
ARIA landmark: W
•
List: X
•
Item of the same type: M
•
Level 1 heading: 1
•
Level 2 heading: 2
•
Level 3 heading: 3
•
Level 4 heading: 4
•
Level 5 heading: 5
•
Level 6 heading: 6
Appendix A Accessibility
138
Text editing
Use these commands (with Quick Nav turned of) to work with text. VoiceOver reads the text as
you move the insertion point.
•
Go forward or back one character: Right Arrow or Left Arrow
•
Go forward or back one word: Option–Right Arrow or Option–Left Arrow
•
Go up or down one line: Up Arrow or Down Arrow
•
Go to the beginning or end of the line: Command–Left Arrow or Command–Down Arrow
•
Go to the beginning or end of the paragraph: Option–Up Arrow or Option–Down Arrow
•
Go to the previous or next paragraph: Option–Up Arrow or Option–Down Arrow
•
Go to the top or bottom of the text ield: Command–Up Arrow or Command–Down Arrow
•
Select text as you move: Shift + any of the insertion point movement commands above
•
Select all text: Command–A
•
Copy, cut, or paste the selected text: Command–C, Command–X, or Command–V
•
Undo or redo last change: Command–Z or Shift–Command–Z
Support for braille displays
You can use a Bluetooth braille display to read VoiceOver output, and you can use a braille
display with input keys and other controls to control iPad when VoiceOver is turned on. For a list
of supported braille displays, go to www.apple.com/accessibility/ios/braille-display.html.
Connect a braille display. Turn on the display, then go to Settings > Bluetooth and turn on
Bluetooth. Then go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille and choose
the display.
Adjust Braille settings. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille, where you
can:
•
Choose contracted, uncontracted 8-dot, or uncontracted 6-dot braille input or output
•
Turn on the status cell and choose its location
•
Turn on Nemeth code for equations
•
Display the onscreen keyboard
•
Choose to have the page turned automatically when panning
•
Change the braille translation from Uniied English
For information about common braille commands for VoiceOver navigation, and for information
speciic to certain displays, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT4400.
Set the language for VoiceOver. Go to Settings > General > Language & Region.
If you change the language for iPad, you may need to reset the language for VoiceOver and your
braille display.
You can set the leftmost or rightmost cell of your braille display to provide system status and
other information:
•
Announcement History contains an unread message
•
The current Announcement History message hasn’t been read
•
VoiceOver speech is muted
•
The iPad battery is low (less than 20% charge)
•
iPad is in landscape orientation
Appendix A Accessibility
139
•
The screen display is turned of
•
The current line contains additional text to the left
•
The current line contains additional text to the right
Set the leftmost or rightmost cell to display status information. Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille > Status Cell, then tap Left or Right.
See an expanded description of the status cell. On your braille display, press the status cell’s
router button.
Read math equations
VoiceOver can read aloud math equations encoded using:
•
MathML on the web
•
MathML or LaTeX in iBooks Author
Hear an equation. Have VoiceOver read the text as usual. VoiceOver says “math” before it starts
reading an equation.
Explore the equation. Double-tap the selected equation to display it full screen and move
through it one element at a time. Swipe left or right to read elements of the equation. Use the
rotor to select Symbols, Small Expressions, Medium Expressions, or Large Expressions, then swipe
up or down to hear the next element of that size. You can continue to double-tap the selected
element to “drill down” into the equation to focus on the selected element, then swipe left or
right, up or down to read one part at a time.
Equations read by VoiceOver can also be output to a braille device using Nemeth code, as well
as the codes used by Uniied English Braille, British English, French, and Greek. See Support for
braille displays on page 139.
Use VoiceOver with Safari
Search the web. Select the search ield, enter your search, then swipe right or left to move down
or up the list of suggested search phrases. Then double-tap the screen to search the web using
the selected phrase.
Skip to the next page element of a particular type. Set the rotor to the element type, then
swipe up or down.
Set the rotor options for web browsing. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Rotor. Tap to select or deselect options, or drag
up to reposition an item.
Skip images while navigating. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Navigate
Images. You can choose to skip all images or only those without descriptions.
Reduce page clutter for easier reading and navigation. Select the Reader item in the Safari
address ield (not available for all pages).
If you pair an Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPad, you can use single-key Quick Nav commands to
navigate webpages. See Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 137.
Use VoiceOver with Maps
With VoiceOver, you can zoom in or out, select a pin, or get information about a location.
Explore the map. Drag your inger around the screen, or swipe left or right to move to
another item.
Zoom in or out. Select the map, set the rotor to Zoom, then swipe down or up with one inger.
Pan the map. Swipe with three ingers.
Appendix A Accessibility
140
Browse visible points of interest. Set the rotor to Points of Interest, then swipe up or down with
one inger.
Follow a road. Hold your inger down on the road, wait until you hear “pause to follow,” then
move your inger along the road while listening to the guide tone. The pitch increases when you
stray from the road.
Select a pin. Touch a pin, or swipe left or right to select the pin.
Get information about a location. With a pin selected, double-tap to display the information
lag. Swipe left or right to select the More Info button, then double-tap to display the
information page.
Hear location cues as you move about. Turn on Tracking With Heading in Maps to hear street
names and points of interest as you approach them.
Edit videos with VoiceOver
You can use VoiceOver gestures to trim Camera videos.
Trim a video. While viewing a video in Photos, double-tap the screen to display the video
controls, then select the beginning or end of the trim tool. Then swipe up to drag to the right, or
swipe down to drag to the left. VoiceOver announces the amount of time the current position
will trim from the recording. To complete the trim, select Trim, then double-tap.
Zoom
Many apps let you zoom in or out on speciic items. For example, you can double-tap or pinch to
look closer in Photos or expand webpage columns in Safari. There’s also a general Zoom feature
that lets you magnify the screen no matter what you’re doing. You can zoom the entire screen
(Full Screen Zoom) or zoom part of the screen in a resizable window and leave the rest of the
screen unmagniied (Window Zoom). And, you can use Zoom together with VoiceOver.
Turn Zoom on or of. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom. Or use the Accessibility
Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut on page 130.
Zoom in or out. With Zoom turned on, double-tap the screen with three ingers.
Adjust the magniication. Double-tap with three ingers, then drag up or down. This gesture
is similar to a double-tap, except you don’t lift your ingers after the second tap—instead, drag
your ingers on the screen. You can also triple-tap with three ingers, then drag the Zoom Level
slider in the zoom controls that appear. To limit the maximum magniication, go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > Zoom > Maximum Zoom Level.
Pan to see more. Drag the screen with three ingers. Or hold your inger near the edge of the
screen to pan to that side. Move your inger closer to the edge to pan more quickly. Or, if you
have detached the Zoom Controller, drag it.
Switch between Full Screen Zoom and Window Zoom. Triple-tap with three ingers, then tap
Window Zoom or Full Screen Zoom in the zoom controls that appear. To choose the mode that’s
used when you turn on Zoom, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom > Zoom Region.
Resize the zoom window (Window Zoom). Triple-tap with three ingers, tap Resize Lens, then
drag any of the round handles that appear.
Move the zoom window (Window Zoom). Drag the handle at the bottom of the zoom window.
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Show the zoom controller. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then turn on Show
Controller, or triple-tap with three ingers, then choose Show Controller. Then you can doubletap the loating Zoom Controls button to zoom in or out, single-tap the button to display the
zoom controls, or drag it to pan. To move the Zoom Controls button, tap and hold the button,
then drag it to a new location. To adjust the transparency of the zoom controller, go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > Zoom > Idle Visibility.
Have Zoom track your selections or the text insertion point. Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > Zoom > Follow Focus. Then, for example, if you use VoiceOver, turning on this
option causes the zoom window to magnify each element on the screen as you select it using a
swipe in VoiceOver.
Zoom in on your typing without magnifying the keyboard. Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > Zoom, then turn on Follow Focus and turn of Zoom Keyboard. Now when you
zoom in while typing (in Messages or Notes, for example), the text you type is magniied but all
of the keyboard remains visible.
Display the magniied part of the screen in grayscale or inverted color. Triple-tap with three
ingers, then tap the Filters button in the controls that appear.
While using Zoom with an Apple Wireless Keyboard, the screen image follows the insertion point,
keeping it in the center of the display. See Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 30.
Invert Colors and Grayscale
Sometimes, inverting the colors or changing to grayscale on the iPad screen makes it easier
to read.
Invert the screen colors. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Invert Colors.
See the screen in grayscale. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Grayscale.
Turn on both efects to see inverted grayscale. You can also apply these efects to just the
contents of the zoom window—see Zoom on page 141.
Speak Selection
Even with VoiceOver turned of, you can have iPad read aloud any text you select.
Turn on Speak Selection. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech. There you can also:
•
Adjust the speaking rate
•
Choose to have individual words highlighted as they’re read
Have text read to you. Select the text, then tap Speak.
You can also have iPad read the entire screen to you. See Speak Screen, next.
Speak Screen
iPad can read the contents of the screen to you, even if you don’t use VoiceOver.
Turn on Speak Screen. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech.
Have iPad speak the screen. Swipe down from the top of the screen with two ingers. Use the
controls that appear to pause speaking or adjust the rate.
Highlight what’s being spoken. Turn on Highlight Content, below the Speak Screen switch when
it’s turned on.
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Use Siri. Say “speak screen.”
You can also have iPad read just text you select—see Speak Selection, above.
Speak Auto-Text
Speak Auto-text speaks the text corrections and suggestions iPad makes when you type.
Turn Speak Auto-text on or of. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech.
Speak Auto-text also works with VoiceOver and Zoom.
Large, bold, and high-contrast text
Display larger text in apps such as Settings, Calendar, Contacts, Mail, Messages, and Notes.
Go to Settings > General > Text Size, then adjust the slider. For even larger text, go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > Larger Text, then turn on Larger Accessibility Sizes.
Display bolder text on iPad. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on Bold Text.
Increase text contrast where possible. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on
Increase Contrast.
Button Shapes
iPad can add a colored background shape or an underline to buttons so they’re easier to see.
Emphasize buttons. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on Button Shapes.
Reduce screen motion
You can stop the movement of some screen elements, for example, the parallax efect of icons
and alerts against the wallpaper, or motion transitions.
Reduce motion. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on Reduce Motion.
On/of switch labels
To make it easier to see whether a setting is on or of, you can have iPad show an additional label
on on/of switches.
Add switch-setting labels. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on On/Of Labels.
Assignable tones
You can assign distinctive ringtones to people in your contacts list for audible FaceTime caller
ID. You can also assign distinct tones to alert you of a variety of other events, including new
voicemail, new mail, sent mail, Tweet, Facebook Post, and reminders. See Sounds and silence on
page 35.
You can purchase ringtones from the iTunes Store on iPad. See Chapter 22, iTunes Store, on
page 113.
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Video Descriptions
Video descriptions provide an audible description of video scenes. If you have a video that
includes video descriptions, iPad can play them for you.
Turn on Video Descriptions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Video Descriptions.
Hearing aids
If you have Made for iPhone hearing aids (compatible with iPad 4th generation or later and
iPad mini), you can use iPad to adjust their settings, stream audio, or use iPad as a remote mic.
Pair with iPad. If your hearing aids aren’t listed in Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing
Aids, you need to pair them with iPad. To start, open the battery door on each hearing aid. Next,
on iPad, go to Settings > Bluetooth and make sure Bluetooth is turned on. Then go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > Hearing Aids. Close the battery doors on your hearing aids and wait
until their name appears in the list of devices (this could take a minute). When the name appears,
tap it and respond to the pairing request.
When pairing is inished, you hear a series of beeps and a tone, and a checkmark appears next to
the hearing aids in the Devices list. Pairing can take as long as 60 seconds—don’t try to stream
audio or otherwise use the hearing aids until pairing is inished.
You should only need to pair once (and your audiologist might do it for you). After that, each
time you turn your hearing aids back on, they reconnect to iPad.
Adjust hearing aid settings and view status. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing
Aids, or choose Hearing Aids from the Accessibility Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut on
page 130. Hearing aid settings appear only after you pair your hearing aids with iPad.
For shortcut access from the Lock screen, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Aids,
then turn on Control on Lock Screen. Use the settings to:
•
Check hearing aid battery status.
•
Adjust ambient microphone volume and equalization.
•
Choose which hearing aids (left, right, or both) receive streaming audio.
•
Control Live Listen.
Stream audio to your hearing aids. Stream audio from Siri, Music, Videos, and more by choosing
your hearing aids from the AirPlay menu .
Use iPad as a remote microphone. You can use Live Listen to stream sound from the
microphone in iPad to your hearing aids. This can help you hear better in some situations by
positioning iPad nearer the sound source. Triple-click the Home button, choose Hearing Aids,
then tap Start Live Listen.
Use your hearing aids with more than one iOS device. If you pair your hearing aids with more
than one iOS device (both an iPhone and iPad, for example), the connection for your hearing
aids automatically switches from one to the other when you do something that generates audio
on the other device, or when you receive a phone call on iPhone. Changes you make to hearing
aid settings on one device are automatically sent to your other iOS devices. To take advantage
of this, all of the devices must be on the same Wi-Fi network and signed in to iCloud using the
same Apple ID.
Appendix A Accessibility
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Mono audio and balance
Mono Audio combines the sound from the left and right channels into a mono signal played on
both channels. This way you can hear everything with either ear, or through both ears with one
channel set louder.
Turn Mono Audio on or of. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Mono Audio.
Adjust the balance. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then drag the Left Right Stereo
Balance slider.
Subtitles and closed captions
The Videos app includes an Alternate Track button
you can tap to choose subtitles and
captions ofered by the video you’re watching. Standard subtitles and captions are usually listed,
but if you prefer special accessible captions, such as subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
(SDH), you can set iPad to list them instead, if they’re available.
Prefer accessible subtitles and closed captions for the hard of hearing in the list of available
subtitles and captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning, then
turn on Closed Captions + SDH. This also turns on subtitles and captions in the Videos app.
Choose from available subtitles and captions. Tap
while watching a video.
Customize your subtitles and captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles &
Captioning > Style, where you can choose an existing caption style or create a new style based
on your choice of:
•
Font, size, and color
•
Background color and opacity
•
Text opacity, edge style, and highlight
Not all videos include closed captions.
Siri
With Siri, you can do things like opening apps just by asking, and VoiceOver can read Siri
responses to you. For information, see Use Siri on page 47.
Widescreen keyboards
All built-in iPad apps show a larger onscreen keyboard when you rotate iPad to landscape view.
You can also type using an Apple Wireless Keyboard.
Guided Access
Guided Access helps an iPad user stay focused on a task. Guided Access dedicates iPad to a
single app, and lets you control which app features are available. Use Guided Access to:
•
Temporarily restrict iPad to a particular app
•
Disable areas of the screen that aren’t relevant to a task, or areas where an accidental gesture
might cause a distraction
•
Limit how long someone can use an app
•
Disable the iPad hardware buttons
Use Guided Access. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Guided Access, where you can:
Appendix A Accessibility
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•
Turn Guided Access on or of
•
Tap Passcode Settings to set a passcode that controls the use of Guided Access (preventing
someone from leaving a session), and turn on Touch ID (as a way to end Guided Access)
•
Tap Time Limits to set a sound or have the remaining Guided Access time spoken before time
ends
•
Set whether other accessibility shortcuts are available during a session
Start a Guided Access session. After turning on Guided Access, open the app, then triple-click
the Home button. Adjust settings for the session, then tap Start.
•
•
•
Disable app controls and areas of the app screen: Draw a circle or rectangle around any part
of the screen you want to disable. Drag the mask into position or use the handles to adjust
its size.
Enable the Sleep/Wake button and Volume buttons: Tap Options below Hardware Buttons.
Keep iPad from switching from portrait to landscape or from responding to other motions: Tap
Options, then turn of Motion.
•
Prevent typing: Tap Options, then turn of Keyboards.
•
Ignore all screen touches: Turn of Touch at the bottom of the screen.
•
Set a session time limit: Tap Time Limit Options at the bottom of the screen.
End the session. Triple-click the Home button, then enter the Guided Access passcode, or use
Touch ID (if enabled).
Switch Control
Switch Control lets you control iPad using a single switch or multiple switches. Use any of several
methods to perform actions such as selecting, tapping, dragging, typing, and even free-hand
drawing. The basic technique is to use a switch to select an item or location on the screen, and
then use the same (or diferent) switch to choose an action to perform on that item or location.
Three basic methods are:
•
Item scanning (default), which highlights diferent items on the screen until you select one.
•
Point scanning, which lets you use scanning crosshairs to pick a screen location.
•
Manual selection, which lets you move from item to item on demand (requires multiple
switches).
Whichever method you use, when you select an individual item (rather than a group), a menu
appears so you can choose how to act on the selected item (tap, drag, or pinch, for example).
If you use multiple switches, you can set up each switch to perform a speciic action and
customize your item selection method. For example, instead of automatically scanning screen
items, you can set up switches to move to the next or previous item on demand.
You can adjust the behavior of Switch Control in a variety of ways, to suit your speciic needs
and style.
Add a switch and turn on Switch Control
You can use any of these as a switch:
•
An external adaptive switch: Choose from a variety of popular USB or Bluetooth switches.
•
The iPad screen: Tap the screen to trigger the switch.
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•
The iPad FaceTime camera: Move your head to trigger the switch. You can use the camera as
two switches: one when you move your head to the left, and the other when you move your
head to the right.
Add a switch and choose its action. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control >
Switches. If you use only one switch, it is your Select Item switch by default.
If you’re adding an external switch, you need to connect it to iPad before it will appear in the
list of available switches. Follow the instructions that came with the switch. If it connects using
Bluetooth, you need to pair it with iPad—turn on the switch, go to Settings > Bluetooth, tap the
switch, then follow the onscreen instructions. For more information, see Bluetooth devices on
page 41.
Turn on Switch Control. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, or use the
Accessibility Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut on page 130.
Turn of Switch Control. Use any scanning method to select and tap Settings > General >
Accessibility > Switch Control. Or triple-click the Home button.
Basic techniques
Whether you use item scanning or point scanning, the Switch Control basics are the same.
Select an item. Trigger your Select Item switch when the item is highlighted (item scanning) or
under the crosshairs (point scanning).
Perform an action on the selected item. Choose a command from the control menu that
appears when you select the item. The layout of the menu depends on whether you use
Auto Tap.
•
•
With Auto Tap of: The control menu includes only the Tap button and the More button (two
dots at the bottom). If you’re in a scrollable area of the screen, a Scroll button also appears.
To tap the highlighted item, trigger your Select Item button when Tap is highlighted. To see
additional action buttons, choose More at the bottom of the menu. If you have multiple
switches, you can set one up speciically for tapping.
With Auto Tap on: To tap the item, do nothing—the item is automatically tapped when the
Auto Tap interval expires (0.75 seconds if you haven’t changed it). To see the control menu,
trigger your Select Item button before the Auto Tap interval expires. The control menu skips
the Tap button and goes right to the full set of action buttons.
Turn on Auto Tap. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Auto Tap. To tap an
item with Auto Tap on, just wait for the Auto Tap interval to pass.
Dismiss the control menu without choosing an action. Tap while the original item is
highlighted and all the icons in the control menu are dimmed. Or choose Escape from the
control menu. The menu goes away after cycling the number of times you specify at Settings >
General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Loops.
Perform screen gestures. Choose Gestures from the control menu.
Scroll the screen. Select an item in a scrollable part of the screen, then:
•
•
With Auto Tap of: Choose the Scroll Down button (next to the Tap button) in the control menu.
Or, for more scrolling options, choose More, then choose Scroll.
With Auto Tap on: Choose Scroll from the control menu. If many actions are available, you
might have to choose More irst.
Tap the Home button. Choose Home in the control menu.
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Perform other hardware actions. Select any item, then choose Device from the menu that
appears. Use the menu to mimic these actions:
•
Double-click the Home button for multitasking
•
Open Notiication Center or Control Center
•
Press the Sleep/Wake button to lock iPad
•
Rotate iPad
•
Flip the Side Switch to mute iPad volume
•
Press the volume buttons
•
Hold down the Home button to open Siri
•
Triple-click the Home button
•
Shake iPad
•
Press the Home and Sleep/Wake buttons simultaneously to take a screenshot
•
Swipe down from the top with two ingers to speak the screen (if you have Speak Screen
turned on)
Item scanning
Item scanning alternately highlights each item or group of items on the entire screen until
you trigger your Select Item switch. If there are many items, Switch Control highlights them in
groups. When you select a group, highlighting continues with the items in the group. When you
select a unique item, scanning stops and the control menu appears. Item scanning is the default
when you irst turn on Switch Control.
Select an item or enter a group. Watch (or listen) as items are highlighted. When the item
you want to control (or the group containing the item) is highlighted, trigger your Select Item
switch. Work your way down the hierarchy of items until you select the individual item you want
to control.
Back out of a group. Trigger your Select Item switch when the dashed highlight around the
group or item appears.
Dismiss the control menu without performing an action. Trigger your Select Item switch when
the item itself is highlighted. Or choose Escape from the control menu.
Hear the names of items as they are highlighted. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Switch Control, then turn on Speech. Or choose Settings from the control menu, then choose
Speech On.
Slow down the scanning. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Auto
Scanning Time.
Point scanning
Point scanning lets you select an item on the screen by pinpointing it with scanning crosshairs.
Switch to point scanning. Use item scanning to choose Point Mode from the control menu. The
vertical crosshair appears when you close the menu.
Select an item. Trigger your Select Item switch when the item you want is within the broad,
horizontal scanning band, then trigger again when the ine scanning line is on the item. Repeat
for vertical scanning.
Reine your selection point. Choose Reine Selection from the control menu.
Return to item scanning. Choose Item Mode from the control menu.
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Manual selection
You can select a screen item directly using dedicated switches instead of having iPad alternately
highlight every item.
Stop scanning and highlight items yourself. Add switches in addition to your Select Item switch
to perform the Move To Next Item and Move To Previous Item actions. (You can use the iPad
FaceTime camera with head-left and head-right movements for these switches.) When you’ve
added the switches, turn of Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Auto Scanning.
Important: Don’t turn of Auto Scanning if you use only one switch. You need at least two: one to
move to an item and a second to select the item.
Settings and adjustments
Adjust basic settings. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, where you can:
•
Add switches and specify their function
•
Turn of auto scanning (only if you’ve added a Move to Next Item switch)
•
Adjust how rapidly items are scanned
•
Set scanning to pause on the irst item in a group
•
Choose how many times to cycle through the screen before hiding Switch Control
•
Turn Auto Tap on or of and set the interval for performing a second switch action to show the
control menu
•
Set whether a movement action is repeated when you hold down a switch, and how long to
wait before repeating
•
Set whether and how long you need to hold a switch down before it’s accepted as a switch
action
•
Have Switch Control ignore accidental repeated switch triggers
•
Adjust the point scanning speed
•
Turn on sound efects or have items read aloud as they are scanned
•
Choose what to include in the Switch Control menu
•
Set whether items should be grouped while item scanning
•
Make the selection cursor larger or a diferent color
•
Save custom gestures to the control menu (in Gestures > Saved)
Fine-tune Switch Control. Choose Settings from the control menu to:
•
Adjust scanning speed
•
Change the location of the control menu
•
Switch between item scan mode and point scan mode
•
Choose whether point scan mode displays crosshairs or a grid
•
Reverse the scanning direction
•
Turn sound or speech accompaniment on or of
•
Turn of groups to scan items one at a time
Appendix A Accessibility
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AssistiveTouch
AssistiveTouch helps you use iPad if you have diiculty touching the screen or pressing the
buttons. You can use AssistiveTouch without any accessory to perform gestures that are diicult
for you. You also can use a compatible adaptive accessory (such as a joystick) together with
AssistiveTouch to control iPad.
The AssistiveTouch menu lets you perform actions such as these by just tapping (or the
equivalent on your accessory):
•
Press the Home button
•
Summon Siri
•
Perform multi-inger gestures
•
Access Control Center or Notiication Center
•
Adjust iPad volume
•
Shake iPad
•
Capture a screenshot
Turn on AssistiveTouch. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch, or use the
Accessibility Shortcut. See Accessibility Shortcut on page 130. When AssistiveTouch is on, the
loating menu button appears on the screen.
Show or hide the menu. Tap the loating menu button, or click the secondary button on
your accessory.
Simulate pressing the Home button. Tap the menu button, then tap Home.
Lock or rotate the screen, adjust iPad volume, or simulate shaking iPad. Tap the menu button,
then tap Device.
Perform a swipe or drag that uses 2, 3, 4, or 5 ingers. Tap the menu button, tap Device >
More > Gestures, then tap the number of digits needed for the gesture. When the corresponding
circles appear on the screen, swipe or drag in the direction required by the gesture. When you
inish, tap the menu button.
Perform a pinch gesture. Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, then tap Pinch. When the pinch
circles appear, touch anywhere on the screen to move the pinch circles, then drag the pinch
circles in or out to perform a pinch gesture. When you inish, tap the menu button.
Create your own gesture. You can add your own favorite gestures to the control menu (for
example, tap and hold or two-inger rotation). Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, then tap an
empty gesture placeholder. Or go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch > Create
New Gesture.
Example 1: To create the rotation gesture, go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
AssistiveTouch > Create New Gesture. On the gesture recording screen that prompts you to
touch to create a gesture, rotate two ingers on the iPad screen around a point between them.
(You can do this with a single inger or stylus—just create each arc separately, one after the
other.) If it doesn’t turn out quite right, tap Cancel, then try again. When it looks right, tap Save,
then give the gesture a name—maybe “Rotate 90.” Then, to rotate the view in Maps, for example,
open Maps, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button, and choose Rotate 90 from Favorites. When
the blue circles representing the starting inger positions appear, drag them to the point around
which you want to rotate the map, then release. You might want to create several gestures with
diferent degrees of rotation.
Appendix A Accessibility
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Example 2: Let’s create the touch-and-hold gesture that you use to start rearranging icons on
your Home screen. This time, on the gesture recording screen, hold down your inger in one spot
until the recording progress bar reaches halfway, then lift your inger. Be careful not to move
your inger while recording, or the gesture will be recorded as a drag. Tap Save, then name the
gesture. To use the gesture, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button, then choose your gesture from
Favorites. When the blue circle representing your touch appears, drag it over a Home screen icon
and release.
If you record a sequence of taps or drags, they’re all played back at the same time. For example,
using one inger or a stylus to record four separate, sequential taps at four locations on the
screen creates a simultaneous four-inger tap.
Exit a menu without performing a gesture. Tap anywhere outside the menu. To return to the
previous menu, tap the arrow in the middle of the menu.
Move the menu button. Drag it anywhere along the edge of the screen.
Adjust your accessory tracking speed. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
AssistiveTouch > Touch speed.
Hide the menu button (with accessory attached). Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
AssistiveTouch > Always Show Menu.
Accessibility in OS X
Take advantage of the accessibility features in OS X when you use iTunes to sync information
and content from your iTunes library to iPad. In the Finder, choose Help > Help Center (or Help >
Mac Help in OS X Yosemite), then search for “accessibility.”
For more information about iPad and OS X accessibility features, go to
www.apple.com/accessibility/.
Appendix A Accessibility
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B
iPad in the enterprise
With support for secure access to corporate networks, directories, and Microsoft Exchange,
iPad is ready to go to work. For detailed information about using iPad in business, go to
www.apple.com/ipad/business/.
Mail, Contacts, and Calendar
To use iPad with your work accounts, you need to know the settings your organization requires.
If you received your iPad from your organization, the settings and apps you need might already
be installed. If it’s your own iPad, your system administrator may provide you with the settings for
you to enter, or have you connect to a mobile device management server that installs the settings
and apps you should have.
Organizational settings and accounts are typically in coniguration proiles. You might be asked to
install a coniguration proile that was sent to you in an email, or one that you need to download
from a webpage. When you open the ile, iPad asks for your permission to install the proile, and
displays information about what it contains.
In most cases, when you install a coniguration proile that sets up an account for you, some iPad
settings can’t be changed. For example, your organization might turn on Auto-Lock and require
you to set a passcode in order to protect the information in the accounts you access.
You can see your proiles in Settings > General > Proiles. If you delete a proile, all of the settings
and accounts associated with the proile are also removed, including any custom apps your
organization provided or had you download. If you need a passcode to remove a proile, contact
your system administrator.
Network access
A VPN (virtual private network) provides secure access over the Internet to private resources,
such as your organization’s network. You may need to install a VPN app from the App Store
that conigures your iPad to access a particular network. Contact your system administrator for
information about any apps and settings you need.
Apps
In addition to the built-in apps and the ones you get from the App Store, your organization
may want you to have certain other apps. They might provide you with a pre-paid redemption
code for the App Store. When you download an app using a redemption code, you own it, even
though your organization purchased it for you.
152
Appendix
iPad in Business
Your organization can also purchase App Store app licenses that are assigned to you for a period
of time, but that the organization retains. You’ll be invited to participate in your organization’s
program in order to access these apps. After you enroll with your Apple ID, you’re prompted to
install these apps as they’re assigned to you. You can also ind them in your Purchased list in the
App Store. An app you receive this way is removed if the organization assigns it to someone else.
Your organization might also develop custom apps that aren’t in the App Store. You install
them from a webpage or, if your organization uses mobile device management, you receive a
notiication asking you to install them over the air. These apps belong to your organization, and
they may be removed or stop working if you delete a coniguration proile or dissociate iPad
from the mobile device management server.
Appendix B iPad in Business
153
C
Use international keyboards
International keyboards let you type text in many diferent languages, including Asian
languages and languages written from right to left. For a list of supported keyboards, go to
www.apple.com/ipad/, choose your iPad, click Tech Specs, then scroll to Languages.
Manage keyboards. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards.
•
•
•
Add a keyboard: Tap Add New Keyboard, then choose a keyboard from the list. Repeat to add
more keyboards.
Remove a keyboard: Tap Edit, tap
then tap Done.
Edit your keyboard list: Tap Edit, drag
tap Done.
next to the keyboard you want to remove, tap Delete,
next to a keyboard to a new place in the list, then
To enter text in a diferent language, switch keyboards.
Switch keyboards while typing. Touch and hold the Globe key
to show all your enabled
keyboards. To choose a keyboard, slide your inger to the name of the keyboard, then release. The
Globe key
appears only if you enable more than one keyboard.
You can also just tap . When you tap , the name of the newly activated keyboard appears
briely. Continue tapping to access other enabled keyboards.
Many keyboards provide letters, numbers, and symbols that aren’t visible on the keyboard.
Enter accented letters or other characters. Touch and hold the related letter, number, or symbol,
then slide to choose a variant. For example:
•
•
On a Thai keyboard: Choose native numbers by touching and holding the related
Arabic number.
On a Chinese, Japanese, or Arabic keyboard: Suggested characters or candidates appear at the
top of the keyboard. Tap a candidate to enter it, or swipe left to see more candidates.
Use the extended suggested candidate list. Tap the up arrow on the right to view the full
candidate list.
•
Scroll the list: Swipe up or down.
•
Return to the short list: Tap the down arrow.
When using certain Chinese or Japanese keyboards, you can create a shortcut for word and input
pairs. The shortcut is added to your personal dictionary. When you type a shortcut while using a
supported keyboard, the paired word or input is substituted for the shortcut.
154
Appendix
International Keyboards
Turn shortcuts on or of. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Shortcuts. Shortcuts are
available for:
•
Simpliied Chinese: Pinyin
•
Traditional Chinese: Pinyin and Zhuyin
•
Japanese: Romaji and 50 Key
Reset your personal dictionary. Go to Settings > General > Reset > Reset Keyboard Dictionary.
All custom words and shortcuts are deleted, and the keyboard dictionary returns to its
default state.
Special input methods
You can use keyboards to enter some languages in diferent ways. A few examples are Chinese
Cangjie and Wubihua, Japanese Kana, and Facemarks. You can also use your inger or a stylus to
write Chinese characters on the screen.
Build Chinese characters from the component Cangjie keys. As you type, suggested
characters appear. Tap a character to choose it, or continue typing up to ive components to see
more options.
Build Chinese Wubihua (stroke) characters. Use the keypad to build Chinese characters using
up to ive strokes, in the correct writing sequence: horizontal, vertical, left falling, right falling, and
hook. For example, the Chinese character 圈 (circle) should begin with the vertical stroke 丨.
•
As you type, suggested Chinese characters appear (the most commonly used characters
appear irst). Tap a character to choose it.
•
If you’re not sure of the correct stroke, enter an asterisk (*). To see more character options, type
another stroke, or scroll through the character list.
•
Tap the match key (匹配) to show only characters that match exactly what you typed.
Write Chinese characters. Write Chinese characters directly on the screen with your inger
when Simpliied or Traditional Chinese handwriting input is turned on. As you write character
strokes, iPad recognizes them and shows matching characters in a list, with the closest match
at the top. When you choose a character, its likely follow-on characters appear in the list as
additional choices.
Matching characters
Appendix C International Keyboards
155
You can type some complex characters, such as 鱲 (part of the name for the Hong Kong
International Airport), by writing two or more component characters in sequence. Tap the
character to replace the characters you typed. Roman characters are also recognized.
Type Japanese kana. Use the Kana keypad to select syllables. For more syllable options, tap the
arrow key and select another syllable or word from the window.
Type Japanese romaji. Use the Romaji keyboard to type syllables. Alternative choices appear
along the top of the keyboard; tap one to type it. For more syllable options, drag the list to the
left or tap the arrow key.
Type facemarks or emoticons. Use the Japanese Kana keyboard and tap the
•
•
Use the Japanese Romaji keyboard (QWERTY-Japanese layout): Tap
key. Or you can:
, then tap the
Use the Chinese (Simpliied or Traditional) Pinyin or (Traditional) Zhuyin keyboard: Tap
tap the key.
Appendix C International Keyboards
key.
, then
156
D
Important safety information
WARNING: Failure to follow these safety instructions could result in ire, electric shock, injury, or
damage to iPad or other property. Read all the safety information below before using iPad.
Handling Handle iPad with care. It is made of metal, glass, and plastic and has sensitive
electronic components inside. iPad can be damaged if dropped, burned, punctured, or crushed,
or if it comes in contact with liquid. Don’t use a damaged iPad, such as one with a cracked
screen, as it may cause injury. If you’re concerned about scratching, consider using a case
or cover.
Repairing Don’t open iPad and don’t attempt to repair iPad yourself. Disassembling iPad may
damage it or may cause injury to you. If iPad is damaged, malfunctions, or comes in contact with
liquid, contact Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider. You can ind more information
about getting service at www.apple.com/support/ipad/repair/.
Battery Don’t attempt to replace the iPad battery yourself—you may damage the battery,
which could cause overheating and injury. The lithium-ion battery in iPad should be replaced
only by Apple or an authorized service provider, and must be recycled or disposed of separately
from household waste. Don’t incinerate the battery. For information about battery services and
recycling, go to www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/.
Distraction Using iPad in some circumstances may distract you and might cause a dangerous
situation (for example, avoid using headphones while riding a bicycle and avoid texting while
driving a car). Observe rules that prohibit or restrict the use of mobile devices or headphones.
Navigation Maps, directions, Flyover, and location-based apps depend on data services.
These data services are subject to change and may not be available in all areas, resulting in
maps, directions, Flyover, or location-based information that may be unavailable, inaccurate, or
incomplete. Some Maps features require Location Services. Compare the information provided
on iPad to your surroundings and defer to posted signs to resolve any discrepancies. Do not use
these services while performing activities that require your full attention. Always comply with
posted signs and the laws and regulations in the areas where you are using iPad and always use
common sense.
157
Appendix
Safety, handling, and support
Charging Charge iPad with the included USB cable and power adapter, or with other thirdparty “Made for iPad” cables and power adapters that are compatible with USB 2.0 or later, or
power adapters compliant with applicable country regulations and with one or more of the
following standards: EN 301489-34, IEC 62684, YD/T 1591-2009, CNS 15285, ITU L.1000, or another
applicable mobile phone power adapter interoperability standard. An iPad Micro USB Adapter
(available separately in some areas) or other adapter may be needed to connect iPad to some
compatible power adapters. Only micro USB power adapters in certain regions that comply
with applicable mobile device power adapter interoperability standards are compatible. Please
contact the power adapter manufacturer to ind out if your micro USB power adapter complies
with these standards.
Using damaged cables or chargers, or charging when moisture is present, can cause ire, electric
shock, injury, or damage to iPad or other property. When you use the Apple USB Power Adapter
to charge iPad, make sure the USB cable is fully inserted into the power adapter before you plug
the adapter into a power outlet.
Lightning cable and connector Avoid prolonged skin contact with the connector when the
Lightning to USB Cable is plugged into a power source because it may cause discomfort or
injury. Sleeping or sitting on the Lightning connector should be avoided.
Prolonged heat exposure iPad and its power adapter comply with applicable surface
temperature standards and limits. However, even within these limits, sustained contact with
warm surfaces for long periods of time may cause discomfort or injury. Use common sense
to avoid situations where your skin is in contact with a device or its power adapter when it’s
operating or plugged into a power source for long periods of time. For example, don’t sleep on a
device or power adapter, or place them under a blanket, pillow, or your body, when it’s plugged
into a power source. It’s important to keep iPad and its power adapter in a well-ventilated area
when in use or charging. Take special care if you have a physical condition that afects your
ability to detect heat against the body.
Hearing loss Listening to sound at high volumes may damage your hearing. Background noise,
as well as continued exposure to high volume levels, can make sounds seem quieter than they
actually are. Turn on audio playback and check the volume before inserting anything in your ear.
For more information about hearing loss, see www.apple.com/sound/. For information about
how to set a maximum volume limit on iPad, see Music settings on page 73.
To avoid hearing damage, use only compatible receivers, earbuds, headphones, speakerphones,
or earpieces with iPad. The headsets sold with iPhone 4s or later in China (identiiable by dark
insulating rings on the plug) are designed to comply with Chinese standards and are only
compatible with iPhone 4s or later, iPad 2 or later, and iPod touch 5th generation.
WARNING: To prevent possible hearing damage, do not listen at high volume levels for
long periods.
Radio frequency exposure iPad uses radio signals to connect to wireless networks. For
information about radio frequency (RF) energy resulting from radio signals and steps you can
take to minimize exposure, go to Settings > General > About > Legal > RF Exposure or visit
www.apple.com/legal/rfexposure/.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
158
Radio frequency interference Observe signs and notices that prohibit or restrict the use of
mobile devices (for example, in healthcare facilities or blasting areas). Although iPad is designed,
tested, and manufactured to comply with regulations governing radio frequency emissions, such
emissions from iPad can negatively afect the operation of other electronic equipment, causing
them to malfunction. Turn of iPad or use Airplane Mode to turn of the iPad wireless transmitters
when use is prohibited, such as while traveling in aircraft, or when asked to do so by authorities.
Medical device interference iPad contains components and radios that emit electromagnetic
ields. iPad also contains magnets along the left edge of the device and on the right side of the
front glass, which may interfere with pacemakers, deibrillators, or other medical devices. The
iPad Smart Cover and iPad Smart Case also contain magnets. These electromagnetic ields and
magnets may interfere with pacemakers, deibrillators, or other medical devices. Maintain a safe
distance of separation between your medical device and iPad, the iPad Smart Cover, and the iPad
Smart Case. Consult your physician and medical device manufacturer for information speciic to
your medical device. If you suspect iPad is interfering with your pacemaker, deibrillator, or any
other medical device, stop using iPad.
Not a medical device iPad is not designed or intended for use in the diagnosis of disease or
other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease.
Medical conditions If you have any medical condition that you believe could be afected by iPad
(for example, seizures, blackouts, eyestrain, or headaches), consult with your physician prior to
using iPad.
Explosive atmospheres Charging or using iPad in any area with a potentially explosive
atmosphere, such as areas where the air contains high levels of lammable chemicals,
vapors, or particles (such as grain, dust, or metal powders), may be hazardous. Obey all signs
and instructions.
Repetitive motion When you perform repetitive activities such as typing or playing games on
iPad, you may experience discomfort in your hands, arms, wrists, shoulders, neck, or other parts
of your body. If you experience discomfort, stop using iPad and consult a physician.
High-consequence activities This device is not intended for use where the failure of the device
could lead to death, personal injury, or severe environmental damage.
Choking hazard Some iPad accessories may present a choking hazard to small children. Keep
these accessories away from small children.
Important handling information
Cleaning Clean iPad immediately if it comes in contact with anything that may cause stains—
such as dirt, ink, makeup, or lotions. To clean:
•
Disconnect all cables and turn iPad of (press and hold the Sleep/Wake button, then slide the
onscreen slider).
•
Use a soft, lint-free cloth.
•
Avoid getting moisture in openings.
•
Don’t use cleaning products or compressed air.
The front of iPad is made of glass with a ingerprint-resistant oleophobic (oil repellant) coating.
This coating wears over time with normal usage. Cleaning products and abrasive materials will
further diminish the coating, and may scratch the glass.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
159
Using connectors, ports, and buttons Never force a connector into a port or apply excessive
pressure to a button, because this may cause damage that is not covered under the warranty. If
the connector and port don’t join with reasonable ease, they probably don’t match. Check for
obstructions and make sure that the connector matches the port and that you have positioned
the connector correctly in relation to the port.
Lightning to USB Cable Discoloration of the Lightning connector after regular use is normal.
Dirt, debris, and exposure to moisture may cause discoloration. If your Lightning cable or
connector become warm during use or your iPad won’t charge or sync, disconnect it from your
computer or power adapter and clean the Lightning connector with a soft, dry, lint-free cloth. Do
not use liquids or cleaning products when cleaning the Lightning connector.
Certain usage patterns can contribute to the fraying or breaking of cables. The Lightning to USB
Cable, like any other metal wire or cable, is subject to becoming weak or brittle if repeatedly bent
in the same spot. Aim for gentle curves instead of angles in the cable. Regularly inspect the cable
and connector for any kinks, breaks, bends, or other damage. Should you ind any such damage,
discontinue use of the Lightning to USB Cable.
Operating temperature iPad is designed to work in ambient temperatures between 32° and 95°
F (0° and 35° C) and stored in temperatures between -4° and 113° F (-20° and 45° C). iPad can be
damaged and battery life shortened if stored or operated outside of these temperature ranges.
Avoid exposing iPad to dramatic changes in temperature or humidity. When you’re using iPad or
charging the battery, it is normal for iPad to get warm.
If the interior temperature of iPad exceeds normal operating temperatures (for example, in a hot
car or in direct sunlight for extended periods of time), you may experience the following as it
attempts to regulate its temperature:
•
iPad stops charging.
•
The screen dims.
•
A temperature warning screen appears.
•
Some apps may close.
Important: You may not be able to use iPad while the temperature warning screen is displayed.
If iPad can’t regulate its internal temperature, it goes into deep sleep mode until it cools. Move
iPad to a cooler location out of direct sunlight and wait a few minutes before trying to use
iPad again.
For more information, see support.apple.com/kb/HT2101.
iPad Support site
Comprehensive support information is available online at
www.apple.com/support/ipad/. To contact Apple for personalized support (not available in all
areas), see www.apple.com/support/contact/.
Restart or reset iPad
If something isn’t working right, try restarting iPad, forcing an app to quit, or resetting iPad.
Restart iPad. Hold down the Sleep/Wake button until the slider appears. Slide your inger across
the slider to turn of iPad. To turn iPad back on, hold down the Sleep/Wake button until the
Apple logo appears.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
160
Force an app to quit. Hold down the Sleep/Wake button on top of iPad for a few seconds until a
red slider appears, then hold down the Home button until the app closes.
If you can’t turn of iPad or if the problem continues, you may need to reset iPad. Do this only if
you’re unable to restart iPad.
Reset iPad. Hold down the Sleep/Wake button and the Home button at the same time for at
least ten seconds, until the Apple logo appears.
You can reset the word dictionary, network settings, home screen layout, and location warnings.
You can also erase all of your content and settings.
Reset iPad settings
Reset iPad settings. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then choose an option:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Reset All Settings: All your preferences and settings are reset.
Erase All Content and Settings: Your information and settings are removed. iPad cannot be used
until it’s set up again.
Reset Network Settings: When you reset network settings, previously used networks and VPN
settings that weren’t installed by a coniguration proile are removed. (To remove VPN settings
installed by a coniguration proile, go to Settings > General > Proile, select the proile, then
tap Remove. This also removes other settings or accounts provided by the proile.) Wi-Fi is
turned of and then back on, disconnecting you from any network you’re on. The Wi-Fi and
“Ask to Join Networks” settings remain turned on.
Reset Keyboard Dictionary: You add words to the keyboard dictionary by rejecting words iPad
suggests as you type. Resetting the keyboard dictionary erases all words you’ve added.
Reset Home Screen Layout: Returns the built-in apps to their original layout on the
Home screen.
Reset Location & Privacy: Resets the location services and privacy settings to their defaults.
An app doesn’t ill the screen
Most apps for iPhone and iPod touch can be used with iPad, but they might not take advantage
of the large screen. In this case, tap to zoom in on the app. Tap to return to the original size.
Check the App Store to see if there’s a version of the app that’s optimized for iPad, or a universal
version that’s optimized for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.
Onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear
If iPad is paired with a Bluetooth keyboard, the onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear. To make the
onscreen keyboard appear, press the Eject key on a Bluetooth keyboard. You can also make the
onscreen keyboard appear by moving the Bluetooth keyboard out of range or turning it of.
Get information about your iPad
See information about iPad. Go to Settings > General > About. The items you can view include:
•
Name
•
Network
•
Number of songs, videos, photos, and apps
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
161
•
Capacity and available storage space
•
iOS version
•
(Cellular models) Carrier
•
Model number
•
Serial number
•
(Cellular models) Cellular Data Number
•
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth addresses
•
(Cellular models) IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)
•
(Cellular models) ICCID (Integrated Circuit Card Identiier, or Smart Card) for GSM networks
•
(Cellular models) MEID (Mobile Equipment Identiier) for CDMA networks
•
Modem irmware
Legal (including legal notices, and license, warranty, regulatory marks, and RF exposure
information)
To copy the serial number and other identiiers, touch and hold the identiier until Copy appears.
•
To help Apple improve products and services, iPad sends diagnostic and usage data. This data
doesn’t personally identify you, but may include location information.
View or turn of diagnostic information. Go to Settings > Privacy > Diagnostics & Usage.
Usage information
View cellular usage. Go to Settings > Cellular Data. See Cellular settings on page 164.
View other usage information. Go to Settings > General > Usage to:
•
See Battery Usage, including the elapsed time since iPad has been charged and usage by app
•
Display battery level as a percentage
•
View overall storage availability and storage used per app
•
View and manage iCloud storage
Disabled iPad
If iPad is disabled because you forgot your passcode or entered an incorrect passcode too many
times, you can restore iPad from an iTunes or iCloud backup and reset the passcode. For more
information, see Restore iPad on page 164.
If you get a message in iTunes that your iPad is locked and you must enter a passcode, see
support.apple.com/kb/HT1212.
VPN settings
A VPN (virtual private network) provides secure access over the Internet to private networks, such
as the network at your organization. You may need to install a VPN app from the App Store that
conigures iPad to access a network. Contact your system administrator for information about the
app and settings you need.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
162
Proiles settings
Coniguration proiles deine settings for using iPad with corporate or school networks or
accounts. You might be asked to install a coniguration proile that was sent to you in an email,
or one that is downloaded from a webpage. iPad asks for your permission to install the proile,
and displays information about what it contains, when you open the ile. You can see the proiles
you have installed in Settings > General > Proiles. If you delete a proile, all of the settings, apps,
and data associated with the proile are also deleted.
Back up iPad
You can use iCloud or iTunes to automatically back up iPad. If you choose to back up using
iCloud, you can’t also use iTunes to automatically back up to your computer, but you can use
iTunes to manually back up to your computer. iCloud backs up iPad daily over Wi-Fi, when it’s
connected to a power source and is locked. The date and time of the last backup is listed at the
bottom of the Backup screen.
iCloud backs up your:
•
Purchased music, movies, TV shows, apps, and books
•
Photos and videos taken with iPad (if you use iCloud Photo Library, your photos and videos are
already stored in iCloud, so they won’t also be part of an iCloud backup)
•
iPad settings
•
App data
•
Home screen, folders, and app layout
•
Messages
•
Ringtones
Note: Purchased content is not backed up in all areas.
Turn on iCloud backups. Go to Settings > iCloud, then log in with your Apple ID and password
if required. Go to Backup, then turn on iCloud Backup. To turn on backups in iTunes on your
computer, go to File > Devices > Back Up.
Back up immediately. Go to Settings > iCloud > Backup, then tap Back Up Now.
Encrypt your backup. iCloud backups are encrypted automatically so that your data is protected
from unauthorized access both while it’s transmitted to your devices and when it’s stored
in iCloud. If you’re using iTunes for your backup, select “Encrypt iPad backup” in the iTunes
Summary pane.
Manage your backups. Go to Settings > iCloud. You can manage which apps are backed up
to iCloud by tapping them on or of. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage > Manage Storage to
remove existing backups and manage iCloud Drive or Documents & Data. In iTunes, remove
backups in iTunes Preferences.
View the devices being backed up. Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage > Manage Storage.
Stop iCloud backups. Go to Settings > iCloud > Backup, then turn of iCloud Backup.
Music not purchased in iTunes isn’t backed up in iCloud. Use iTunes to back up and restore that
content. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
Important: Backups for music, movies, or TV show purchases are not available in all countries.
Previous purchases may not be restored if they are no longer in the iTunes Store, App Store, or
iBooks Store.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
163
Purchased content, iCloud Photo Sharing, and My Photo Stream content don’t count against your
5 GB of free iCloud storage.
For more information about backing up iPad, see support.apple.com/kb/HT5262.
Update and restore iPad software
You can update iPad software in Settings, or by using iTunes. You can also erase or restore iPad,
and then use iCloud or iTunes to restore from a backup.
Deleted data is no longer accessible through the iPad user interface, but it isn’t erased from iPad.
For information about erasing all content and settings, see Restart or reset iPad on page 160.
Update iPad
You can update iPad software in Settings or by using iTunes.
Update wirelessly on iPad. Go to Settings > General > Software Update. iPad checks for available
software updates.
Update software in iTunes. iTunes checks for available software updates each time you sync iPad
using iTunes. See Sync with iTunes on page 19.
For more information about updating iPad software, see support.apple.com/kb/HT4623.
Restore iPad
You can use iCloud or iTunes to restore iPad from a backup.
Restore from an iCloud backup. Reset iPad to erase all content and settings, then choose Restore
from a Backup and sign in to iCloud in Setup Assistant. See Restart or reset iPad on page 160.
Restore from an iTunes backup. Connect iPad to the computer you normally sync with, select
iPad in the iTunes window, then click Restore in the Summary pane.
When the iPad software is restored, you can either set it up as a new iPad, or restore your music,
videos, app data, and other content from a backup.
For more information about restoring iPad software, see support.apple.com/kb/HT1414.
Cellular settings
Use Cellular Data settings on iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) to activate cellular data service, turn
cellular use on or of, or add a Personal Identiication Number (PIN) to lock the SIM card. With
some carriers, you can also change your data plan.
For the following options, go to Settings > Cellular Data, then turn the options on or of, or follow
the onscreen instructions.
Turn Cellular Data on or of. If Cellular Data is of, all data services will use only Wi-Fi—including
email, web browsing, push notiications, and other services. If Cellular Data is on, carrier charges
may be incurred. For example, using certain features and services that transfer data, such as
Messages, could result in charges to your data plan.
Monitor and manage your cellular data network usage. You can see which apps use cellular
data and turn of the option, if you want.
Turn LTE on or of. Turning on LTE loads data faster.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
164
Turn Data Roaming on or of. Turning of Data Roaming avoids carrier charges when using a
network provided by a diferent carrier.
Set up Personal Hotspot. Personal Hotspot shares iPad’s Internet connection with your computer
and other iOS devices. See Personal Hotspot on page 39.
Set whether cellular data is used for apps and services. Go to Settings > Cellular, then turn
cellular data on or of for any app that can use cellular data. If a setting is of, iPad uses only Wi-Fi
for that service. The iTunes setting includes both iTunes Match and automatic downloads from
the iTunes Store and the App Store.
Activate, view, or change your cellular data account. Tap View Account, then follow the
onscreen instructions.
Lock the SIM card. Locking the SIM card with a PIN means you need to enter the PIN to use a
cellular connection on iPad.
Sell or give away iPad
Before you sell or give away your iPad, be sure to erase all content and your personal information.
If you enabled Find My iPad (see Find My iPad on page 44), Activation Lock is on. You need to
turn of Activation Lock before the new owner can activate iPad under his or her own account.
Erase iPad and remove Activation Lock. Go to Settings > General > Reset > Erase All Content
and Settings.
See support.apple.com/kb/HT5661.
Learn more, service, and support
Refer to the following resources to get more iPad-related safety, software, service, and
support information.
To learn about
Do this
Using iPad safely
See Important safety information on page 157.
iPad service and support, tips, forums, and
Apple software downloads
Go to www.apple.com/support/ipad/.
The latest information about iPad
Go to www.apple.com/ipad/.
Managing your Apple ID account
Go to appleid.apple.com.
Using iCloud
Go to help.apple.com/icloud/.
Using iTunes
Open iTunes, then choose Help > iTunes Help. For an
online iTunes tutorial (not available in all areas), go to
www.apple.com/support/itunes/.
Using other Apple iOS apps
Go to www.apple.com/support/ios/.
Obtaining warranty service
First follow the advice in this guide. Then go to
www.apple.com/support/ipad/.
Viewing iPad regulatory information
On iPad, go to Settings > General > About > Legal >
Regulatory.
Screen repair
Go to
www.apple.com/support/ipad/repair/screen-damage/
Battery service
Go to
www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/.
Using iPad in an enterprise environment
Go to www.apple.com/ipad/business/.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
165
FCC compliance statement
This device complies with part 15 of the FCC rules. Operation is subject to the following two
conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept
any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital
device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable
protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates,
uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with
the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is
no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does
cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning
the equipment of and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or
more of the following measures:
•
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
•
Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
•
•
Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit diferent from that to which the receiver
is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
Important: Changes or modiications to this product not authorized by Apple could void
the electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and wireless compliance and negate your authority
to operate the product. This product has demonstrated EMC compliance under conditions
that included the use of compliant peripheral devices and shielded cables between system
components. It is important that you use compliant peripheral devices and shielded cables
between system components to reduce the possibility of causing interference to radios,
televisions, and other electronic devices.
Canadian regulatory statement
This device complies with Industry Canada licence-exempt RSS standard(s). Operation is subject
to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device
must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of
the device.
Operation in the band 5150-5250 MHz is only for indoor use to reduce the potential for harmful
interference to co-channel mobile satellite systems.
Users are advised that high-power radars are allocated as primary users (i.e., priority users) of the
bands 5250-5350 MHz and 5650-5850 MHz and that these radars could cause interference and/or
damage to LE-LAN devices.
Le présent appareil est conforme aux CNR d’Industrie Canada applicables aux appareils
radio exempts de licence. L’exploitation est autorisée aux deux conditions suivantes : (1)
l’appareil ne doit pas produire de brouillage, et (2) l’utilisateur de l’appareil doit accepter tout
brouillage radioélectrique subi, même si le brouillage est susceptible d’en compromettre
le fonctionnement.
La bande 5 150-5 250 MHz est réservés uniquement pour une utilisation à l’intérieur ain de
réduire les risques de brouillage préjudiciable aux systèmes de satellites mobiles utilisant les
mêmes canaux.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
166
Les utilisateurs êtes avisés que les utilisateurs de radars de haute puissance sont désignés
utilisateurs principaux (c.-à-d., qu’ils ont la priorité) pour les bandes 5 250-5 350 MHz et 5 650-5 850
MHz et que ces radars pourraient causer du brouillage et/ou des dommages aux dispositifs LAN-EL.
CAN ICES-3 (B)/NMB-3(B)
Disposal and recycling information
Your iPad and/or battery should not be disposed of with household waste. Dispose of
your iPad and/or battery in accordance with local environmental laws and guidelines. For
information about the recycling program at Apple and recycling collection points, visit
www.apple.com/recycling. For information about restricted substances and other environmental
initiatives at Apple, visit www.apple.com/environment/.
Battery replacement: The lithium-ion battery in iPad should be replaced by Apple or an
authorized service provider. For more information about battery services and recycling, go
to www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/.
California Battery Charger Energy Eiciency
Türkiye
Türkiye Cumhuriyeti: AEEE Yönetmelĭine Uygundur.
Taiwan Battery Statement
China Battery Statement
European Union—Disposal Information
The symbol above means that according to local laws and regulations your product and/or its
battery shall be disposed of separately from household waste. When this product reaches its
end of life, take it to a collection point designated by local authorities. The separate collection
and recycling of your product and/or its battery at the time of disposal will help conserve
natural resources and ensure that it is recycled in a manner that protects human health and
the environment.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
167
Brasil—Informações sobre descarte e reciclagem
O símbolo indica que este produto e/ou sua bateria não devem ser descartadas no lixo
doméstico. Quando decidir descartar este produto e/ou sua bateria, faça-o de acordo com as
leis e diretrizes ambientais locais. Para informações sobre o programa de reciclagem da Apple,
pontos de coleta e telefone de informações, visite www.apple.com/br/environment/.
Información sobre eliminación de residuos y reciclaje
El símbolo indica que este producto y/o su batería no debe desecharse con los residuos
domésticos. Cuando decida desechar este producto y/o su batería, hágalo de conformidad
con las leyes y directrices ambientales locales. Para obtener información sobre el programa de
reciclaje de Apple, puntos de recolección para reciclaje, sustancias restringidas y otras iniciativas
ambientales, visite www.apple.com/la/environment/.
ENERGY STAR® compliance statement
To save energy, iPad is set to lock after two minutes of user inactivity. To change this setting,
go to Settings > General > Auto-Lock. To unlock iPad, press the Sleep/Wake button or the
Home button.
iPad meets the ENERGY STAR guidelines for energy eiciency. Reducing energy consumption
saves money and helps conserve valuable resources. For more information about ENERGY STAR,
go to www.energystar.gov.
Apple and the environment
At Apple, we recognize our responsibility to minimize the environmental impacts of our
operations and products. For more information, go to www.apple.com/environment/.
Appendix D Safety, handling, and support
168
K Apple Inc.
© 2015 Apple Inc. All rights reserved.
Apple, the Apple logo, AirDrop, AirPlay, AirPort, Apple TV,
FaceTime, Finder, GarageBand, Guided Access, iBooks,
iCloud Keychain, iMessage, iPad, iPad Air, iPhone, iPhoto,
iPod, iPod touch, iSight, iTunes, iTunes U, Keychain, Keynote,
Lightning, Mac, Numbers, OS X, Pages, Passbook, Photo Booth,
the Podcast logo, Safari, Siri, Smart Cover, and Spotlight
are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and
other countries.
AirPrint, Apple Music, Apple Pay, EarPods, Flyover, Handof,
iPad mini, Multi-Touch, and Touch ID are trademarks of
Apple Inc.
Apple Store, iCloud, iTunes Extras, iTunes Match, iTunes Plus,
and iTunes Store are service marks of Apple Inc., registered in
the U.S. and other countries.
Apple
1 Ininite Loop
Cupertino, CA 95014-2084
408-996-1010
www.apple.com
App Store, iBooks Store, and iTunes Radio are service marks of
Apple Inc.
IOS is a trademark or registered trademark of Cisco in the U.S.
and other countries and is used under license.
The Bluetooth® word mark and logos are registered
trademarks owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and any use of such
marks by Apple Inc. is under license.
ENERGY STAR® is a U.S. registered trademark.
Adobe and Photoshop are trademarks or registered
trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the U.S. and/or
other countries.
Other company and product names mentioned herein may be
trademarks of their respective companies.
Every efort has been made to ensure that the information in
this manual is accurate. Apple is not responsible for printing or
clerical errors.
Some apps are not available in all areas. App availability is
subject to change.
019-00159/2015-06