Apple MD511LL-A, MD515LL-A, MD514LL-A, MD518LL-A, MD523LL-A User Manual

...
iPad
User Guide
For iOS 5.1 Software
Contents
9 Chapter 1: At a Glance 9 Overview 10 Buttons 12 Micro-SIM card tray 12 Home screen 16 Using the Multi-Touch screen
18 Chapter 2: Getting Started 18 What you need 18 Setting up iPad 18 Setting up mail and other accounts 19 Managing content on iPad 19 Using iCloud 20 Syncing with iTunes 21 Connecting iPad to your computer 21 Viewing the user guide on iPad 22 Battery 23 Using and cleaning iPad
24 Chapter 3: Basics 24 Using apps 26 Customizing the Home screen 28 Typing 32 Searching 33 Printing 34 File Sharing 35 Notications 36 Twitter 37 Using AirPlay 37 Using Bluetooth devices 38 Security features
40 Chapter 4: Safari 40 Viewing webpages 41 Links 41 Reading List 41 Reader 41 Entering text and lling out forms 42 Searching 42 Bookmarks and history 42 Printing webpages, PDFs, and other documents 42 Web clips
2
43 Chapter 5: Mail 43 Checking and reading email 44 Working with multiple accounts 44 Sending mail 45 Using links and detected data 45 Viewing attachments 45 Printing messages and attachments 46 Organizing mail 46 Searching mail 46 Mail accounts and settings
48 Chapter 6: Messages 48 Sending and receiving messages 49 Sending messages to a group 49 Sending photos, videos, and more 50 Editing conversations 50 Searching messages
51 Chapter 7: Camera 51 About Camera 52 Taking photos and videos 52 Viewing, sharing, and printing 53 Editing photos 53 Trimming videos 53 Uploading photos and videos to your computer 54 Photo Stream
55 Chapter 8: FaceTime 55 About FaceTime 56 Making a FaceTime call 56 While on a FaceTime call
57 Chapter 9: Photo Booth 57 About Photo Booth 57 Selecting an eect 58 Taking a photo 58 Viewing and sharing photos 58 Uploading photos to your computer
59 Chapter 10: Photos 59 Viewing photos and videos 60 Viewing slideshows 60 Organizing photos and videos 61 Sharing photos and videos 61 Printing photos 61 Using Picture Frame 62 Importing photos and videos
63 Chapter 11 : Videos 63 About Videos 63 Playing videos 64 Watching rented movies
Contents
3
64 Watching videos on a TV 65 Deleting videos from iPad 65 Using Home Sharing
66 Chapter 12 : YouTube 66 About YouTube 66 Browsing and searching for videos 67 Playing videos 68 Keeping track of videos you like 68 Sharing videos, comments, and ratings 68 Watching YouTube on a TV
69 Chapter 13 : Calendar 69 About Calendar 69 Viewing your calendars 70 Adding events 70 Responding to invitations 71 Searching calendars 71 Subscribing to calendars 71 Importing calendar events from Mail 71 Syncing calendars 72 Calendar accounts and settings
73 Chapter 14: Contacts 73 About Contacts 73 Syncing contacts 74 Searching contacts 74 Adding and editing contacts 75 Contacts accounts and settings
76 Chapter 15 : Notes 76 About Notes 76 Writing and reading notes 77 Searching notes 77 Printing or emailing notes
78 Chapter 16: Reminders 78 About Reminders 79 Setting a reminder 79 Managing reminders in list view 79 Managing reminders in date view 80 Managing completed reminders 80 Searching reminders
81 Chapter 17 : Maps 81 Finding locations 82 Getting directions 83 Getting and sharing info about a location 83 Showing trac conditions 84 Map views
4
Contents
85 Chapter 18: Music 85 Adding music and audio 85 Playing songs and other audio 87 Viewing tracks on an album 87 Searching audio content 87 iTunes Match 88 Genius 88 Playlists 89 Home Sharing
90 Chapter 19: iTunes Store 90 About the iTunes Store 90 Finding music, videos, and more 91 Purchasing music, audiobooks, and tones 91 Purchasing or renting videos 91 Following artists and friends 92 Streaming or downloading podcasts 92 Checking download status 92 Viewing account information 93 Verifying downloads
94 Chapter 20: App Store 94 About the App Store 95 Finding and downloading apps 95 Deleting apps 96 Store settings
97 Chapter 21: Newsstand 97 About Newsstand 98 Reading the latest issues
99 Chapter 22: iBooks 99 About iBooks 99 Using the iBookstore 100 Syncing books and PDFs 100 Reading books 102 Changing a book’s appearance 102 Studying notes and vocabulary lists 102 Interacting with multimedia 103 Printing or emailing a PDF 103 Organizing the bookshelf
104 Chapter 23: Game Center 104 About Game Center 105 Signing in to Game Center 105 Purchasing and downloading games 105 Playing games 105 Playing with friends 106 Game Center settings
Contents
5
107 Chapter 24: Accessibility 107 Universal Access features 107 About VoiceOver 11 6 Triple-click Home 117 Zoom 117 Large Text 117 White on Black 117 Speak Selection 11 8 Speak Auto-Text 11 8 Mono Audio 11 8 AssistiveTouch 11 9 Universal Access in OS X 11 9 Minimum font size for mail messages 11 9 Widescreen keyboards 11 9 Closed captioning
120 Chapter 25: Settings 120 Airplane Mode 120 Wi-Fi 121 Notications 12 2 Location Services 12 2 Cellular Data 12 3 VPN 12 3 Personal Hotspot 12 3 Brightness & Wallpaper 124 Picture Frame 124 General 129 Settings for apps
130 Appendix A: iPad in Business 130 iPad in the enterprise 130 Using conguration proles 130 Setting up Microsoft Exchange accounts 131 VPN access 131 LDAP and CardDAV accounts
13 2 Appendix B: International Keyboards 13 2 Adding and removing keyboards 13 2 Switching keyboards 13 2 Chinese 134 Japanese 134 Typing emoji characters 134 Using the candidate list 134 Using shortcuts 13 5 Vietnamese
13 6 Appendix C: Support and Other Information 13 6 iPad Support site 13 6 Low-battery image or “Not Charging” message appears 13 6 iPad doesn’t respond 13 7 Restarting and resetting iPad 13 7 “This accessory is not supported by iPad” appears
6
Contents
13 7 An app doesn’t ll the screen 13 7 Onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear 13 7 Backing up iPad 13 9 Updating and restoring iPad software 13 9 Can’t send or receive email 140 Sound, music, and video 141 iTunes Store and App Store 142 Safety, service, and support information 142 Disposal and recycling information 142 Apple and the environment 143 iPad operating temperature
Contents
7
At a Glance
Multi-Touch
display
Multi-Touch
display
Front
camera
Front
camera
Home
Home
App icons
App icons
Status bar
Status bar
Dock connector
Dock connector
Speaker
Speaker
Microphone
Microphone
Headphone
jack
Headphone
jack
Micro-SIM
tray (on some
models)
Micro-SIM
tray (on some
models)
Sleep/Wake
Sleep/Wake
Back
camera
Back
camera
Volume
buttons
Volume
buttons
Side Switch
Side Switch
Read this chapter to learn about iPad features, how to use the controls, and more.

Overview

1
Your iPad features and the Home screen may be dierent, depending on the model of iPad you have.
9
Accessories
Dock Connector to USB Cable
Dock Connector to USB CableDock Connector to USB Cable
10W USB Power Adapter
10W USB Power Adapter10W USB Power Adapter
Sleep/Wake button
Sleep/Wake button
The following accessories are included with iPad:
Item What you can do with it
10W USB power adapter Use the 10W USB power adapter to provide power to
iPad and charge the battery.
Dock Connector to USB Cable Use this cable to connect iPad to the 10W USB power
adapter to charge or to your computer to sync. Use the cable with the optional iPad Dock, or plug it directly into iPad.

Buttons

A few buttons make it easy to lock iPad and adjust the volume.
Sleep/Wake button
You can lock iPad by putting it to sleep when you’re not using it. When you lock iPad, nothing happens if you touch the screen, but music continues playing and you can use the volume buttons.
10
Lock iPad Press the Sleep/Wake button.
Unlock iPad Press the Home button
Turn iPad o Hold down the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until the red slider
appears, then drag the onscreen slider.
Turn iPad on Hold down the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.
or the Sleep/Wake button, then drag the slider.
If you don’t touch the screen for a minute or two, iPad locks automatically. You can change how long it takes the screen to lock, or set a passcode to unlock iPad.
Set the Auto-Lock time: In Settings, go to General > Auto-Lock, then set a time for iPad to lock automatically.
Set a passcode: In Settings, go to General > Passcode Lock, then tap On or O.
Use an iPad Smart Cover, sold separately, with iPad 2 or later to automatically unlock iPad when you open the cover and lock iPad when you close it.
Use an iPad Smart Cover: In Settings, go to General > iPad Cover Lock/Unlock, then tap On.
Chapter 1 At a Glance
Home button
Volume buttons
Volume buttons
Side Switch
Side Switch
The Home button lets you get 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 “Opening and switching apps” on page 24.
Display the multitasking bar to see recently used apps
Display audio playback controls When iPad is locked: Double-click the Home button . See “Playing songs
When iPad is unlocked, double-click the Home button
and other audio When using another app: Double-click the Home button
multitasking bar from left to right.
” on page 85.
.
, then ick the
Volume buttons
Use the volume buttons to adjust the volume of songs and other media, and of alerts and
sound eects.
Increase the volume Press the Volume Up button.
Decrease the volume Press the Volume Down button.
Set a volume limit In Settings, go to Music > Volume Limit.
Mute the sound Hold down the Volume Down button.
WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see the iPad Important
Product Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad.
Side Switch
You can use the Side Switch to disable audio alerts and notications. You can also use it to lock the
screen rotation and prevent the iPad display from switching between portrait and landscape mode.
Mute notications, alerts, and sound eects
Lock the screen rotation In Settings, go to General > Use Side Switch to, then tap Lock Rotation. See
Chapter 1 At a Glance
Slide the Side Switch down to mute notications, alerts, and sound eects.
This switch doesn’t mute audio playback, such as music, podcasts, movies, and TV shows. See “Side Switch
“Side Switch
” on page 12 7.
” on page 12 7.
11

Micro-SIM card tray

Micro-SIM card
Micro-SIM card
SIM tray
SIM tray
SIM eject tool
SIM eject tool
The micro-SIM card in some 4G and 3G models is used for cellular data. If your micro-SIM card wasn’t preinstalled or if you change cellular data carriers, you may need to install or replace the micro-SIM card.
Open the SIM tray: Insert the tip of the SIM eject tool into the hole on the SIM tray. Press rmly
and push the tool straight in until the tray pops out. Pull out the SIM tray to install or replace the micro-SIM card. If you don’t have a SIM eject tool, you may be able to use the end of a small paper clip.
For more information, see “Cellular Data” on page 12 2 .

Home screen

Press the Home button at any time to go to the Home screen, which displays your iPad apps. Tap any icon to open the app. See “Using apps” on page 24.
Status icons
The icons in the status bar at the top of the screen give information about iPad:
Status icon What it means
Airplane mode Shows that airplane mode is on—you can’t access the
Internet, or use Bluetooth® devices. Non-wireless features are available. See “Airplane Mode
LTE Shows that your carrier’s 4G LTE network (iPad Wi-Fi + 4G) is
available, and you can connect to the Internet over 4G LTE.
4G Shows that your carrier’s 4G network (some iPad Wi-Fi + 4G
models) is available, and you can connect to the Internet over 4G.
3G Shows that your carrier’s 3G network (4G or 3G models) is
available, and you can connect to the Internet over 3G.
EDGE Shows that your carrier’s EDGE network (some 4G or 3G
models) is available, and you can connect to the Internet over EDGE.
GPRS Shows that your carrier’s GPRS network (some 4G or 3G
models) is available, and you can connect to the Internet over GPRS.
” on page 12 0 .
12
Chapter 1 At a Glance
Status icon What it means
Wi-Fi Shows that iPad has a Wi-Fi Internet connection. The more
bars, the stronger the connection. See “Joining a Wi-Fi network
” on page 12 0 .
Personal Hotspot Shows that iPad is providing a Personal Hotspot to
another iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch. See “Personal Hotspot
” on page 12 3.
Syncing Shows that iPad is syncing with iTunes. See “Syncing with
iTunes
” on page 20.
Activity Shows network and other activity. Some third-party apps
use this icon to show an active process.
VPN Shows that you’re connected to a network using VPN. See
“VPN
” on page 12 3.
Lock Shows that iPad is locked. See “Sleep/Wake button” on
page 10 .
Screen orientation lock Shows that the screen orientation is locked. See “Viewing
in portrait or landscape
Location Services Shows that an item is using Location Services. See
“Location Services
Play Shows that a song, audiobook, or podcast is playing. See
“Playing songs and other audio
Bluetooth 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 o. No icon: Bluetooth is turned o or not paired.
See “Using Bluetooth devices
Battery Shows the battery level or charging status. See “Charging
the battery
” on page 22.
” on page 15.
” on page 12 2 .
” on page 85.
” on page 37.
iPad apps
iPad comes with the following apps:
Browse websites on the Internet. Rotate iPad sideways for widescreen viewing. Double-tap to
zoom in or out—Safari automatically ts the webpage column to the screen. Open multiple
Safari
Mail
Photos
Chapter 1 At a Glance
pages using tabs. Sync bookmarks with Safari or Microsoft Internet Explorer on your computer. Add Safari web clips to the Home screen for fast access to favorite websites. Save images from websites to your Photo Library. Print webpages using AirPrint. See Chapter 4, “ Safari,” on page 40.
Send and receive mail using many of the most popular mail services, Microsoft Exchange, or
most industry-standard POP3 and IMAP mail services. Send and save photos. View PDF les and
other attachments, or open them in other apps. Print messages and attachments using AirPrint. See Chapter 5, “ Mail,” on page 43.
Organize your favorite photos and videos into albums. Watch a slideshow. Zoom in for a closer look. Edit photos and print them using AirPrint. Use Photo Stream to push the photos you take on iPad to your devices. See Chapter 10, “Photos,” on page 59.
13
Music
Messages
Calendar
Notes
Reminders
Maps
YouTube
Videos
Contacts
Game Center
iTunes Store
App Store
Newsstand
FaceTime
Sync with your iTunes library and listen to your songs, audiobooks, and podcasts on iPad. Create and manage playlists, or use Genius to create playlists for you. Listen to Genius Mixes of songs from your library. Use Home Sharing to play music from your computer. Stream your music or videos wirelessly to an Apple TV or compatible audio system using AirPlay. See Chapter 18 , “ Music,” on page 85.
Send messages over Wi-Fi to other iOS 5 users, and include photos, videos, and other information. Your messages are encrypted. See Chapter 6, “ Messages,” on page 48.
Keep your calendar current on iPad, or sync it with your Mac OS X or Windows calendar. Subscribe to others’ calendars. Sync over the Internet with Microsoft Exchange or CalDAV servers. See Chapter 13 , “ Calendar,” on page 69.
Take notes on the go—grocery lists, brilliant ideas. Send them in mail. Sync notes to Mail or Microsoft Outlook or Outlook Express. See Chapter 15, “Notes,” on page 76.
Organize your life with due dates and lists. Reminders work with iCal and Microsoft Outlook on your computer. You can keep your reminders up to date across all your devices using iCloud or a Microsoft Exchange account. See Chapter 16, “Reminders,” on page 78.
See a standard, satellite, hybrid, or terrain view of locations around the world. Zoom in for a closer look, or check out Google Street View. Find your current location. Get detailed driving,
public transit, or walking directions and see current highway trac conditions. Find businesses
in the area. See Chapter 17, “ Maps,” on page 81.
Play videos from YouTube’s online collection. Search for any video, or browse featured, most viewed, most recently updated, and top-rated videos. Set up and log in to your YouTube account—then rate videos, sync your favorites, show subscriptions, and more. See Chapter 12 , “ YouTube,” on page 66.
Play movies, TV shows, podcasts, videos from your iTunes library or your movie collection. Buy or rent movies on iPad using the iTunes Store. Download video podcasts. See Chapter 11 , “ Videos,” on page 63.
Organize your address book on iPad and keep it up to date on all of your iOS devices with iCloud. See Chapter 14, “Contacts,” on page 73.
Discover new games and share your game experiences with friends. Invite a friend, or request a match with an opponent. Check player rankings on the leaderboards. Gain achievements for extra points. See Chapter 23, “ Game Center,” on page 104.
Search the iTunes Store for music, audiobooks, TV shows, music videos, and movies. Browse, preview, purchase, and download new releases, top items, and more. Buy or rent movies and buy TV shows to view on iPad. Download podcasts. Read reviews, or write your own reviews for your favorite store items. See Chapter 19 , “ iTunes Store,” on page 90.
Search the App Store for apps you can purchase or download. Read reviews, or write your own reviews for your favorite apps. Download and install the apps on your Home screen. See Chapter 20, “ App Store,” on page 94.
Keep all your app subscriptions in one convenient place. Newsstand automatically downloads whatever’s new for each of your app subscriptions. It all happens in the background, so you never have to interrupt what you’re doing. See Chapter 21, “ Newsstand,” on page 97.
Make video calls to other FaceTime users over Wi-Fi. Use the front camera to talk face to face, or the back camera to share what you see. See Chapter 8, “ FaceTime,” on page 55.
14
Chapter 1 At a Glance
Take photos and record HD videos. View them on iPad, mail them, or upload them to your computer or the Internet. Tap to set the exposure. Trim and save video clips. Upload videos
Camera
Photo Booth
Settings
directly to YouTube. See Chapter 7, “Camera,” on page 51.
Use the front or back camera to take a snapshot. Add a special eect, such as twirl or
stretch, before you take a snapshot. Snapshots are saved in an album in the Photo app. See Chapter 9, “ Photo Booth,” on page 57.
Personalize your iPad settings in one convenient place—network, mail, web, music, video, photos, and more. Set up Picture Frame, mail accounts, contacts, and calendars. Manage your cellular data account. Set an auto-lock and a passcode for security. See Chapter 25, “ Settings,” on page 12 0 .
Note: App functionality and availability may vary depending on where you purchase and use iPad.
Viewing in portrait or landscape
You can view iPad‘s built-in apps in either portrait or landscape orientation. Rotate iPad and the
screen rotates too, adjusting automatically to t the new orientation.
You may prefer landscape orientation for viewing webpages in Safari, for example, or when entering text. Webpages automatically scale to the wider screen, making the text and images larger. The onscreen keyboard also becomes larger, which may help increase your typing speed and accuracy. Lock the screen orientation if you want to keep the screen from rotating.
Lock the screen in portrait or landscape orientation: Double-click the Home button to view
the multitasking bar, then ick from left to right. Tap to lock the screen orientation.
You can also set the Side Switch to lock the screen orientation instead of silencing sound eects and notications. In Settings, go to General > Use Side Switch to, then tap Lock Rotation. See
“Side Switch” on page 12 7.
Chapter 1 At a Glance
15

Using the Multi-Touch screen

Brightness
Brightness
The controls on the Multi-Touch screen change, depending on the task you’re performing. To
control iPad, use your ngers to pinch, swipe, tap, and double-tap.
Using multitasking gestures
You can use multitasking gestures on iPad to return to the home screen, reveal the multitasking bar, or switch to another app.
Return to the Home screen: Pinch four or ve ngers together.
Reveal the multitasking bar: Swipe up with four or ve ngers.
Switch apps: Swipe left or right with four or ve ngers.
Turn multitasking gestures on or o: In Settings, go to > General > Multitasking Gestures, then
tap On or O.
Zooming in or out
While viewing photos, webpages, mail, or maps, you can zoom in and out. Pinch two ngers
together or apart. For photos and webpages, you can double-tap (tap twice quickly) to zoom in, then double-tap again to zoom out. For maps, double-tap to zoom in and tap once with two
ngers to zoom out.
16
Zoom is also an accessibility feature that lets you magnify the entire screen of any app you’re using and helps you see what’s on the display. See “Zoom” on page 117 .
Adjusting brightness
To adjust the screen’s brightness, double-click the Home button to view the multitasking bar. Flick from left to right, then drag the brightness slider.
Use Auto-Brightness to automatically adjust the screen’s brightness: In Settings, go to Brightness & Wallpaper.
See “Brightness & Wallpaper” on page 12 3 .
Chapter 1 At a Glance
Using the onscreen keyboard
The onscreen keyboard appears automatically anytime you need to type. Use the keyboard to enter text, such as contact information, mail, and web addresses. The keyboard corrects misspellings, predicts what you’re typing, and learns as you use it. See “Typing” on page 28.
Using lists
Some lists have an index along the side to help you navigate quickly.
Find items in an indexed list: Tap a letter to jump to items starting with that letter. Drag your
nger along the index to scroll quickly through the list.
Choose an item: Tap an item in the list.
Depending on the list, tapping an item can do dierent things—for example, it may open a new
list, play a song, open an mail message, or show someone’s contact information.
Return to a previous list: Tap the back button in the upper-left corner.
Chapter 1 At a Glance
17
Getting Started
2
Read this chapter to learn how to set up iPad, set up mail accounts, use iCloud, and more.

What you need

·
WARNING: To avoid injury, read all operating instructions in this guide and safety information in the
iPad Important Product Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad before using iPad.
To use iPad, you need:
An Apple ID for some features, including iCloud, the App Store and iTunes Store, and  online purchases
An Internet connection (broadband is recommended) Â
To use iPad with your computer, you need:
A Mac or a PC with a USB 2.0 port and one of the following operating systems: Â
Mac OS X version 10.5.8 or later Â
Windows 7, Windows Vista, or Windows XP Home or Professional with Service Pack 3 or later Â
iTunes 10.6 or later, available at  www.itunes.com/download

Setting up iPad

To set up iPad, turn it on and follow the Setup Assistant. The onscreen directions in Setup Assistant step you through the setup process, including connecting to a Wi-Fi network, signing in with or creating a free Apple ID, setting up iCloud, and turning on recommended features, such as Location Services and Find My iPad.
During setup, you can copy your apps, settings, and content from another iPad by restoring from an iCloud backup or from iTunes. See “Backing up iPad” on page 13 7.

Setting up mail and other accounts

iPad works with iCloud, Microsoft Exchange, and many of the most popular Internet-based mail, contacts, and calendar service providers.
If you don’t already have a mail account, you can set up a free iCloud account when you set up iPad, or set one up later in Settings > iCloud. See “Using iCloud” on page 19.
Set up an iCloud account: Go to Settings > iCloud.
Set up another account: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
You can add contacts using an LDAP or CardDAV account, if your company or organization supports it. See “Syncing contacts” on page 73.
For information about setting up a Microsoft Exchange account in a corporate environment, see “Setting up Microsoft Exchange accounts” on page 13 0 .
18

Managing content on iPad

You can transfer information and les between iPad and your other iOS devices and computers,
using either iCloud or iTunes.
 iCloud stores content such as music, photos, and more, and wirelessly pushes it to your other
iOS devices and computers, keeping everything up to date. See “Using iCloud,” below.
 iTunes syncs music, video, 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 le to iPad for use with an app, or to copy a document you’ve created on iPad to your
computer. See “Syncing with iTunes” on page 20.
You can use iCloud or iTunes, or both, depending on your needs. For example, you can use iCloud Photo Stream to automatically push photos you take on iPad to your other devices, and use iTunes to sync photo albums from your computer to iPad.
Note: Don’t sync items in the Info pane of iTunes (such as contacts, calendars, and notes) and also use iCloud to keep that information up to date on your devices. Otherwise, you may see duplicated data on iPad.

Using iCloud

iCloud stores your content, including music, photos, contacts, calendars, and supported documents. Content stored in iCloud is pushed wirelessly to your other iOS devices and computers set up with the same iCloud account.
iCloud is available on iOS 5 devices, on Macs running OS X Lion v10.7.2 or later, and on PCs with the iCloud Control Panel for Windows (Windows Vista Service Pack 2 or Windows 7 required).
iCloud features include:
 iTunes in the Cloud—Download previous iTunes music and TV show purchases to iPad for free,
anytime you like.
 Apps and Books—Download previous App Store and iBookstore purchases for free, anytime
you like.
 Photo Stream—Photos you take on one device appear automatically on all your devices. See
“Photo Stream” on page 54.
 Documents in the Cloud—For iCloud-enabled apps, keep documents and app data up to date
across all your devices.
 Mail, Contacts, Calendars—Keep your mail contacts, calendars, notes, and reminders up to date
across all your devices.
 Backup—Back up iPad to iCloud automatically when connected to power and Wi-Fi. See
“Backing up with iCloud” on page 13 7.
 Find My iPad—Locate your iPad on a map, display a message, play a sound, lock the screen, or
remotely wipe the data. See “Find My iPad” on page 38.
 Find My Friends—Keep track of your family and friends (when connected to a Wi-Fi or cellular
network) using the Find My Friends app. Download the free app from the App Store.
 iTunes Match—With an iTunes Match subscription, all your music, including music you’ve
imported from CDs or purchased somewhere other than iTunes, appears on all of your devices and can be downloaded and played on demand. See “iTunes Match” on page 87.
With iCloud, you get a free mail account and 5 GB of storage for your mail, documents, and backups. Your purchased music, apps, TV shows, and books, as well as your Photo Stream, don’t count against your free space.
Chapter 2 Getting Started
19
Note: iCloud is not available in all areas, and iCloud features may vary by area. For information about iCloud, go to www.apple.com/icloud.
Sign in or create an iCloud account: Go to Settings > iCloud.
If you have a MobileMe subscription, you can move it to iCloud from a Mac or PC at www.me.com/move until June 30, 2012.
Enable or disable iCloud services Go to Settings > iCloud.
Enable iCloud backups Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup.
Find your iPad Visit www.icloud.com, sign in with your Apple ID, then choose Find My iPad.
Important: On your iPad, Find My iPad must be turned on in Settings >
iCloud in order for iPad to be located.
But more iCloud storage Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup, then tap Buy More Storage. For
information about buying iCloud storage, go to help.apple.com/icloud.
View and download previous iTunes Store purchases
View and download previous App Store purchases
View and download previous iBookstore purchases
Turn Photo Stream on or o Go to Settings > iCloud > Photo Stream.
Turn on Automatic Downloads
for music, apps, or books
Go to the iTunes Store, then tap Purchased
Go to the App Store, then tap Purchased .
Go to iBooks, tap Store, then tap Purchased .
Go to Settings > Store.
.
For more information about iCloud, go to www.apple.com/icloud. For support information, go to www.apple.com/support/icloud.

Syncing with iTunes

Syncing with iTunes copies information from a computer to iPad, and vice versa. You can sync by connecting iPad to your computer using the Dock Connector to USB Cable, or you can set up iTunes to sync wirelessly using Wi-Fi. You can set iTunes to sync music, photos, video, podcasts, apps, and more. For detailed information about syncing iPad with a computer, open iTunes then select iTunes Help from the Help menu.
Set up wireless iTunes syncing: Connect iPad to your computer using the Dock Connector to USB Cable. In iTunes, turn on “Sync over Wi-Fi connection” in the device’s Summary pane.
When Wi-Fi syncing is turned on, iPad automatically syncs every day. iPad must be connected to a power source, both iPad and your computer must be on the same wireless network, and iTunes must be open on the computer. For more information, see “iTunes Wi-Fi Sync.”
Tips for syncing with iTunes
If you’re using iCloud to store your contacts, calendars, bookmarks, and notes, don’t also sync  them to iPad using iTunes.
Purchases you make from the iTunes Store or the App Store on iPad are synced back to your  iTunes library. You can also purchase or download content and apps from the iTunes Store on your computer, and then sync them to iPad.
In the device’s Summary pane, you can set iTunes to automatically sync iPad when it’s attached  to your computer. To temporarily override this, hold down Command and Option (Mac) or Shift and Control (PC) until you see your iPad appear in the sidebar.
20
Chapter 2 Getting Started
In the device’s Summary pane, select “Encrypt backup” if you want to encrypt the information  stored on your computer when iTunes makes a backup. Encrypted backups are indicated by a lock icon , and you need a password to restore the backup. If you don’t select this option, passwords (such as those for mail accounts) aren’t included in the backup and have to be reentered if you use the backup to restore iPad.
In the device’s Info pane, when you sync mail accounts, only the settings are transferred from Â
your computer to iPad. Changes you make to a mail account on iPad don’t aect the account
on your computer.
In the device’s 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.
If you listen to part of a podcast or audiobook, your stopping point is included if you sync the Â
content with iTunes. If you started listening on iPad, you can pick up where you left o in iTunes
on your computer—or vice versa.
In the device’s Photo pane, you can sync photos and videos from a folder on your computer. Â

Connecting iPad to your computer

Use the included Dock Connector to USB Cable to connect iPad to your computer. Connecting iPad to your computer allows you to sync information, music, and other content with iTunes. You can also sync with iTunes wirelessly. See “Syncing with iTunes.”
Unless iPad is syncing with your computer, you can disconnect it at any time. If you disconnect while a sync is in progress, some data may not get synced until the next time you connect iPad to your computer.
Cancel a sync: Drag the slider on iPad.

Viewing the user guide on iPad

You can view the iPad User Guide on iPad in Safari, or you can install the free iBooks app and download the guide from the iBookstore.
View the user guide in Safari: In Safari, tap , then tap the iPad User Guide bookmark. Or go to help.apple.com/ipad.
Add an icon for the user guide to the Home screen: Tap , then tap “Add to Home Screen.”
View the user guide in iBooks: If you haven’t installed iBooks, open the App Store, then search
for and install “iBooks.” Open iBooks and tap Store. Search for “iPad User Guide,” then select and download the user guide.
Chapter 2 Getting Started
21

Battery

Charging
Charging
Not Charging
Not Charging
Charged
Charged
or
or
iPad has an internal rechargeable battery. For more information about iPad batteries, go to www.apple.com/batteries/ipad.html.
Charging the battery
WARNING: For important safety information about charging iPad, see the iPad Important Product
Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad.
The battery icon in the upper-right corner of the status bar shows the battery level or charging status.
Charge the battery: The best way to charge the iPad battery is to connect iPad to a power outlet using the included Dock Connector to USB Cable and 10W USB power adapter. When you connect iPad to a USB 2.0 port on a Mac with the Dock Connector to USB Cable, iPad may charge slowly while syncing.
Important: The iPad battery may drain instead of charge if iPad is connected to a PC, to a computer
that’s turned o or is in sleep or standby mode, to a USB hub, or to the USB port on a keyboard.
If your Mac or PC doesn’t provide enough power to charge iPad, a “Not Charging” message appears in the status bar. To charge iPad, disconnect it from your computer and connect it to a power outlet using the included Dock Connector to USB Cable and 10W USB power adapter.
Important: If iPad is very low on power, it may display one of the following images, 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 one of the low-battery images appears.
Maximizing battery life
iPad uses a lithium-ion battery. For information about maximizing the battery life of iPad, go to www.apple.com/batteries/ipad.html.
Replacing the battery
The iPad battery isn’t user replaceable; it can be replaced only by an Apple Authorized Service Provider (AASP). Rechargeable batteries have a limited number of charge cycles and may eventually need to be replaced. AASPs also recycle iPad batteries according to local laws and regulations. For information, go to www.apple.com/batteries/replacements.html.
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Chapter 2 Getting Started

Using and cleaning iPad

It’s important to nd a comfortable posture when using iPad, and to take frequent breaks. Use
your lap, or a table, case, or dock accessory, to support iPad during use.
Handle iPad with care, to maintain its appearance. If you’re concerned about scratching or abrasion of the screen, you can use a case or a cover, sold separately.
To clean iPad, unplug all cables and turn o iPad (press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the
red slider appears, then slide the onscreen slider). Use a soft, slightly damp, lint-free cloth. Avoid getting moisture in openings. Don’t use window cleaners, household cleaners, aerosol sprays, solvents, alcohol, ammonia, or abrasives to clean iPad. The iPad screen has an oleophobic coating; simply wipe the screen with a soft, lint-free cloth to remove oil left by your hands. The ability of this coating to repel oil will diminish over time with normal usage, and rubbing the screen with an
abrasive material will further diminish its eect and may scratch your screen.
For more information about handling iPad, see the iPad Important Product Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad.
Chapter 2 Getting Started
23
Basics
3
Read this chapter to learn how to use apps on iPad. You’ll also learn how to search, print, share
les, and more.

Using apps

The high-resolution Multi-Touch screen and simple nger gestures make it easy to use iPad apps.
Open an app by tapping its icon. You can switch between apps, rearrange apps, and organize them in folders.
Opening and switching apps
Open an app: Tap its icon on the Home screen.
24
Return to the Home screen: Press the Home button , or pinch four or ve ngers together on
the screen.
Multitasking allows certain apps to run in the background, so you can quickly switch between the apps you’re using.
View the most recently used apps: Double-click the Home button .
The most recently used apps appear in the multitasking bar at the bottom of the screen. Flick left to see more apps.
Force an app to close: Touch and hold the app icon until it begins to jiggle, then tap .
The app is added to the recents list again, the next time you open it.
Lock the screen orientation or use the music controls: Double-click the Home button , then
ick along the bottom of the screen from left to right.
The screen orientation lock, brightness slider, and music controls appear.
Brightness
Brightness
Screen orientation lock
Screen orientation lock
Music controls
Music controls
Delete an app from the Home screen: Touch and hold the app icon until it jiggles and an appears. Tap to delete the app, then press the Home button .
Important: Deleting an app from iPad also deletes the documents and data created by the app.
Scrolling
Drag up or down to scroll. You can also scroll sideways in apps such as Safari, Photos, and Maps.
Dragging your nger to scroll doesn’t choose or activate anything on the screen.
Swipe to scroll quickly.
You can wait for the scrolling to come to a stop, or touch anywhere on the screen to stop it immediately. Touching the screen to stop scrolling doesn’t choose or activate anything on the screen.
To quickly scroll to the top of a list, webpage, or mail message, tap the status bar at the top of the screen.
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25

Customizing the Home screen

You can customize the layout of app icons on the Home screen—including the icons in the Dock along the bottom of the screen.
Rearranging icons
You can create additional Home screens and arrange your apps over multiple Home screens.
Rearrange icons:
1 Touch and hold any app on the Home screen until it jiggles.
2 Arrange the apps by dragging them.
3 Press the Home button to save your arrangement.
Move an icon to another screen While arranging icons, drag an icon to the right edge of the screen until a
new screen appears. You can return to a previous screen and drag more icons to the new screen.
Create additional Home screens While arranging icons, swipe to the rightmost Home screen, then drag an
icon to the right edge of the screen. You can create up to 11 Home screens. The dots above the Dock show the number of screens you have, and which screen you’re viewing.
Go to a dierent Home screen Flick left or right, or tap to the left or right of the row of dots.
Go to the rst Home screen Press the Home button
Reset the Home screen to its original layout
In Settings, go to General > Reset, then tap Reset Home Screen Layout. Resetting the Home screen removes any folders you’ve created and applies the default wallpaper to your Home screen.
.
When you connect iPad to your computer using the Dock Connector to USB Cable, you can rearrange the icons on the Home screen, as well as the order of the screens, in iTunes. Select iPad in the iTunes sidebar, then click the Apps tab.
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Chapter 3 Basics
Organizing with folders
You can use folders to organize icons on the Home screen. You can put up to 20 icons in a folder. iPad automatically names a folder when you create it, based on the icons you use to create the folder, but you can change the name. Rearrange folders by dragging them on the Home screen or by moving them to a new Home screen or to the Dock.
Create a folder: Touch and hold an icon until the Home screen icons begin to jiggle, then drag the icon onto another icon.
iPad creates a new folder that includes the two icons, and shows the folder’s name. You can tap
the name eld to enter a dierent name.
Add an icon to a folder When the icons are jiggling, drag the icon onto the folder.
Remove an icon from a folder While arranging icons, tap to open the folder, then drag the icon out of
the folder.
Open a folder Tap the folder. You can then tap an app icon to open that app.
Close a folder Tap outside the folder, or press the Home button.
Delete a folder Remove all icons from the folder.
The folder is deleted automatically when empty.
Rename a folder While arranging icons, tap to open the folder, then tap the name at the top
and use the keyboard to enter a new name.
When you nish organizing your Home screen, press the Home button to save your changes.
Many apps, such as Mail and the App Store, display an alert badge on their Home screen icon with a number (to indicate incoming items) or an exclamation mark (to indicate a problem). If the app is in a folder, the badge appears on the folder as well. A numbered badge shows the total number of items you haven’t attended to, such as incoming mail messages and updated apps to download. An alert badge indicates a problem with the app.
Changing the wallpaper
You can choose the images or photos you want to use as wallpaper for your Lock screen and your Home screen. Choose an image that came with iPad, or a photo from your Camera Roll album or another album on iPad.
Set wallpaper:
1 In Settings, go to Brightness & Wallpaper, tap the image of the Lock and Home screens, then tap
Wallpaper or Saved Photos.
2 Tap to choose an image or photo. If you choose a photo, drag or pinch it to position or resize it,
until it looks the way you want.
3 Tap Set Lock Screen, Set Home Screen, or Set Both.
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Typing

The onscreen keyboard appears automatically anytime you need to type. Use the keyboard to enter text, such as contact information, mail, and web addresses. The keyboard corrects misspellings, predicts what you’re typing, and learns as you use it.
You can also use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to type. When you use an external keyboard, the onscreen keyboard doesn’t appear. See “Using an Apple Wireless Keyboard” on page 31.
Entering text
Depending on the app you’re using, the intelligent keyboard may automatically suggest corrections as you type, to help prevent mistyped words.
Enter text: Tap a text eld, such as in a note or new contact, to bring up the keyboard, then tap
keys on the keyboard.
If you touch the wrong key, you can slide your nger to the correct key. The letter isn’t entered until you release your nger from the key.
28
Delete the previous character Tap .
Quickly type a period and space Double-tap the space bar. To turn this feature o, go to Settings >
General > Keyboard.
Type uppercase Tap the Shift key
then slide to a letter.
Turn caps lock on Double-tap the Shift key
type are uppercase. Tap the Shift key to turn caps lock o. To turn this feature o, go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
Enter numbers, punctuation, or symbols
Enter accented letters or other alternate characters
Use autocorrection to enter “’ll” Type “lll.” For example, type “youlll” to get “you’ll.”
Set options for typing Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
Hide the onscreen keyboard Tap the Keyboard key
Chapter 3 Basics
Tap the Number key punctuation and symbols.
Touch and hold the related key, then slide to choose a variant.
before tapping a letter. Or touch and hold the Shift key,
. The Shift key turns blue, and all letters you
. Tap the Symbol key to see additional
.
Dictation
Tap to begin dictation.
Tap to begin dictation.
Grab points
Grab points
On an iPad that supports dictation, you can dictate text instead of typing it on the onscreen keyboard. For example, you can dictate a message in Mail or a note in Notes. To use Dictation, iPad must be connected to the Internet.
Turn on Dictation: Go to, Settings > General > Keyboard > Dictation.
Dictate text: From the onscreen keyboard, tap , then dictate. When you nish, tap again.
Add to a message: Tap again and continue dictating.
Enter punctuation: Say the punctuation mark.
Note: Dictation may not be available in all languages or in all areas, and features may vary by area. Cellular data charges may apply.
Editing text
The Multi-Touch screen makes it easy to change the text you’ve entered. An onscreen magnifying glass helps you position the insertion point right where you need it. Grab points let you select more or less text. You can also cut, copy, and paste text and photos within apps, or across apps.
Position the insertion point: Touch and hold to bring up the magnifying glass, then drag to position the insertion point.
Select text: Tap the insertion point to display the selection buttons. Tap Select to select the adjacent word, or tap Select All to select all text. You can also double-tap a word to select it. Drag the grab points to select more or less text. In read-only documents, such as webpages, or messages you receive, touch and hold to select a word.
Cut or copy text Select text, then tap Cut or Copy.
Paste text Tap the insertion point, then tap Paste to insert the last text that you cut or
copied. Or, select text, then tap Paste to replace the text.
Undo the last edit Shake iPad.
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29
Make text bold, italic, or underlined When available, tap , then tap B/I/U.
Find a denition for a word Tap a word to select it, then tap Dene.
Find alternative words Tap a word, tap Select, then tap Suggest, and tap a suggested word.
Justify text When available, select the text you want to justify, then tap the left arrow or
the right arrow.
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.
Use a split keyboard Touch and hold the Keyboard key , slide your nger to Split, then release.
Move the keyboard Touch and hold , slide your nger to Undock to move the keyboard to
the middle of the screen, then release.
Return to a full keyboard Touch and hold the Keyboard key
then release.
Return a full keyboard to the bottom of the screen
Turn Split Keyboard on or o Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Split Keyboard, then tap On or O.
Touch and hold the Keyboard key
, slide your nger to Dock and Merge,
, slide your nger to Dock, then release.
You can use Settings to set the layouts for the onscreen software keyboard and for any hardware keyboards. The available layouts depend on the keyboard language. See Appendix B, “ International Keyboards,” on page 13 2 .
For each language, you can choose dierent layouts for the onscreen software keyboard and for
any external hardware keyboards. The software keyboard layout determines the layout of the keyboard on the iPad screen. The hardware keyboard layout determines the layout of an Apple Wireless Keyboard connected to iPad. See “Using an Apple Wireless Keyboard” on page 31.
Select a hardware or software keyboard layout
Add or remove an international keyboard
Use an international keyboard Touch and hold the Globe key
Go to Settings > General > International > Keyboards, tap a language, then choose a software or hardware keyboard layout.
Go to Settings > General > International > Keyboards.
on the onscreen keyboard to display a
list of enabled languages, then slide your nger to choose a language. See
Appendix B, “ International Keyboards,” on page 13 2 .
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Chapter 3 Basics
Auto-correction and spell checking
For many languages, iPad automatically corrects misspellings or makes suggestions as you type. When iPad suggests a word, you can accept the suggestion without interrupting your typing.
Accept the suggestion: Type a space, punctuation mark, or return character.
Reject a suggestion: Finish typing the word as you want it, then tap the “x” next to the suggestion.
Each time you reject a suggestion for the same word, iPad becomes more likely to accept the word.
iPad may also underline words you’ve already typed that might be misspelled.
Replace a misspelled word Tap the word, then tap one of the alternate spellings.
If the word you want doesn’t appear, just retype it.
Turn auto-correction or
spell checking on or o
Add a word to the keyboard dictionary
Go to Settings > General > Keyboard.
Go to Settings > General > Keyboard. Tap Add New Shortcut. Enter the
word in the Phrase eld, but leave the Shortcut eld blank. This adds the word to the keyboard dictionary and it won’t be identied as being
misspelled when you type it.
Shortcuts
Shortcuts lets you type just a few characters instead of a longer word or phrase. The expanded text appears whenever you type the shortcut. For example, the shortcut “omw” expands to “On my way!”
Create a shortcut: Go to Settings > General > Keyboard, then tap Add New Shortcut.
To add a word or phrase to the keyboard dictionary so that iPad doesn’t try to correct or replace it,
leave the Shortcut eld blank.
Edit a shortcut: Go to Settings > General > Keyboard, then tap the shortcut.
Using an Apple Wireless Keyboard
In addition to the onscreen keyboard, you can also use an Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPad.
The Apple Wireless Keyboard connects using Bluetooth, so you must pair the keyboard with iPad. See “Pairing Bluetooth devices” on page 37.
Once the keyboard is paired with iPad, it connects whenever the keyboard is within range (up to 33 feet or 10 meters). You can tell that the keyboard is connected if the onscreen keyboard doesn’t
appear when you tap in a text eld.
Switch the language when using a hardware keyboard: Hold down the Command key and tap the space bar to display a list of available languages. Tap the space bar again to choose a language.
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31
Disconnect a wireless keyboard from iPad: Hold down the power button on the keyboard until
the green light goes o.
iPad disconnects the keyboard when it’s out of range.
Unpair a wireless keyboard from iPad: In Settings, go to General > Bluetooth, tap next to the keyboard name, then tap “Forget this Device.”
You can apply dierent layouts to a wireless keyboard. See Appendix B, “ International Keyboards,” on page 13 2 and “Keyboard layouts” on page 30.

Searching

You can search iPad‘s built-in apps, including Mail, Calendar, Music, Video, Notes, and Contacts. Search an individual app, or search all the apps at once using Spotlight.
Go to Search: On the main page of the Home screen, ick right or press the Home button . On the Search page, you can press the Home button to return to the main Home screen.
Search iPad: On the Search page, enter text in the Search eld. Search results appear
automatically as you type. Tap Search to dismiss the keyboard and see more of the results.
Tap an item in the results list to open it. Icons to the left of the search results let you know which app the results are from.
At the top of the list, iPad shows your top hits based on previous searches. At the bottom of the list, the search results also include options to search the web or search Wikipedia.
Here’s a list of the apps searched and what information is searched within each app:
App What’s searched
Contacts First, last, and company names
Mail To, From, and Subject elds of all accounts (the text of messages isn’t searched)
Calendar Event titles, invitees, locations, and notes
Music Music (names of songs, artists, and albums) and the titles of podcasts, videos, and audiobooks
Notes Text of notes
Messages Names and text of messages
Reminders Titles
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Chapter 3 Basics
Search also searches the names of built-in and installed apps on iPad. If you have a lot of apps, you can use Spotlight to locate and open them.
Open an app from Search: Enter all or part of the app name, then tap to open the app.
You can choose which apps are searched and the order they’re searched in. In Settings, go to General > Spotlight Search.

Printing

iPad can print wirelessly to AirPrint-enabled printers. You can print from the following iPad built-in apps:
Mail—email messages and viewable attachments Â
Photos and Camera—photos Â
Safari—webpages, PDF les, and viewable attachments Â
iBooks—PDF les Â
Notes—currently displayed note Â
Maps—view of map showing on the screen Â
Other apps available from the App Store may also support AirPrint.
An AirPrint-enabled printer doesn’t require printer software; it just needs to be connected to the same Wi-Fi network as iPad. If you’re not sure whether your printer is AirPrint-enabled, refer to its documentation.
For more information about AirPrint, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT4356.
Printing a document
AirPrint uses your Wi-Fi network to send print jobs wirelessly to your printer. iPad and the printer must be on the same Wi-Fi network.
Print a document:
1 Tap or (depending on the app you’re using), then tap Print.
2 Tap Select Printer to select a printer.
3 Set printer options, such as number of copies and double-sided output (if the printer supports it).
Some apps also let you set a range of pages to print.
4 Tap Print.
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33
If you double-click the Home button while a document is printing, the Print Center app appears as the most recent app. A badge on the icon shows how many documents are ready to print, including the currently printing document.
See the status of a print job Double-click the Home button , tap the Print Center icon, then select a
print job.
Cancel a print job Double-click the Home button
job, then tap Cancel Printing.
, tap the Print Center icon, select the print

File Sharing

File Sharing lets you transfer les with the Dock Connector to USB Cable between iPad and your computer, using iTunes. You can share les created with a compatible app and saved in a
supported format.
Apps that support le sharing appear in the File Sharing Apps list in iTunes. For each app, the Files list shows the documents that are on iPad. See the app’s documentation for how it shares les; not
all apps support this feature.
Transfer a le from iPad to your computer: In iTunes, go to your device’s Apps pane. In the File
Sharing section, select an app from the list. On the right, select the le you want to transfer, then
click “Save to.”
Transfer a le from your computer to iPad: In iTunes, go to your device’s Apps pane. In the File
Sharing section, select an app, then click Add. The le is immediately transferred to your device for
use with the app you selected.
Delete a le from iPad: In iTunes, go to your device’s Apps pane. Select the le in the Files list in
the File Sharing section of the Apps pane, then press the Delete key.
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Chapter 3 Basics
Notications
Notication Center displays all your alerts in one place, including alerts about:
Reminders Â
Calendar events Â
New mail Â
New messages Â
Friend requests (Game Center) Â
Alerts also appear on the lock screen, or briey at the top of the screen when you’re using iPad. You can see all current alerts in Notication Center.
Show Notication Center Swipe down from the top of the screen.
Respond to an alert in
Notication Center
Respond to an alert on the lock screen
Remove an alert from
Notication Center
Set options for notications Go to Settings > Notications.
Tap the alert.
Swipe the alert from left to right.
, then tap Clear.
Tap
Chapter 3 Basics
35

Twitter

Add your current location
Add your current location
Attachment
Attachment
Available characters remaining
Available characters remaining
Sign in to your Twitter account (or create a new account) in Settings to enable Tweets with attachments from the following apps:
Camera or Photos—with a photo from your Camera Roll album Â
Safari—with a webpage Â
Maps—with a location Â
YouTube—with a video Â
Sign in to (or create) a Twitter account:
1 Go to Settings > Twitter.
2 Enter the user name and password for an existing account, or tap Create New Account.
To add another account, tap Add Account.
Tweet a photo, video, or webpage
Tweet a location in Maps Tap the location pin, tap
Add Twitter user names and photos to your contacts
Turn Twitter on or o for Photos or Safari
View the item, tap , then tap Tweet. If isn’t showing, tap the screen. To include your location, tap Add Location. Location Services must be on.
Go to Settings > Location Services.
Services must be on. Go to Settings > Location Services.
Go to Settings > Twitter, then tap Update Contacts.
Go to Settings > Twitter.
, tap Share Location, then tap Tweet. Location
36
When you’re writing a Tweet, the number in the lower-right corner of the Tweet screen shows the number of characters remaining that you can enter. Attachments use some of a Tweet’s 140 characters.
You can install and use the Twitter app to post a Tweet, view your timeline, search for trending topics, and more. In Settings, go to Twitter, then tap Install. To learn how to use the Twitter app, open the app, tap the More button (…), tap Accounts & Settings, tap Settings, then tap Manual.
Chapter 3 Basics

Using AirPlay

You can stream music, photos, and video wirelessly to your HDTV or speakers using AirPlay and Apple TV. You can also use AirPlay to stream audio to an Airport Express or AirPort Extreme base station. Other AirPlay-enabled receivers are available from third-parties. Visit the online Apple Store for details.
iPad and the AirPlay-enabled device must be on the same Wi-Fi network.
Stream content to an AirPlay-enabled device: Start the video, slideshow, or music, then tap and choose the AirPlay device. Once streaming starts, you can exit the app that’s playing the content.
Get quick access to the AirPlay controls
Switch playback back to iPad Tap
When the screen is on, double-click the Home button and scroll to the left end of the multitasking bar.
and choose iPad.
You can mirror the iPad screen (iPad 2 or later) on a TV with Apple TV. Everything on the iPad screen appears on the TV.
Mirror the iPad screen on a TV: Tap at the left end of the multitasking bar, choose an Apple TV, and tap the Mirroring button that appears.
A blue bar appears at the top of the iPad screen when AirPlay mirroring is turned on. You can also mirror the iPad screen on a TV using a cable. See “Watching videos on a TV” on page 64.

Using Bluetooth devices

You can use iPad with the Apple Wireless Keyboard and other Bluetooth devices, such as Bluetooth headphones. For supported Bluetooth proles, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT3647.
Pairing Bluetooth devices
You must rst pair a Bluetooth device (such as a keyboard or headphones) with iPad before you
can use it.
Pair a Bluetooth device with iPad:
1 Follow the instructions that came with the device to make it discoverable.
2 In Settings, choose General > Bluetooth, and turn Bluetooth on.
3 Select the device and, if prompted, enter the passkey or PIN number. See the instructions about
the passkey or PIN that came with the device.
Note: Before you pair an Apple Wireless Keyboard, press the power button to turn the keyboard
on. You can pair only one Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPad at a time. To pair a dierent keyboard, you must rst unpair the current one.
After you pair the keyboard with iPad, the product name and a Bluetooth icon appear on the screen.
After you pair headphones with iPad, the product name and a Bluetooth audio icon appear on the screen along with the audio or video playback controls. Tap to switch to a dierent audio output, such as the internal speaker.
To use the onscreen keyboard again, turn o Bluetooth in Settings > General > Bluetooth, or press
the Eject key on the Bluetooth keyboard.
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37
Bluetooth status
The Bluetooth icon appears in the iPad status bar at the top of the screen:
 (white): Bluetooth is on and paired with a device.
 (gray): Bluetooth is on and paired with a device, but the device is out of range or turned o.
 No Bluetooth icon: Bluetooth is turned o or not paired with a device.
Unpairing a Bluetooth device from iPad
If you pair iPad with one Bluetooth device and then want to use a dierent device of the same type instead, you must unpair the rst device.
Unpair a Bluetooth device: Go to Settings > General > Bluetooth, then turn Bluetooth on. Choose the device, then tap “Forget this Device.”

Security features

Security features help protect the information on iPad from being accessed by others.
Passcodes and data protection
For security, you can set up a passcode that you must enter each time you turn on or wake up iPad.
Set a passcode: Go to Settings > General > Passcode Lock > Turn Passcode On. Enter a 4-digit passcode, then enter it again to verify it. iPad will require you to enter the passcode to unlock it, or to display the passcode lock settings.
Setting a passcode turns on data protection, which uses your passcode as the key for encrypting mail messages and attachments stored on iPad. (Data protection may also be used by some apps available from the App Store.) A notice at the bottom of the Passcode Lock screen in Settings shows that data protection is enabled.
To increase security, turn o Simple Passcode (a four-digit number) and use a more robust
passcode that has a combination of numbers, letters, punctuation, and special characters. See “Auto-Lock” on page 126.
Find My iPad
Find My iPad can help you locate a lost or misplaced iPad using an iPhone, iPod touch, or another iPad. You can also use Find My iPad using a Mac or PC with a web browser signed in to www.icloud.com or www.me.com. Find My iPad includes:
 Find on a map: View the approximate location of your iPad on a full-screen map.
 Display a Message or Play a Sound: Compose a message that appears on your iPad, or play
sound for two minutes.
 Remote Passcode Lock: Remotely lock your iPad and create a 4-digit passcode, if you haven’t
set one previously.
 Remote Wipe: Protects your privacy by erasing all the information and media on your iPad and
restoring iPad to its original factory settings.
Important: Before you can use these features, you must turn on Find My iPad either in iCloud or in
MobileMe settings on your iPad. Find My iPad can be turned on in only one account.
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Chapter 3 Basics
Turn on Find My iPad using iCloud Go to Settings > iCloud and turn on Find My iPad.
Turn on Find My iPad using MobileMe
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, tap your MobileMe account, then turn on Find My iPad.
Find My iPad uses Wi-Fi to locate your iPad. If Wi-Fi is turned o or if your iPad isn’t connected to a Wi-Fi network, Find My iPad can’t nd it. See “Using iCloud” on page 19.
Chapter 3 Basics
39
Safari
View your bookmarks or Reading List.
View your bookmarks or Reading List.
Open a new page.
Open a new page.
Search the web and the current page.
Search the web and the current page.
Enter a web address (URL).
Enter a web address (URL).
Double-tap an item or pinch to zoom in or out.
Double-tap an item or pinch to zoom in or out.

Viewing webpages

4
40
View a webpage: Tap the address eld (in the title bar), type the web address, then tap Go.
You can view webpages in portrait or landscape orientation.
Erase the text in the address eld Tap .
Scroll around a webpage Drag up, down, or sideways.
Scroll within a frame on a webpage Scroll with two ngers inside the frame.
Open a new page Tap
Go to another page Tap a tab at the top of the page.
Stop a webpage from loading Tap
Reload a webpage Tap in the address eld.
Close a page Tap on the page’s tab.
. You can have up to nine pages open at a time.
in the address eld.
Protect private information and block some websites from tracking your behavior
Set options for Safari Go to Settings > Safari.
Go to Settings > Safari and turn on Private Browsing.

Links

Follow a link on a webpage: Tap the link.
Open a link in a new tab Touch and hold the link, then tap “Open in New Tab.”
See a link’s destination address Touch and hold the link.
Detected data—such as phone numbers and email addresses—may also appear as links in webpages. Touch and hold a link to see the available options. See “Using links and detected data” on page 45.

Reading List

Reading List lets you collect links to webpages to read later.
Add a link to the current page to your reading list: Tap , then tap “Add to Reading List.”
Add a link to your reading list: Touch and hold the link, then choose “Add to Reading List.”
View your reading list Tap , then tap Reading List.
Use iCloud to keep your reading list up to date on your iOS devices and computers
Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Bookmarks. See “Using iCloud page 19.
” on

Reader

Reader displays web articles without ads or clutter, so you can read without distractions. On a webpage with an article, you can use Reader to view just the article.
View an article in Reader: Tap the Reader button, if it appears in the address eld.
Adjust the font size Tap .
Bookmark, add to Reading List or Home Screen, share, or print
the article
Return to normal view Tap Reader.
Tap
.
Entering text and lling out forms
Enter text: Tap a text eld to bring up the keyboard.
Move to another text eld Tap the text eld, or tap Next or Previous.
Submit a form Tap Go or Search, or the link on the page to submit the form, if available.
To enable AutoFill to help ll out forms, go to Settings > Safari > AutoFill.
Chapter 4 Safari
41

Searching

The search eld in the upper-right corner lets you search the web, and the current page or PDF.
Search the web, and the current page or searchable PDF: Enter text in the search eld.
 To search the web: Tap one of the suggestions that appear, or tap Search.
 To nd the search text on the current page or PDF: Scroll to the bottom of the screen, then tap
the entry below On This Page.
The rst instance is highlighted. To nd later occurrences, tap .
Change the search engine Go to Settings > Safari > Search Engine.

Bookmarks and history

When you save a bookmark, you can edit its title. Bookmarks are normally saved at the top level of Bookmarks. Tap Bookmarks to choose another folder.
Bookmark a webpage: Open the page, tap , then tap Add Bookmark.
View previous webpages (history): Tap , then tap History. To clear the history, tap Clear.
Open a bookmarked webpage Tap .
Display the bookmarks bar Tap the address eld. To always show the bookmarks bar, go to Settings >
Safari, under General.
Edit a bookmark or bookmark folder
Use iCloud to keep bookmarks up to date on your iOS devices and computers
Sync bookmarks with the web browser on your computer
, choose the folder that has the bookmark or folder you want to edit,
Tap then tap Edit.
Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Bookmarks. See “Using iCloud page 19.
See “Syncing with iTunes
” on page 20.
” on
42

Printing webpages, PDFs, and other documents

Print a webpage, PDF, or Quick Look document: Tap , then tap Print.
For more information, see “Printing a document” on page 33.

Web clips

You can create web clips, which appear as icons on the Home screen. When you open a web clip, Safari automatically zooms to the part of the webpage that was showing at the time you saved the web clip.
Add a web clip: Open the webpage and tap . Then tap “Add to Home Screen.”
Unless the webpage has a custom icon, that image is also used for the web clip icon on the Home screen.
Web clips are backed up by iCloud and by iTunes, but they aren’t synced by iTunes or MobileMe. They also aren’t pushed to other devices by iCloud.
Chapter 4 Safari
Mail
Swipe to reveal the message list.
Swipe to reveal the message list.
Fetch new mail.
Fetch new mail.
5

Checking and reading email

In Mail, the Mailboxes screen provides quick access to all your inboxes and other mailboxes.
When you open a mailbox, Mail retrieves and displays the most recent messages. You can set the number of messages retrieved, in Mail settings. See “Mail accounts and settings” on page 46.
Reveal the message list In portrait mode, swipe from left to right to show the message list for the
current mailbox. Then tap Mailboxes to go to the mailboxes list.
Organize messages by thread Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
If you organize messages by thread, related messages appear as a single entry in the mailbox. See “Mail accounts and settings
Check for new messages Choose a mailbox, or tap
Load more messages Scroll to the bottom of the message list and tap Load More Messages.
at any time.
” on page 46.
43
Zoom in on part of a message Double-tap an area of the message. Double-tap again to zoom out. Or
pinch apart or together to zoom in or out.
Resize a column of text to t the screen
See all the recipients of a message Tap Details. Tap a name or email address to see the recipient’s contact
Add an email recipient to your contacts list
Flag or mark a message as unread
Open a meeting invitation Tap the invitation. See “Responding to invitations
Double-tap the text.
information. Then tap a phone number or email address to contact the person.
Tap the message and, if necessary, tap Details to see the recipients. Then tap a name or email address and tap Create New Contact or “Add to Existing Contact.”
Open the message and, if necessary, tap Details. Then tap Mark. To mark multiple messages as unread, see “Organizing mail
” on page 70.
” on page 46.

Working with multiple accounts

If you set up more than one account, the Accounts section of the Mailboxes screen lets you access those accounts. You can also tap All Inboxes to see all of your incoming messages in a single list. For information about adding accounts, see “Mail accounts and settings” on page 46.
When you compose a new message, tap the From eld and select the account to send the
message from.

Sending mail

You can send an email message to anyone who has an email address.
Compose a message: Tap .
Add a recipient from Contacts Type a name or email address in the To eld, or tap .
Rearrange recipients To move a recipient from one eld to another, such as from To to Cc, drag
the recipient’s name to the new location.
Make text bold, italic, or underlined Tap the insertion point to display the selection buttons, then tap Select.
Drag the points to select the text that you want to style. Tap B/I/U. Tap Bold, Italic, or Underline to apply the style.
Send a photo or video in an email message
Save a draft of a message to
nish later
Reply to a message Tap , then tap Reply. Files or images attached to the initial message
Quote a portion of the message you’re replying to or forwarding
Forward a message Open a message and tap , then tap Forward.
Share contact information In Contacts, choose a contact, tap Share Contact at the bottom of the
In Photos, choose a photo or video, tap Video. You can also copy and paste photos and videos.
To send multiple photos or videos, tap album. Tap to select the photos and videos, tap Share, then tap Email.
Tap Cancel, then tap Save. The message is saved in the Drafts mailbox. Touch and hold
aren’t sent back. To include the attachments, forward it instead of replying.
Touch and hold to select text. Drag the grab points to select the text you want to include in your reply, then tap
To change the indentation of quoted text, touch and hold to select text, then tap
Info screen.
to quickly access it.
. Tap Quote Level, then tap Increase or Decrease.
, then tap Email Photo or Email
while viewing thumbnails in an
.
, then tap
44
Chapter 5 Mail

Using links and detected data

iPad detects web links, phone numbers, email addresses, dates, and other types of information that you can use to open a webpage, create a pre-addressed email message, create or add information to a contact, or perform some other useful action. Detected data appears as blue underlined text.
Tap the data to use its default action, or touch and hold to see other actions. For example, for an address, you can display the location in Maps, or add it to Contacts.

Viewing attachments

iPad displays image attachments in many commonly used formats (JPEG, GIF, and TIFF) inline with the text in email messages. iPad can play many types of audio attachments, such as MP3, AAC, WAV,
and AIFF. You can download and view les (such as PDF, webpage, text, Pages, Keynote, Numbers,
Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents) that are attached to messages you receive.
View an attached le: Tap the attachment to open it in Quick Look. You may need to wait while it downloads before viewing.
Open an attached le Touch and hold the attachment, then choose an app to open it. If none of
your apps support the le, and it isn’t one that Quick Look supports, you can see the name of the le but you can’t open it.
Save an attached photo or video Touch and hold the photo or video, then tap Save Image or Video. The item
is saved to your Camera Roll album in the Photos app.
Quick Look supports the following document types:
.doc, .docx Microsoft Word
.htm, .html webpage
.key Keynote
.numbers Numbers
.pages Pages
.pdf Preview, Adobe Acrobat
.ppt, .pptx Microsoft PowerPoint
.rtf Rich Text Format
.txt text
.vcf contact information
.xls, .xlsx Microsoft Excel

Printing messages and attachments

You can print email messages, and attachments that can be viewed in Quick Look.
Print an email message: Tap , then tap Print.
Print an inline image Touch and hold the image, then tap Save Image. Then open Photos and
print the image from your Camera Roll album.
Print an attachment Tap the attachment to view it in Quick Look, then tap
and tap Print.
For more information, see “Printing” on page 33.
Chapter 5 Mail
45

Organizing mail

You can organize messages in any mailbox, folder, or search results window. You can delete or mark messages as read. You can also move messages from one mailbox or folder to another in the same
account or between dierent accounts. You can add, delete, or rename mailboxes and folders.
Delete a message: Open the message and tap .
You can also delete a message directly from the mailbox message list by swiping left or right over the message title, then tapping Delete.
Some mail accounts support archiving messages instead of deleting them. When you archive
a message, it’s moved from your Inbox to All Mail. Turn archiving on or o in Settings > Mail,
Contacts, Calendars.
Recover a message Deleted messages are moved to the Trash mailbox.
To change how long a message stays in the Trash before being deleted permanently, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars. Then tap Advanced.
Delete or move multiple messages While viewing a list of messages, tap Edit, select the messages you want to
delete, then tap Move or Delete.
Move a message to another mailbox or folder
Add a mailbox Go to the mailboxes list, tap Edit, then tap New Mailbox.
Delete or rename a mailbox Go to the mailboxes list, tap Edit, then tap a mailbox. Enter a new name or
Flag and mark multiple messages as read
While viewing a message, tap
location for the mailbox. Tap Delete Mailbox to delete it and all its contents.
While viewing a list of messages, tap Edit, select the messages you want, then tap Mark. Choose either Flag or Mark as Read.
, then choose a mailbox or folder.

Searching mail

You can search the To, From, Subject and body text of email messages. Mail searches the downloaded messages in the current mailbox. For iCloud, Exchange, and some IMAP mail accounts, you can also search messages on the server.
Search email messages: Open a mailbox, scroll to the top, and enter text in the Search eld. Tap From, To, Subject, or All to choose which elds you want to search. If your mail account supports it,
messages on the server are also searched.
Mail messages can also be included in searches from the Home screen. See “Searching” on page 32.

Mail accounts and settings

Accounts
For Mail and for your mail account settings, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
You can set up:
iCloud Â
Microsoft Exchange Â
Gmail Â
Yahoo! Â
AOL Â
Microsoft Hotmail Â
MobileMe Â
Other POP and IMAP mail systems Â
46
Chapter 5 Mail
Some settings depend on the type of account you’re setting up. Your service provider or system administrator can provide the information you need to enter.
Change an account’s settings: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then make the changes you want.
Stop using an account Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then turn o
an account service (such as Mail, Calendars, or Notes).
If an account service is o, iPad doesn’t display or sync information with
the account service until you turn it back on. This is a good way to stop receiving work email while on vacation, for example.
Store drafts, sent messages, and
deleted messages on iPad
Set how long before messages are removed permanently from Mail
Adjust email server settings Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then choose an account.
Adjust SSL and password settings Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then tap
Turn Archive Messages on or o Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then choose an account. See
Delete an account Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then scroll
Send signed and encrypted messages
Set Push settings Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Fetch New Data. Push delivers
For IMAP accounts, you can change where these messages are stored. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an IMAP account, then tap Advanced. Choose a location for Draft Mailbox, Sent Mailbox, or Deleted Mailbox.
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then tap Advanced. Tap Remove, then choose a time: Never, or after one day, one week, or one month.
Ask your network administrator or Internet service provider for the correct settings.
Advanced. Ask your network administrator or Internet service provider for the correct settings.
“Organizing mail
down and tap Delete Account. All email and the contacts, calendar, and bookmark information synced
with the account are removed from iPad.
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, choose an account, then
tap Advanced. Turn on S/MIME, then select certicates for signing and
encrypting outgoing messages.
To install certicates, obtain a conguration prole from your system administrator, download the certicates from the issuer’s website using
Safari, or receive them in Mail attachments.
new information when iPad is connected to the Internet (some delays
may occur). You might want to turn Push o to suspend delivery of email
and other information, or to conserve battery life. When Push is o, use the Fetch New Data setting to determine how often data is requested. For optimal battery life, don’t fetch too often.
” on page 46.
Mail settings
To change settings that apply to all of your accounts, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
Change the tones played when mail is sent or received: Go to Settings > Sounds.
Chapter 5 Mail
47
Messages
Tap the edit button to edit or forward a conversation.
Tap the edit button to edit or forward a conversation.
Tap the compose button to start a new conversation.
Tap the compose button to start a new conversation.
Tap the Attach Media button to include a photo or video.
Tap the Attach Media button to include a photo or video.
6

Sending and receiving messages

Using the Messages app and the built-in iMessage service, you can send text messages over Wi-Fi or cellular data connections to other iOS 5 users. Messages can include photos, videos, and other
info, let you see when the other person is typing, and let others be notied when you’ve read
their messages. Because iMessages are displayed on all of your iOS 5 devices logged in to the same account, you can start a conversation on one of your devices, then continue it on another device. iMessages are also encrypted.
Note: Cellular data charges or additional fees may apply.
Send a text message: Tap , then tap and choose a contact, search your contacts by entering a name, or enter a phone number or email address manually. Enter the message, then tap Send.
Note: An alert badge appears if a message can’t be sent. If the alert appears in the address
eld, make sure you enter the name, phone number, or email address of another iOS 5 user. In a
conversation, tap the alert to try sending the message again.
48
Conversations are saved in the Messages list. A blue dot indicates unread messages. Tap a conversation to view or continue it. In an iMessage conversation, your outgoing messages are highlighted in blue.
Use emoji characters Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > International Keyboards > Add New
Keyboard, then tap Emoji to make that keyboard available. To enter emoji characters when typing a message, tap See “Switching keyboards” on page 13 2 .
Hide keyboard Tap
Resume a previous conversation Tap the conversation in the Messages list, then enter a message and tap Send.
Display earlier messages in the conversation
Receive iMessages using another email address
Follow a link in a message Tap the link. A link may open a webpage in Safari, or let you add a phone
Forward a conversation Select a conversation, then tap
Add someone to your contacts list,
or share a contact
Notify others when you’ve read their messages
Set other options for Messages Go to Settings > Messages.
Manage notications for messages See “Notications
Set the alert sound for incoming text messages
in the lower-right corner.
Tap the status bar to scroll to the top, then tap Load Earlier Messages.
Go to Settings > Messages > Receive At > Add Another Email.
number to your contacts, for example.
Tap a phone number or email address in the Messages list, then tap .
Go to Settings > Messages and turn on Send Read Receipts.
” on page 121.
See “Sounds
” on page 12 5.
to bring up the Emoji keyboard.
. Select parts to include, then tap Forward.

Sending messages to a group

Group messaging lets you send a message to multiple recipients.
Send messages to a group: Tap , then enter multiple recipients.

Sending photos, videos, and more

You can send photos, videos, locations, contact info, and voice memos.
Send a photo or video: Tap .
The size limit of attachments is determined by your service provider. iPad may compress photo and video attachments, if necessary.
Send a location In Maps, tap for a location, tap Share Location, then tap Message.
Send contact info In Contacts, choose a contact, tap Share Contact (below Notes), then tap
Send Message.
Save a photo or video you receive to your Camera Roll album
Copy a photo or video Touch and hold the attachment, then tap Copy.
Save contact info you receive Tap the contact bubble, then tap Create New Contact or “Add to
Tap the photo or video, tap
Existing Contact.”
, then tap Save Image.
Chapter 6 Messages
49

Editing conversations

If you want to keep just part of a conversation, you can delete the parts you don’t want. You can also delete entire conversations from the Messages list.
Edit a conversation: Tap Edit, select the parts to delete, then tap Delete.
Clear all text and attachments,
without deleting the conversation
Delete a conversation Swipe the conversation, then tap Delete.
Tap Edit, then tap Clear All.

Searching messages

You can search the content of conversations in the Messages list.
Search a conversation: Tap the search eld, then enter the text you’re looking for.
You can also search conversations from the Home screen. See “Searching” on page 32.
50
Chapter 6 Messages
Camera
View the photos and videos you’ve taken.
View the photos and videos you’ve taken.
Start and stop video recording.
Start and stop video recording.
Camera/ Video switch
Camera/ Video switch
7

About Camera

If you have an iPad 2 or later, you can take both still photos and videos. There’s a camera on the back, and a front camera for FaceTime and self-portraits.
If Location Services is turned on, photos and videos are tagged with location data that can be used by some apps and photo-sharing websites. See “Location Services” on page 12 2 .
Note: If Location Services is turned o when you open Camera, you may be asked to turn it on.
You can use Camera without Location Services.
51

Taking photos and videos

Take a photo: Make sure the Camera/Video switch is set to , then aim iPad and tap . You can also take a photo by pressing the Volume Up button.
Record a video: Slide the Camera/Video switch to , then tap to start or stop recording, or press the Volume Up button.
When you take a photo or start a video recording, iPad makes a shutter sound. You can control the volume with the Volume buttons or the Side Switch.
Note: In some areas, the shutter sound isn’t silenced by the Side Switch.
A rectangle briey appears where the camera is focused and setting the exposure. When you
photograph people, iPad (3rd generation) uses face detection to automatically focus on and balance the exposure across up to 10 faces. A rectangle appears over each detected face.
Zoom in or out Pinch the screen (back camera, in camera mode only).
Turn on the grid Tap Options.
Set the exposure Tap the person or object on the screen.
Lock the exposure Touch and hold the screen until the rectangle pulses. AE Lock appears on
the screen, and the exposure remains locked until you tap the screen again.
Take a screenshot Press and release the Sleep/Wake button and the Home button
same time. The screenshot is added to your Camera Roll album.
Note: On an iPad without a camera, screenshots are added to the Saved Photos album.
at the

Viewing, sharing, and printing

The photos and videos you take with Camera are saved in your Camera Roll album.
View your Camera Roll album: Flick from left to right, or tap the thumbnail image in the lower-left corner of the screen. You can also view your Camera Roll album in the Photos app.
To take more photos or videos, tap Done.
If you have iCloud Photo Stream turned on in Settings > iCloud, new photos also appear in your Photo Stream album, and are streamed to your other iOS devices and computers. See “Using iCloud” on page 19 .
For more information about viewing and sharing photos and videos, see “Sharing photos and videos
” on page 61 and “Uploading photos and videos to your computer” on page 53.
Show or hide the controls while viewing a full-screen photo or video
Email or text a photo or video Tap
Tweet a photo View the photo full-screen, tap , then tap Tweet. To post a Tweet, you
Print a photo Tap
Delete a photo or video Tap
Tap the screen.
.
must be logged in to your Twitter account. Go to Settings > Twitter. To include your location, tap Add Location.
. See “Printing a document” on page 33.
.
52
Chapter 7 Camera

Editing photos

Crop
Crop
Auto enhance
Auto enhance
Rotate
Rotate
Remove red-eye
Remove red-eye
You can rotate, enhance, remove red-eye, and crop photos. Enhancing improves a photo’s overall darkness or lightness, color saturation, and other qualities.
Edit a photo: While viewing a photo full-screen, tap Edit, then choose a tool.
With the red-eye tool, tap each eye to correct it. To crop, drag the corners of the grid, drag the photo to reposition it, then tap Crop. You can also tap Constrain when cropping, to set a
specic ratio.

Trimming videos

You can trim the frames from the beginning and end of a video that you just recorded, or from any other video in your Camera Roll album. You can replace the original video, or save the trimmed version as a new video clip.
Trim a video: While viewing a video, tap the screen to display the controls. Drag either end of the frame viewer at the top of the video, 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 Camera
Roll album, leaving the original video unaected.

Uploading photos and videos to your computer

You can upload the photos and videos you take with Camera to photo applications on your computer, such as iPhoto on a Mac.
Upload photos and videos to your computer: Connect iPad to your computer using the Dock Connector to USB Cable.
 Mac: Select the photos and videos you want, then click the Import or Download button in
iPhoto or other supported photo application on your computer.
 PC: Follow the instructions that came with your photo application.
If you delete the photos and videos from iPad when you upload them to your computer, they’re removed from your Camera Roll album. You can use the Photos settings pane in iTunes to sync photos and videos to the Photos app on iPad (videos can be synced only with a Mac). See “Syncing with iTunes” on page 20.
Chapter 7 Camera
53

Photo Stream

With Photo Stream—a feature of iCloud—photos you take on iPad are automatically uploaded to iCloud and pushed to all your other devices that have Photo Stream enabled. Photos uploaded to iCloud from your other devices and computers are pushed to your Photo Stream album on iPad. See “Using iCloud” on page 19 .
Turn on Photo Stream: Go to Settings > iCloud > Photo Stream.
New photos you’ve taken are uploaded to your Photo Stream when you leave the Camera app and iPad is connected to the Internet via Wi-Fi. Any other photos added to your Camera Roll— including photos downloaded from email and text messages, and images saved from web pages, Photo Booth, and screenshots—are also uploaded to your Photo Stream and pushed to your other devices. Photo Stream can share up to 1000 of your most recent photos across your iOS devices. Your computers can keep all your Photo Stream photos permanently.
Save photos to iPad from Photo Stream
Delete a photo from iCloud In your Photo Stream album, select the photo, then tap
Delete multiple photos from iCloud
In your Photo Stream album, tap , select the photos you want to save, then tap Save.
.
In your Photo Stream album, tap , select the photos you want to delete, then tap Delete.
Note: To delete photos from Photo Stream, you need iOS 5.1 or later on iPad and all of your other iOS devices. For more information, see support.apple.com/kb/HT4486.
Although deleted photos are removed from the Photo Stream on your devices, the original remains in the Camera Roll (or Saved Photos) album on the device the photo originated from.
54
Chapter 7 Camera
FaceTime
Drag your image to any corner.
Drag your image to any corner.
Switch cameras.
Switch cameras.
Mute (you can hear and see; the caller can see but not hear).
Mute (you can hear and see; the caller can see but not hear).
8

About FaceTime

FaceTime lets you make video calls over Wi-Fi. Use the front camera to talk face-to-face, or the back camera to share what you see around you.
To use FaceTime, you need iPad 2 or later and a Wi-Fi connection to the Internet. See “Network” on page 12 5 . The person you call must also have an iOS device or computer that works with FaceTime.
Note: FaceTime may not be available in all areas.
55

Making a FaceTime call

To make a FaceTime call, choose someone from your contacts or favorites, or list of recent calls.
When you open FaceTime, you may be prompted to sign in using your Apple ID, or to create a new account.
Call a contact: Tap Contacts, choose a name, then tap the phone number or email address the person uses for FaceTime. FaceTime must be turned on in Settings > FaceTime.
Restart a recent call Tap Recents, then choose the call from the list.
Add a favorite Tap Favorites, then tap
or email address that the person uses for FaceTime.
Call a favorite Tap Favorites, then tap a name in the list.
Add a contact Tap Contacts, then tap
For a contact outside your region, be sure to enter the complete number, including country code and area code.
Set options for FaceTime Go to Settings > FaceTime.
, choose a contact and select the phone number
.

While on a FaceTime call

While talking to someone using FaceTime, you can switch cameras, change the orientation of iPad,
mute your microphone, move your picture-in-picture display, open another app, and nally, end
your call.
Switch between the front and back cameras
Change the orientation of iPad Rotate iPad. The image your friend sees changes to match.
Mute the call Tap
Move your picture-in-picture display
Use another app during a call Press the Home button
End the call Tap
Tap .
To avoid unwanted orientation changes as you move, lock the iPad orientation. See “Viewing in portrait or landscape
. Your friend can still see you, and you can still see and hear your
friend.
Drag the inset window to any corner.
, then tap an app icon. You can still talk with your friend, but you can’t see each other. To return to the call, tap the green bar at the top of the screen.
.
” on page 15.
56
Chapter 8 FaceTime
Photo Booth
9

About Photo Booth

If you have an iPad 2 or later, it’s easy to take a photo using Photo Booth. Make your photo more
interesting by applying an eect when you take it. Photo Booth works with both the front and
back cameras.
Selecting an eect
Before you take a picture, you can select an eect to apply.
Select an eect: Tap , then tap the eect you want.
Distort an image: If you select a distortion eect, drag your nger across the screen to change
the distortion. You can also pinch, swipe, or rotate the image to change the distortion.
57

Taking a photo

To take a Photo Booth photo, just aim iPad and tap.
Take a photo: Aim iPad and tap .
When you take a photo, iPad makes a shutter sound. You can use the volume buttons on the side of the iPad to control the volume of the shutter sound. You won’t hear a sound if you set the Side Switch to silent. See “Buttons” on page 10 .
Note: In some regions, sound eects are played even if the Side Switch is set to silent.
Switch between the front and back cameras: Tap at the bottom of the screen.
Review the photo you’ve just taken: Tap the thumbnail of your last shot. Swipe left or right to
view more thumbnails.
If you don’t see the controls, tap the screen to display them.
Delete a photo: Select a thumbnail, then tap .
Manage photos: Tap one or more thumbnails. Tap , then tap Email, Copy, or Delete.

Viewing and sharing photos

The photos you take with Photo Booth are saved in your Camera Roll album in the Photos app on iPad.
View photos in your Camera Roll album: In Photos, tap your Camera Roll album. To ip through
the photos, tap the left or right button, or swipe left or right. See “Viewing photos and videos” on page 59.
You can use Mail to send a Photo Booth photo in an email message.
Email a photo: Tap a thumbnail to select the photo, or tap again to select more than one photo. Tap , then tap the Email button at the bottom of the screen.
Mail opens and creates a new message with the photo attached.

Uploading photos to your computer

Upload the photos you take with Photo Booth to photo applications on your computer, such as iPhoto on a Mac.
Upload photos to your computer: Connect iPad to your computer using the Dock Connector to USB cable.
 Mac: Select the photos to upload, then click the Import or Download button in iPhoto or other
supported photo application on your computer.
 PC: Follow the instructions that came with your photo application.
If you delete the photos from iPad when you upload them to your computer, they’re removed from your Camera Roll album. You can use the Photos settings pane in iTunes to sync photos to the Photos app on iPad.
58
Chapter 9 Photo Booth
Photos
Select a photo to view.
Select a photo to view.
Edit the photo.
Edit the photo.
Play a slideshow.
Play a slideshow.
Delete the photo.
Delete the photo.
Stream slideshow to an HDTV using AirPlay.
Stream slideshow to an HDTV using AirPlay.
Share the photo, assign it to a contact, use it as wallpaper, or print it.
Share the photo, assign it to a contact, use it as wallpaper, or print it.
Tap the screen to display the controls.
Tap the screen to display the controls.

Viewing photos and videos

Photos lets you view photos, and videos that you capture on or sync to iPad, in your:
Camera Roll album—photos and videos you take with the built-in camera, or save from an  email, text message, webpage, or screenshot
Photo Stream album—photos streamed from iCloud (see “ Â Photo Stream” on page 54)
Last Import album—photos and videos imported from a digital camera, iOS device, or SD Â memory card (see “Importing photos and videos” on page 62)
Photo Library and other albums synced from your computer (see “ Â Syncing with iTunes” on page 20)
Note: On an iPad without a camera, the Camera Roll album is named Saved Photos.
10
59
View photos and videos: Tap one of the buttons at the top of the screen. For example, tap
Album, then tap an album to see its thumbnails. Tap a thumbnail to see the photo or video full-screen.
You can also pinch to open or close an album, view a photo or video full-screen, or return to thumbnail view.
Albums you sync with iPhoto 8.0 (iLife ’09) or later, or Aperture v3.0.2 or later, can be viewed by events or by faces. You can also view photos by location, if they were taken with a camera that supports geotagging.
Show or hide the controls Tap the full-screen photo or video.
See the next or previous photo or video
Zoom in or out Double-tap or pinch.
Pan a photo Drag the photo.
Play a video Tap
Stream a video to an HDTV See “Using AirPlay” on page 37.
Edit photos or trim videos See “Editing photos” or “Trimming videos
Flick left or right.
in the center of the screen.
” on page 53.

Viewing slideshows

View a slideshow: Tap Slideshow. Select slideshow options, then tap Start Slideshow.
Stream a slideshow to an HDTV See “Using AirPlay” on page 37.
Stop a slideshow Tap the screen.
Set additional options Go to Settings > Photos.

Organizing photos and videos

You can create, rename, and delete albums on iPad to help you organize your photos and videos.
Create an album: When viewing albums, tap Edit, then tap Add. Select photos to add to the new album, then tap Done.
Note: Albums created on iPad aren’t synced back to your computer.
Rename an album Tap Edit, then select an album.
Rearrange albums Tap Edit, then drag
Delete an album Tap Edit, then tap .
up or down.
60
Chapter 10 Photos

Sharing photos and videos

Send a photo or video in an email, text message, or Tweet: Choose a photo or video, then tap . If you don’t see , tap the screen to show the controls.
To post a Tweet, you must be logged in to your Twitter account. Go to Settings > Twitter.
The size limit of attachments is determined by your service provider. iPad may compress photo and video attachments, if necessary.
Send multiple photos or videos While viewing thumbnails, tap , select the photos or videos, then tap Share.
Copy a photo or video Tap , then tap Copy.
Copy multiple photos or videos Tap , select the photos and videos, then tap Copy.
Paste a photo or video in an email or text message
Save a photo or video from an email message
Save a photo or video from a text message
Save a photo from a webpage Touch and hold the photo, then tap Save Image.
Photos and videos that you receive, or that you save from a webpage, are saved to your Camera Roll album (or to Saved Photos, on an iPad with no camera).
Touch and hold where you want to place the photo or video, then tap Paste.
Tap to download the item if necessary, tap the photo or touch and hold the video, then tap Save.
Tap the image in the conversation, tap
, than tap Save.

Printing photos

Print a photo: Tap , then tap Print.
Print multiple photos: While viewing a photo album, tap . Select the photos you want to print,
then tap Print.
For more information, see “Printing” on page 33.

Using Picture Frame

When iPad is locked, you can display a slideshow of all, or selected albums, of your photos.
Start Picture Frame: Press the Sleep/Wake button to lock iPad, press the button again to turn the screen on, then tap .
Pause the slideshow Tap the screen.
Stop the slideshow Pause the slideshow, then tap
Set options for Picture Frame Go to Settings > Picture Frame.
Turn o Picture Frame Go to Settings > General > Passcode Lock.
.
Chapter 10 Photos
61

Importing photos and videos

With the iPad Camera Connection Kit (sold separately), you can import photos and videos directly from a digital camera, another iOS device with a camera, or from an SD memory card.
Import photos:
1 Insert the SD Card Reader or Camera Connector, included in the iPad Camera Connection Kit, into
the iPad dock connector.
 To 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.
 To 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 ts only one way.
For more information, see the iPad Camera Connection Kit documentation.
2 Unlock iPad.
3 The Photos app opens and displays the photos and videos that are available for importing.
4 Select the photos and videos you want to import.
 To import all the items: Tap Import All.
 To import just some of the items: Tap the ones you want to include (a checkmark appears on
each), tap Import, then select 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.
To view the photos, look in the Last Import album. A new Event contains all the photos that were selected for import.
To transfer the photos to your computer, connect iPad to your computer and import the images with a photo application such as iPhoto or Adobe Elements.
62
Chapter 10 Photos
Videos
Cars 2 © Disney/Pixar.
Cars 2 © Disney/Pixar.
Drag to skip forward or back.
Drag to skip forward or back.
Tap the video to show or hide the controls.
Tap the video to show or hide the controls.
Watch the video on a TV with Apple TV.
Watch the video on a TV with Apple TV.
Drag to adjust the volume.
Drag to adjust the volume.
11

About Videos

You can use iPad to view movies, music videos, video podcasts, and, if they’re available in your area, TV shows. iPad also supports special features such as chapters, subtitles, alternate audio, and closed captioning.
You can rent or purchase videos from the iTunes Store, and you can use a video adapter cable to watch videos on a TV or projector. If you have an Apple TV, you can use AirPlay to watch the videos wirelessly on a TV.

Playing videos

Play a video: Tap Videos, then tap a category of videos, such as Movies. Tap the video you want to watch. If the video has chapters, tap Chapters, and then tap a chapter title, or just tap .
Show or hide the playback controls While a video is playing, tap the screen.
Adjust the volume Drag the volume slider, or use the volume buttons on the side of iPad or
the buttons on a compatible headset.
Watch widescreen Rotate iPad.
Scale a video to ll the screen or t to the screen
Double-tap the screen. Or, tap
to make it t the screen.
to make the video ll the screen, or tap
63
Pause or resume playback Tap or , or press the center button (or equivalent button) on a
compatible headset.
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 5 seconds into the video, the previous video in your library opens.
Skip to a specic chapter Tap Done, tap Chapters, then choose a chapter. (Not always available.)
Skip to the next chapter Tap
Skip to the previous chapter Tap
Rewind or fast-forward Touch and hold
Skip to any point in a video Drag the playhead along the scrubber bar. Slide your nger down to adjust
Stop watching a video Tap Done.
Play a video on Apple TV using AirPlay
Select a dierent audio language Tap
Show or hide subtitles Tap , then choose a language, or O, from the Subtitles list. (Not always
Show or hide closed captioning Go to Settings > Video. (Not always available.)
or press the center button (or equivalent button) on a compatible
headset twice quickly. (Not always available.)
or press the center button (or equivalent button) on a compatible headset three times quickly. If you’re less than 5 seconds into the video, the previous video in your library opens. (Not always available.)
or .
the scrub rate from fast to slow.
and choose an Apple TV. See “Watching videos on a TV” on page 64.
Tap
, then choose a language from the Audio list. (Not always available.)
available.)
. If you’re less than

Watching rented movies

You can rent movies in standard-denition or high-denition format from the iTunes Store and
watch them on iPad. You can download rented movies to iPad, or transfer them to iPad from iTunes on your computer. (Rented movies aren’t available in all areas.)
A movie must be completely downloaded before you can watch it. You can pause a download and continue it later. Rented movies expire after a certain number of days, and once you start a
movie, you have a limited amount of time to nish watching it. Movies are automatically deleted
when they expire. Before renting a movie, check the iTunes Store for the expiration time.
View a rented movie: Tap Movies, tap the video you want to watch, then select a chapter or just tap . If you don’t see the video in your list, it might still be downloading.
Transfer rented movies to iPad: Connect iPad to your computer. Then select iPad in the iTunes sidebar, click Movies, and select the rented movies you want to transfer. Your computer must be connected to the Internet. Movies rented on iPad cannot be transferred to a computer.

Watching videos on a TV

You can stream videos wirelessly to your TV using AirPlay and Apple TV, or connect iPad to your TV using one of the following cables:
Apple Digital AV Adapter and an HDMI cable Â
Apple Component AV Cable Â
Apple Composite AV Cable Â
Apple VGA Adapter and a VGA cable Â
64
Apple cables are available for purchase in many countries. Go to www.apple.com/store or check with your local Apple retailer.
Chapter 11 Videos
Stream videos using AirPlay: Start video playback, then tap and choose your Apple TV from
the list of AirPlay devices. If doesn’t appear or if you don’t see Apple TV in the list of AirPlay devices, make sure it’s on the same wireless network as iPad. For more information, see “Using AirPlay” on page 37.
While video is playing, you can exit Videos and use other apps. To return playback to iPad, tap and choose iPad.
Stream videos using a cable: Use the cable to connect iPad to your TV or AV receiver and select the corresponding input.
Connect using an Apple Digital AV Adapter
Connect using an AV cable Use the Apple Component AV Cable, Apple Composite AV Cable, or other
Connect using a VGA Adapter Attach the VGA Adapter to the iPad Dock connector. Connect the VGA
Attach the Apple Digital AV Adapter to the iPad Dock connector. Use an HDMI cable to connect the HDMI port of the adapter to your TV or receiver. To keep iPad charged while watching videos, use an Apple Dock Connector to USB Cable to connect the 30-pin port of the adapter to your iPad 10W USB Power Adapter.
authorized iPad-compatible cable. You can also use these cables with the Apple Universal Dock to connect iPad to your TV. You can use the dock’s remote to control playback.
Adapter with a VGA cable to a compatible TV, projector, or VGA display.
With iPad 2 or later, when the cable is connected to a TV or projector, the iPad screen is automatically mirrored on the external display at a resolution of up to 1080p, and videos play at a resolution of up to 1080p. Some apps such as Keynote may use the external display as a second video monitor. With previous iPad models, only certain apps (including YouTube, Videos, and Photos) can use the external display.
With iPad 2 or later, you can also mirror the screen on a TV wirelessly, using AirPlay Mirroring and Apple TV. See “Using AirPlay” on page 37.
If you use the Apple Digital AV Adapter or the Apple Component AV Cable, high-resolution videos are shown in HD quality.

Deleting videos from iPad

To save space, you can delete videos from iPad.
Delete a video: In the videos list, tap and hold a movie until the delete button appears, then tap . Tap Cancel or Home when you nish deleting videos.
When you delete a video (other than rented movies) from iPad, it isn’t deleted from your iTunes library on your computer, and you can sync the video back to iPad later. If you don’t want to sync the video back to iPad, set iTunes to not sync the video. See “Syncing with iTunes” on page 20.
Important: If you delete a rented movie from iPad, it’s deleted permanently and can’t be
transferred back to your computer.

Using Home Sharing

Home Sharing lets you play music, movies, and TV shows on iPad from the iTunes library on your Mac or PC. See “Home Sharing” on page 89.
Chapter 11 Videos
65
YouTube
12

About YouTube

YouTube lets you watch short videos submitted by people from around the world. Some YouTube features require a YouTube account. To set up an account, go to www.youtube.com.
To use YouTube, iPad must have an Internet connection. See “Network” on page 12 5 .
Note: YouTube isn’t available in all languages and locations.

Browsing and searching for videos

Browse videos: Tap any browse button at the bottom of the screen.
Search for a video Tap the search eld, type a word or phrase, and tap Search.
See more videos from this YouTube user
See videos similar to this one In the sidebar, tap “Related.”
While watching full-screen, tap the screen to see the controls, and then
. In the sidebar, tap “More From.” You must be signed in to a
tap YouTube account.
66
Drag to skip
forward or back.
Drag to skip
forward or back.
Tap the video to show or hide the controls.
Tap the video to show or hide the controls.
Drag to adjust the volume.
Drag to adjust the volume.
See video information, related videos, and comments.
See video information, related videos, and comments.
Add this video to
your YouTube
Favorites.
Add this video to
your YouTube
Favorites.

Playing videos

Watch a video: Tap any video as you browse. Playback starts when enough of the video is downloaded to iPad. Tap to start the video sooner.
Show or hide the video controls Tap the screen.
Adjust the volume Drag the volume slider, or use the iPad volume buttons or the volume
buttons on a compatible headset.
Watch full-screen Rotate iPad to landscape orientation. If you still see video information,
.
tap
Switch between lling the screen and tting the screen width
Pause or resume playback Tap
Start over from the beginning Tap
Scan forward or back Touch and hold
Skip to any point Drag the playhead along the scrubber bar. Slide your nger down to adjust
Skip to the next or previous video in a list
Stop watching a video Tap Done.
Play a video on Apple TV using AirPlay
While watching full-screen, double-tap the video. You can also tap to
make the video ll the screen, or to make it t the screen. If you don’t see these controls, the video already ts the screen perfectly.
or . You can also press the center button (or equivalent button) on a
compatible headset.
while the video is playing. If you’ve watched less than ve seconds
of the video, you’ll skip instead to the previous video in the list.
or .
the scrub rate from fast to slow.
to skip to the next video. Tap twice to skip to the previous video.
Tap
If you’ve watched less than ve seconds of the video, tap only once.
and choose Apple TV. For information, see “Using AirPlay” on
Tap page 37.
Chapter 12 YouTube
67

Keeping track of videos you like

Show the controls for managing videos: While watching a full-screen video, tap to display the playback controls, then tap .
Add a video to Favorites Tap Add, then select Favorites. If you’re watching the video, tap .
Add a video to a playlist Tap Add, then select the playlist. If you don’t see your playlists, sign in.
Subscribe to videos by this YouTube user
Delete a favorite Tap Favorites, then tap Edit.
Delete a video from a playlist or an entire playlist
Flag a video Tap
Tap More From, then tap Subscribe. You must be signed in to a YouTube account.
Tap Playlists, then tap Edit.
.

Sharing videos, comments, and ratings

Show the controls for sharing, rating, and commenting: While watching a full-screen video, tap to display the controller, then tap .
Rate a video Tap Like or Dislike. You must be signed in to a YouTube account.
Add a comment Tap Comments, then tap the comment eld. You must be signed in to a
YouTube account.
Add a video to Favorites or a playlist
Email a link to a video Tap Share.
Flag a video Tap the movie to display the toolbar, then tap
Send your own video to YouTube Open the Photos app, select the video, then tap .
Tap Add, then select Favorites or a playlist.
.
68

Watching YouTube on a TV

If you have an Apple TV, you can use AirPlay to watch YouTube videos on a TV. See “Playing videos” on page 67.
You can also use a cable to connect iPad to your TV or a projector. See “Watching videos on a TV” on page 64.
Chapter 12 YouTube
Calendar
Choose a view.
Choose a view.
Add an event.
Add an event.
Touch and drag to adjust.
Touch and drag to adjust.
13

About Calendar

Calendar makes it easy to stay on schedule. You can view individual calendars, or several calendars at once. You can view your events by day, by month, or in a list. You can search the titles, invitees, locations, and notes of events. If you enter birthdays for your contacts, you can view those birthdays in Calendar.
You can also make, edit, or cancel events on iPad, and sync them back to your computer. You can subscribe to iCloud, Google, Yahoo!, or iCal calendars. If you have a Microsoft Exchange or iCloud account, you can receive and respond to meeting invitations.

Viewing your calendars

You can view calendars individually or as a combined calendar, making it easy to manage work and family calendars at the same time.
Change views: Tap List, Day, Year, or Month.
69
View the Birthdays calendar Tap Calendars, then tap Birthdays to include birthdays from your Contacts
with your events.
See the details of an event Tap the event. You can tap information about the event to get more details.
For example, if an address for the location is specied, tap it to open Maps.
Edit or delete a calendar Tap Calendars, then tap Edit.
Select calendars to view Tap Calendars, then tap to select the calendars you want to view. The
events for all selected calendars appear in a single calendar on iPad.

Adding events

You can add and update calendar events directly on iPad.
Add an event: Tap and enter event information, then tap Done.
You can also touch and hold to add a new event to an empty spot on a calendar. Drag the grab points to adjust the event’s duration.
Set an alert Tap Alert, then set an alert for 5 minutes to two days before the event.
Set a default alert for events Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendar > Default Alert Times.
Update an event Tap Edit, then change event information.
To adjust an event’s time or duration, touch and hold the event to select it. Then drag it to a new time, or drag the grab points to change its duration.
Delete an event Tap the event, tap Edit, then scroll down and tap Delete Event.
Invite others to an event Tap Invitees to select people from Contacts. Requires an iCloud, Microsoft
Exchange, or CalDAV account.

Responding to invitations

If you have an iCloud, Microsoft Exchange, or a supported CalDAV account you can receive and respond to meeting invitations from people in your organization. When you receive an invitation, the meeting appears in your calendar with a dotted line around it, and appears in the lower­right corner of the screen.
Respond to an invitation: Tap a meeting invitation in the calendar, or tap to display the Event screen and tap the invitation.
See the organizer’s contact information
See other invitees Tap Invitees. Tap a name to see the person’s contact information.
Add comments in reply Tap Add Comments. Your comments are visible to the organizer but not
Set your availability Tap Availability and select “busy” or “free.” Busy identies the time as
Tap “invitation from.”
to other attendees. Comments may not be available, depending on the calendar service you’re using.
reserved when someone invites you to a meeting.
70
Chapter 13 Calendar

Searching calendars

In List view, you can search the titles, invitees, locations, and notes elds of the events in your
calendars. Calendar searches the events for the calendars you’re currently viewing.
Search for events: Tap List, then enter text in the search eld.
Calendar events can also be included in searches from the Home screen. See “Searching” on page 32.

Subscribing to calendars

You can subscribe to calendars that use the iCalendar (.ics) format. Many calendar-based services support calendar subscriptions, including iCloud, Yahoo!, Google, and the iCal application in OS X.
Subscribed calendars are read-only. You can read events from subscribed calendars on iPad, but you can’t edit them or create new events.
Subscribe to a calendar: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then tap Add Account. Tap Other, then tap Add Subscribed Calendar.
You can also subscribe to an iCal (or other .ics) calendar published on the web by tapping a link to the calendar.

Importing calendar events from Mail

You can add events to a calendar by importing a calendar le from an email message. You can import any standard .ics calendar le.
Import events from a calendar le: In Mail, open the message and tap the calendar le.

Syncing calendars

You can sync Calendar in these ways:
 In iTunes: Use the device settings panes to sync with iCal or Microsoft Entourage on a Mac, or
with Microsoft Outlook 2003, 2007, or 2010 on a PC, when you connect iPad to your computer.
 In Settings: Turn on Calendars in your iCloud, Microsoft Exchange, Google, or Yahoo! accounts
to sync your calendar information over the Internet, or to set up a CalDAV account if your company or organization supports it. See “Setting up mail and other accounts” on page 18 .
Chapter 13 Calendar
71

Calendar accounts and settings

There are several settings available for Calendar and your calendar accounts. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
Calendar accounts are also used to sync to-do items for Reminders.
Add a CalDAV account: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, tap Add an Account, then tap Other. Under Calendars, tap Add CalDAV Account.
These options apply to all of your calendars:
Set calendar alert tones Go to Settings > Sounds > Calendar Alerts.
Sync past events Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Sync, then choose a time
period. Future events are always synced.
Set alerts to sound when you receive a meeting invitation
Turn on Calendar time zone support
Set a default calendar Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Default Calendar.
Use iCloud to keep Calendar up to date on your iOS devices and computers
Important: When Time Zone Support is on, Calendar displays event dates and times in the time
zone of the city you selected. When Time Zone Support is o, Calendar displays events in the time
zone of your current location as determined by your Internet connection. When you travel, iPad may not display events or sound alerts at the correct local time. To manually set the correct time, see “Date & Time” on page 12 8 .
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, and tap “New Invitation Alerts.”
Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Time Zone Support, then turn on Time Zone Support.
Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Calendar. See “Using iCloud page 19.
” on
72
Chapter 13 Calendar
Contacts
View in Maps.
View in Maps.
Add or change info.
Add or change info.
Find contacts.
Find contacts.
14

About Contacts

Contacts lets you easily access and edit your contact lists from personal, business, and organizational accounts. You can search across all of your groups, and the information in Contacts is automatically accessed to make addressing emails quick and easy.

Syncing contacts

You can add contacts in the following ways:
Use your iCloud contacts. See “ Â Using iCloud” on page 19 .
In iTunes, sync contacts from Google or Yahoo!, or sync with applications on your computer. See  “Syncing with iTunes” on page 20.
Set up a Microsoft Exchange account on iPad, with Contacts enabled. See “ Â Contacts accounts and settings” on page 75.
Set up an LDAP or CardDAV account to access business or school directories. See “ Â Contacts accounts and settings” on page 75.
Enter contacts directly on iPad. See “ Â Adding and editing contacts” on page 74.
73

Searching contacts

You can search titles and rst, last, and company names in your contacts on iPad. If you have a Microsoft Exchange account, an LDAP account, or a CardDAV account you can also search those contacts.
Search contacts: In Contacts, tap the search eld and enter your search.
Search a GAL Tap Groups, tap Directories at the bottom of the list, then enter your search.
Search an LDAP server Tap Groups, tap the LDAP server name, then enter your search.
Search a CardDAV server Tap Groups, tap the searchable CardDAV group at the bottom of the list,
then enter your search.
Save contact information from a
GAL, LDAP, or CardDAV server
Search for the contact you want to add, then tap Add Contact.
Contacts can also be found through searches from the Home screen. See “Searching” on page 32.

Adding and editing contacts

Add a contact on iPad: Tap Contacts and tap . If isn’t visible, make sure you’re not viewing an LDAP, CalDAV, or GAL contacts list; you can’t add contacts to those.
Edit contact information: Choose a contact, then tap Edit.
Add a new eld Tap Add Field.
Add a contact’s Twitter user name Tap Add Field, then tap Twitter.
Change a eld label Tap the label and choose a dierent one. To add a new label, scroll to
the bottom of the list and tap Add Custom Label.
Change the ringtone or text tone for the contact
Delete an item Tap
Assign a photo to a contact In edit mode, tap Add Photo or tap the existing photo. You can choose
Delete a contact In Contacts, choose a contact, than tap Edit. Scroll down and tap
Tap the ringtone or text tone eld, then choose a new sound in Settings > Sounds.
, then tap Delete.
to take a photo with the camera, or use an existing photo.
To import photos from your contacts’ Twitter proles, go to Settings >
Twitter. Sign in to your Twitter account, then tap Update Contacts.
Delete Contact.
74
Chapter 14 Contacts

Contacts accounts and settings

You can add additional Contacts accounts and adjust the way contact names are sorted and displayed.
Add a Contacts account: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then tap Add Account.
To change Contact settings, go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars for these options:
Set how contacts are sorted Tap Sort Order and choose to sort by rst or last name.
Set how contacts are displayed Tap Display Order and choose to display by rst or last name.
Setting your My Info card Tap My Info, then select the contact card with your name and information
from the list. The My Info card is used by Safari and other apps.
Set a default Contacts account Tap Default Account, then select an account. New contacts you create
without specifying another account are stored here.
Use iCloud to keep Contacts up to date on your iOS devices and computers
Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Contacts. See “Using iCloud page 19.
” on
Chapter 14 Contacts
75
Notes
Email or print the note.
Email or print the note.
Delete the note.
Delete the note.
Tap a note to view.
Tap a note to view.
Add a note.
Add a note.
View the previous or next note.
View the previous or next note.
15

About Notes

With its large display and onscreen keyboard, iPad makes jotting notes easy. iCloud makes notes you type on iPad available on all your other iOS devices and Mac computers.
You can read and write notes in landscape or portrait orientation. In portrait orientation, tap Notes to view a list of your notes. In landscape orientation, the list of notes appears on the left, and the current note is circled in red.

Writing and reading notes

Notes are listed by last-modied date, with the most recent note at the top. The list shows the rst
few words of each note. Tap a note in the list to read or edit it.
Add a note: Tap , type the note, then tap Done.
76
Read a note: Tap the note in the list, or tap or to see the next or previous note.
Edit a note Tap anywhere on the note to bring up the keyboard. Edit the note, then
tap Done.
Change the font Go to Settings > Notes.
Delete a note Tap
Use iCloud to keep your notes up to date on your iOS devices and Mac computers
at the bottom of the note.
Go to Settings > iCloud and turn on Notes (it’s on by default). See “Using iCloud
” on page 19.

Searching notes

You can search the text of notes to nd a particular note.
Search for notes: Enter text in the search eld that appears at the top of the notes list. In portrait
orientation, tap Notes to display the notes list.
Search results appear as you type. Tap the keyboard button to dismiss the keyboard and see more results. To view a note, tap it in the search results list.

Printing or emailing notes

Print or email a note: Tap the note, then tap .
To email a note, iPad must be set up for email. See “Sending mail” on page 44.
Chapter 15 Notes
77
Reminders
Mark items as completed.
Mark items as completed.
Add a reminder.
Add a reminder.
Change views.
Change views.
16

About Reminders

Reminders lets you organize your life—complete with due dates and lists. Reminders works with your calendar accounts, so changes you make update automatically on all your iOS devices and computers.
78
Switch between list view and date view: At the top of the screen, tap List or Date.

Setting a reminder

Add a reminder: In Reminders, tap , then enter a description and tap Done.
After you add a reminder, you can ne-tune its settings:
Set a day or time for a reminder Tap the reminder, then tap Remind Me. Turn on “On a Day” then set the date
and time you want to be reminded. Reminders that are due are displayed in
Notication Center.
Add notes to a reminder Tap the reminder, then tap Show More. Tap Notes.
Move a reminder to another list Tap the reminder, then tap Show More. Tap List and choose a new list.
To create or edit lists, see “Managing reminders in list view
Delete a reminder Tap a reminder, tap Show More, then tap Delete.
Edit a reminder Tap a reminder, then tap its name.
Mark a reminder as completed Tap the box next to the reminder so that a checkmark appears.
Completed reminders are shown in the Completed list. See “Managing completed reminders
Set the tone played for reminders Go to Settings > Sound.
Use iCloud to keep Reminders up to date on your iOS devices and computers
Go to Settings > iCloud, then turn on Reminders. See “Using iCloud page 19.
” on page 80.
” on page 79.
” on

Managing reminders in list view

Organizing reminders in to lists makes it easy to keep your work, personal, and other to-dos separate from each other. Reminders comes with one list for active reminders, plus a built-in list of completed items. You can add other lists of your own.
Create a list: At the top of the screen, tap List, then tap Edit.
Switch between lists In list view, tap the list you want to view.
View completed items In list view, tap Completed.
Change the order of lists In list view, tap Edit. Drag
You can’t move a list to a dierent account, and you can’t change the order
of reminders in a list.
Delete a list In list view, tap Edit. Tap
When you delete a list, all the items in the list are deleted.
Change the name of a list In list view, tap Edit. Tap the name you want to change, then type a new
name. Tap Done.
Set a default list for new reminders Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then under the Reminders
heading, tap Default List.
next to a list to change the order.
for each list you want to delete.

Managing reminders in date view

Use date view to view and manage reminders that have a due date.
View reminders for a date: At the top of the screen, tap Date to view today’s reminders and uncompleted items from previous days.
Chapter 16 Reminders
79

Managing completed reminders

Reminders keeps track of the items you mark as completed. You can see them in list or date view, and also in the completed list.
View completed items: Tap the List button at the top of the screen, then tap Completed.
Mark a completed item as uncompleted
Sync previous reminders Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars. Then under Reminders, tap Sync.
Tap to remove the checkmark. The item automatically moves back to its original list.
This setting applies to all your reminder accounts. For best performance, don’t sync more previous items than you need to.

Searching reminders

Search reminders: Tap the search eld, then enter a search phrase.
Reminders are searched by name.
You can also search Reminders from the Home screen. See “Spotlight Search
” on page 126.
80
Chapter 16 Reminders
Maps
More information
More information
Double-tab to zoom in; tap with two fingers to zoom out. Or, pinch to zoom in or out.
Double-tab to zoom in; tap with two fingers to zoom out. Or, pinch to zoom in or out.
Set options, such as showing traffic or satellite view.
Set options, such as showing traffic or satellite view.
© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
Get directions by car, public transit, or walking.
Get directions by car, public transit, or walking.
Enter a search.
Enter a search.
Display the location of a business or person in your contacts list.
Display the location of a business or person in your contacts list.
Show your current location.
Show your current location.
17

Finding locations

WARNING: For important information about driving and navigating safely, see the Important
Product Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad.
Find a location: Tap Search, then tap the search eld to bring up the keyboard. Type an address
or other information, then tap Search.
You can search for information such as:
Intersection (“8th and market”) Â
Area (“greenwich village”) Â
Landmark (“guggenheim”) Â
Zip code Â
Business (“movies,” “restaurants san francisco ca,” “apple inc new york”) Â
You can also tap to nd the location of a contact.
81
See the name or description of a location
See a list of the businesses found in a search
Find your current location Tap
Use the digital compass Tap
Mark a location Touch and hold the map until the drop pin appears.
Tap the pin.
.
Tap Tap a business to see its location.
.
Your current location is shown by a blue marker. If your location can’t be determined precisely, a circle appears around the marker. The smaller the circle, the greater the precision.
again. The icon changes to and a small compass appears
onscreen.
Important: Maps, directions, 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, or location-based information that may be unavailable, inaccurate, or incomplete. Compare the information provided on iPad to your surroundings, and defer to posted signs to resolve any discrepancies.
If Location Services is turned o when you open Maps, you may be asked to turn it on. You can
use Maps without Location Services. See “Location Services” on page 12 2 .

Getting directions

Get directions:
1 Tap Directions.
2 Enter starting and ending locations.
Tap to choose a location in Bookmarks (including your current location or the dropped pin), a recent location, or a contact.
3 Tap Route, then select directions for driving ( ), public transit ( ), or walking ( ).
4 Do one of the following:
 To view directions one step at a time, tap Start, then tap to see the next leg of the trip.
 To view all the directions in a list, tap Start, then tap .
Tap any item in the list to see a map showing that leg of the trip.
5 If multiple routes appear, choose the one you want to use.
82
If you’re taking public transit, tap to set your departure or arrival time, and to choose a schedule for the trip. Tap the icon at a stop to see the departure time for that bus or train, and to get a link to the transit provider’s website or contact info (when available).
Get directions from a location on the map
Bookmark a location Tap "Add to Bookmarks.”
Chapter 17 Maps
Tap the pin, tap , then tap Directions To Here or Directions From Here.

Getting and sharing info about a location

Make a FaceTime call (when available).
Make a FaceTime call (when available).
Visit the website.
Visit the website.
© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
Get or share info about a location: Tap the pin, then tap .
Add a business to your contacts Tap “Add to Contacts.”
Tweet, text, or email your location Tap Share Location.
To post a Tweet, you must be logged in to your Twitter account. Go to Settings > Twitter.
Showing trac conditions
You can show trac conditions for major streets and highways on the map.
Show trac conditions: Tap or drag the bottom-right corner of the screen, then turn on Trac.
Streets and highways are color-coded to indicate the ow of trac:
Gray—no data is available Â
Green—posted speed limit Â
Yellow—slower than the posted speed limit Â
Red—stop and go Â
Trac conditions aren’t available in all areas.
Chapter 17 Maps
83

Map views

© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
© 2012 Google. Map data © 2012 Google.
Tap to return
to map view.
Tap to return
to map view.
© 2012 Google.
© 2012 Google.
See a standard, satellite, hybrid, or terrain view: Tap or drag the bottom-right corner of the screen, then select the view you want.
See the Google Street View of a location: Tap . Flick left or right to pan through the 360° panoramic view (the inset shows your current view). Tap an arrow to move down the street. To return to map view, tap the map inset.
84
Street View may not be available in all areas.
Chapter 17 Maps
Music

Adding music and audio

To get music and other audio content onto iPad:
Purchase and download content from the iTunes Store on iPad. In Music, tap Store when  browsing. See Chapter 19 , “ iTunes Store,” on page 90.
Use Automatic Download to automatically download new music purchased on your other iOS Â devices and computers. See “Using iCloud” on page 19 .
Sync with iTunes on your computer. You can sync all of your media, or selected songs and other  items. See “Syncing with iTunes” on page 20.
Use iTunes Match to store your music library in iCloud and access it on all your iOS devices and  computers. See “iTunes Match” on page 87.
18

Playing songs and other audio

WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see the Important Product
Information Guide at support.apple.com/manuals/ipad.
You can listen to audio from the built-in speaker, headphones attached to the headphones port, or wireless Bluetooth stereo headphones paired with iPad. When headphones are attached or paired, no sound comes out of the speaker.
Browse your collection: Tap one of the buttons along the bottom of the screen. You can browse by playlist, song, artist, or album. Tap More to browse by genre or composer, or to see your podcasts.
Play a song or other item: Tap the item.
Use the controls at the top of the screen to control playback.
85
View the Now Playing screen: Tap the thumbnail of the album cover at the top of the screen.
Drag to skip forward or back.
Drag to skip forward or back.
Adjust the volume.
Adjust the volume.
Back
Back
Browse music.
Browse music.
Track list
Track list
Toggle between now playing and browse.
Toggle between now playing and browse.
Make a Genius playlist.
Make a Genius playlist.
Play/Pause
Play/Pause
Repeat
Repeat
Shuffle
Shuffle
AirPlay
AirPlay
Repeat songs Tap .
= Repeat all songs in the album or list. = Repeat the current song only. = No repeat.
Shue songs Tap .
= Songs are shued.
= Songs are playing in order.
Skip to any point in a song Drag the playhead along the scrubber bar. Slide your nger down to slow
down the scrub rate.
Set podcast playback speed Tap
. Tap again to change the speed. = Play at double speed. = Play at half speed. = Play at normal speed.
Repeat last 30 seconds of podcast Tap .
Browse songs in a list using the cover art
Use Ping See “Following artists and friends
Play music on AirPlay speakers
From the Now Playing screen, ick left to right. Songs start playing
automatically.
” on page 91.
Tap . See “Using AirPlay” on page 37.
or Apple TV
Set options for Music Go to Settings > Music.
When using another app, you can display audio playback controls by double-clicking the Home button , then icking from left to right along the bottom of the screen.
86
Chapter 18 Music
The controls operate the currently playing app, or—if the music is paused—the most recent app that played. The icon for the app appears on the right. Tap it to open the app.
Double-clicking the Home button also displays audio playback controls when the screen is locked.

Viewing tracks on an album

See all the tracks on the album that contains the current song: From the Now Playing screen, tap . (Tap the screen rst if the controls aren’t showing.) Tap a track to play it. Tap again to return to the Now Playing screen.
In track list view, you can assign ratings to songs. You can use ratings when creating smart playlists in iTunes.

Searching audio content

You can search the titles, artists, albums, and composers of songs, podcasts, and other audio content on iPad.
Search music: When browsing, enter text in the search eld at the bottom-right corner of the
screen.
You can also search audio content from the Home screen. See “Searching” on page 32.

iTunes Match

iTunes Match stores your music library in iCloud—including songs imported from CDs—and lets you enjoy your collection anywhere, anytime on your iPad and other iOS devices and computers. iTunes Match is available as a paid subscription.
Note: iTunes Match is not available in all areas. Cellular data charges may apply if Settings > Music > Use Cellular Data is turned on.
Subscribe to iTunes Match: In iTunes on your computer, go to Store > Turn On iTunes Match, then click the Subscribe button.
Once you subscribe, iTunes adds your music, playlists, and Genius Mixes to iCloud. Your songs that match music already in the iTunes Store are automatically available in iCloud. Any remaining songs are uploaded. You can download and play matched songs at iTunes Plus quality (256 kbps DRM-free AAC), even if your original was of lower quality. For more information, go to www.apple.com/icloud/features.
Turn on iTunes Match Go to Settings > Music.
Turning on iTunes Match removes synced music from iPad, and disables Genius Mixes and Genius Playlists.
Chapter 18 Music
87

Genius

A Genius playlist is a collection of songs from your library that go great together. You can create Genius playlists in iTunes and sync them to iPad. You can also create and save Genius playlists directly on iPad.
A Genius Mix is a selection of songs of the same kind of music, recreated from your library each time you listen to the mix.
To use Genius on iPad, rst turn on Genius in iTunes, then sync iPad with iTunes. Genius Mixes are
synced automatically, unless you manually manage your music and choose which mixes you want to sync in iTunes. Genius is a free service, but it requires an Apple ID.
When you sync a Genius Mix, iTunes may select and sync songs from your library that you haven’t
specically chosen to sync.
Play a Genius Mix: Tap Playlists, then tap one of the Genius Mixes at the top of the playlists.
Make a Genius playlist: Play a song, then tap at the top of the screen.
The Genius Playlist is added to your playlists, following the Genius Mixes.
Save a Genius playlist View your Playlists, tap Genius Playlist, than tap Save. The playlist is
renamed with the title of the song you picked.
Refresh a Genius playlist In the playlist, tap Refresh.
Make a Genius playlist using
a dierent song
Delete a saved Genius playlist Tap the playlist, then tap .
Play a song, then tap
.
Genius playlists created on iPad are copied to your computer when you sync with iTunes.
Note: Once a Genius playlist is synced to iTunes, you can’t delete it directly from iPad. Use iTunes to edit the playlist name, stop syncing, or delete the playlist.

Playlists

You can create and edit your own playlists on iPad, or edit playlists synced from iTunes on your computer.
Create a playlist: View Playlists, then tap New near the top of the screen. Enter and save a title, select songs and videos to include, then tap Done.
When you make a playlist and then sync iPad to your computer, the playlist is synced to your iTunes library.
Edit a playlist: View Playlists and select the playlist. Tap Edit, then:
To add more songs: Tap Add Songs.
To delete a song: Tap . Deleting a song from a playlist doesn’t delete it from iPad.
To move a song higher or lower in the list: Drag .
Your edits are copied to the playlist in your iTunes library, either the next time you sync iPad with your computer, or wirelessly via iCloud if you’ve subscribed to iTunes Match.
Delete a playlist In Playlists, touch and hold the playlist, then tap .
Delete a song from iPad In Songs, swipe the song, then tap Delete.
The song is deleted from iPad, but not from your iTunes library on your Mac or PC.
88
Chapter 18 Music

Home Sharing

Home Sharing lets you play music, movies, and TV shows on iPad from the iTunes library on your Mac or PC. iPad and your computer must be on the same Wi-Fi network. On your computer, iTunes must be open, with Home Sharing turned on and logged in using the same Apple ID as Home Sharing on iPad.
Note: Home Sharing requires iTunes 10.2 or later, available at www.itunes.com/download. Bonus content, such as digital booklets and iTunes Extras, can’t be shared.
Play music from your computer iTunes library on iPad:
1 In iTunes on your computer, go to Advanced > Turn On Home Sharing.
2 Log in, then click Create Home Share.
3 On iPad, go to Settings > Music, then log in to Home Sharing using the same Apple ID and
password.
4 In Music, tap More, then tap Shared and choose your computer’s library.
Return to content on iPad Tap Shared and choose My iPad.
Chapter 18 Music
89
iTunes Store
Choose a category.
Choose a category.
19

About the iTunes Store

Use the iTunes Store to add content to iPad. You can browse and purchase music, TV shows, audiobooks, and alert tones. You can also buy and rent movies, or download and play podcasts or iTunes U collections. You need an Apple ID in order to purchase content. See “Store settings” on page 96.
Note: The iTunes Store may not be available in all regions, and iTunes Store content may vary across regions. Features are subject to change.
To access the iTunes Store, iPad must have an Internet connection. See “Network” on page 12 5 .

Finding music, videos, and more

90
Browse content: Tap one of the content categories, such as Music or Videos.
Search for content Tap the search eld and enter one or more words, then tap Search.
Buy, review, or tell a friend about
an item
Explore artist and friend recommendations
Tap an item in a list to see more details on its Info screen.
Tap Ping. See “Following artists and friends
” on page 91.

Purchasing music, audiobooks, and tones

When you nd a song, album, tone, or audiobook you like in the iTunes Store, you can purchase
and download it. You can preview an item before you purchase it, to make sure it’s what you want.
Preview a song, tone, or audiobook: Tap the item and follow the onscreen instructions.
Redeem a gift card or code Tap Music, then tap Redeem at the bottom of the screen and follow
the onscreen instructions. While you’re signed in, your remaining store credit appears with your Apple ID information at the bottom of most iTunes Store screens.
Complete an album While viewing any album, tap the discounted price for the remaining songs,
below Complete My Album (not available in all areas). To see oers for completing other albums, tap Music, then tap Complete My Album Oers.
Download a previously purchased item
Automatically download purchases made on other iOS devices and computers
Tap Purchased. You can also download an item while browsing; just tap Download where
you usually see the price.
Go to Settings > Store, then turn on the kinds of purchases you want to automatically download.

Purchasing or renting videos

The iTunes Store lets you purchase and download movies, TV shows, and music videos. Some movies can also be rented for a limited time. Video content may be available in standard-
denition (SD) format, high-denition (HD) format, or both.
Purchase or rent a video: Tap Buy or Rent.
Once you purchase an item, it begins downloading and appears on the Downloads screen. See “Checking download status” on page 92.
Preview a video Tap Preview.
View the preview on a TV with AirPlay and Apple TV
When the preview starts, tap and choose Apple TV. See “Using AirPlay
” on page 37.

Following artists and friends

Use Ping to connect with the world’s most passionate music fans. Follow favorite artists to learn about new releases and upcoming concerts and tours, get an insider’s perspective through their
photos and videos, and learn about their musical inuences. Read friends’ comments about the
music they’re listening to, and see what they’re buying and which concerts they plan to attend. Also, express your musical likes and post comments for your own followers.
To create and explore musical connections, you need to create a Ping prole.
Create your Ping prole: Open the iTunes application on your Mac or PC, click Ping, and follow the onscreen instructions.
Chapter 19 iTunes Store
91
Follow an artist Tap Follow on the artist’s prole page.
Follow a friend Tap People, enter your friend’s name in the search eld, then tap Follow.
When you follow someone, they don’t automatically follow you. In your
prole, you can choose to approve or decline requests to be followed as
they arrive, or simply accept all new followers without review (the default).
Share your thoughts As you browse albums and songs, tap Post to comment on a piece of music,
or tap Like just to say you like it. Your friends will see your thoughts in their Ping Activity feed.
Share concert plans Tap Concerts on your prole page to see upcoming concerts by the artists
you follow, and see which of your friends are going to a concert. Tap Tickets to buy your own ticket, or tap I’m Going to let others know you’ll be there too. (Not available in all areas.)

Streaming or downloading podcasts

You can listen to audio podcasts or watch video podcasts streamed over the Internet from the iTunes Store. You can also download audio and video podcasts.
Stream a podcast: Tap Podcasts to browse podcasts in the iTunes Store.
Video podcasts are marked with a video icon .
Download a podcast Tap the Free button, then tap Download. Downloaded podcasts appear
in the Podcasts playlist.
Listen to or watch a podcast you’ve downloaded
In Music, tap Podcasts, then tap the podcast. Video podcasts also appear in your list of videos.

Checking download status

You can check the Downloads screen to see the status of in-progress and scheduled downloads, including purchases you pre-order.
See the status of items being downloaded: Tap Downloads.
Pre-ordered items don’t download automatically when they’re released. Return to the Downloads screen to begin the download.
Download a pre-ordered item Tap the item, then tap .
If a download is interrupted, the download resumes when there’s an Internet connection. Or, if you open iTunes on your computer, iTunes completes the download to your iTunes library (if your computer is connected to the Internet and signed in using the same Apple ID).

Viewing account information

To view iTunes Store information for your Apple ID on iPad, tap your Apple ID (at the bottom of most iTunes Store screens). Or go to Settings > Store and tap View Apple ID. You must be signed in to view your account information. See “Store settings” on page 96.
92
Chapter 19 iTunes Store

Verifying downloads

You can use iTunes on your computer to verify that all the music, videos, apps, and other items you bought from the iTunes Store or App Store are in your iTunes library. You might want to do this if a download was interrupted.
Verify your downloads: In iTunes on your computer, go to Store > Check for Available Downloads.
To see all of your purchases, sign in using your Apple ID, go to Store > View My Account, and click Purchase History.
Chapter 19 iTunes Store
93
App Store
Check for app updates.
Check for app updates.
20

About the App Store

You can search for, browse, review, purchase, and download apps from the App Store directly to iPad.
Note: The App Store may not be available in all countries or regions, and App Store content may vary by country or region. Features are subject to change.
To browse the App Store, iPad must be connected to the Internet. See “Network” on page 12 5 . To purchase apps, you need an Apple ID. See “Store settings” on page 96.
94

Finding and downloading apps

Browse the featured selections to see new, notable, or recommended apps, or browse Top 25 to
see the most popular apps. If you’re looking for a specic app, use Search.
Browse the App Store: Tap Featured, Categories, or Top Charts.
Browse using Genius Tap Genius to see a list of recommended apps based on what’s already in
your app collection. To turn Genius on, follow the onscreen instructions. Genius is a free service, but you need an Apple ID.
Search for apps Tap Search, tap the search eld and enter one or more words, then tap
Search.
Email a link to an app’s Info page in iTunes
Send an app to someone as a gift Tap “Gift This App,” then follow the onscreen instructions.
Report a problem Tap “Report a Problem.” Select a problem from the list or type optional
Purchase and download an app Tap the price (or tap Free), then tap Buy Now.
Redeem a gift card or code Tap Redeem near the bottom of the Featured screen, then follow the
See the status of downloads After you begin downloading an app, its icon appears on the Home screen
Download a previously purchased app
Automatically download purchases made on other iOS devices and computers
Tap “Tell a Friend.”
comments, then tap Report.
If you already purchased the app, “Install” appears instead of the price on the Info screen. You won’t be charged if you download it again.
onscreen instructions.
and shows a progress indicator.
Tap Purchased, nd the app in the list, then tap Download.
You can also download an item while browsing; just tap Download where you usually see the price.
Go to Settings > Store, then turn on the kinds of purchases you want to automatically download.

Deleting apps

You can delete apps you install from the App Store. If you delete an app, data associated with the app is also deleted.
Delete an App Store app: Touch and hold the app icon on the Home screen, until the icons start to jiggle, then tap . Press the Home button when you nish deleting apps.
For information about resetting iPad to erase every app and all of your data and settings, see “Reset” on page 129.
Chapter 20 App Store
95

Store settings

Use Store settings to sign in using an Apple ID, create a new Apple ID, or edit an existing one. If you have more than one Apple ID, you can use Store settings to sign out and sign in using another Apple ID.
For iTunes Store terms and conditions, go to www.apple.com/legal/itunes/ww/.
Sign in using an Apple ID: Go to Settings > Store, tap Sign In, then tap Use Existing Apple ID and enter your Apple ID and password.
View and edit your account information
Sign in using a dierent Apple ID Go to Settings > Store, tap your account name, then tap Sign Out.
Create a new Apple ID Go to Settings > Store, tap Sign In, then tap Create New Apple ID and
Automatically download purchases Go to Settings > Store, then turn on the types of purchases, such as Music
Download purchases using the cellular network
Go to Settings > Store, tap your Apple ID, then tap View Apple ID. Tap an
item to edit it. To change your password, tap the Apple ID eld.
follow the onscreen instructions.
or Books, that you want to automatically download to iPad. You can also
turn o automatic updating of Newsstand apps.
Go to Settings > Store, then turn Use Cellular Data on or o. Downloading
purchases over the cellular network may incur charges from your carrier. Newsstand apps update only when iPad is connected to a Wi-Fi network. See Chapter 21 , “ Newsstand,” on page 97.
96
Chapter 20 App Store
Newsstand
Touch and hold a publication to rearrange.
Touch and hold a publication to rearrange.
21

About Newsstand

Newsstand organizes your magazine and newspaper app subscriptions with a shelf that lets you access your publications quickly and easily. Newsstand apps appear on the shelf, and as new issues become available, a badge lets you know they’re ready for reading. They’re delivered to iPad automatically.
Find Newsstand apps: Tap Newsstand to reveal the shelf, then tap Store.
When you purchase a newsstand app, it’s added to your shelf for easy access. 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. See “Store settings” on page 96.
Pricing varies, and Newsstand apps may not be available in all regions or countries.
97

Reading the latest issues

When a newspaper or magazine has a new issue, Newsstand automatically downloads it when
connected to Wi-Fi and noties you by displaying a badge on the app icon. To start reading, open
Newsstand and look for apps with a “New” banner.
Each app has its own method of managing issues. For information about how to delete, nd, or
work with individual issues, see the app’s help information or App Store listing. You can’t remove a Newsstand app from the shelf, or put other types of apps on the shelf.
Turn o automatic downloads: Go to Settings > Store and turn automatic downloads o for the publication.
98
Chapter 21 Newsstand
iBooks
22

About iBooks

iBooks is a great way to read and buy books. Download the free iBooks app from the App Store, and then get everything from classics to bestsellers from the built-in iBookstore. Once you download a book, it’s displayed on your bookshelf.
To download the iBooks app and use the iBookstore, you need an Internet connection and
an Apple ID. If you don’t have an Apple ID, or if you want to make purchases using a dierent
Apple ID, go to Settings > Store. See “Store settings” on page 96.
Note: The iBooks app and the iBookstore may not be available in all languages or areas.

Using the iBookstore

In the iBooks app, tap Store to open the iBookstore. From there, you can browse featured books
or bestsellers, and nd books by author or topic. When you nd a book you like, you can purchase
and download it.
Note: Some features of the iBookstore may not be available in all locations.
Purchase a book: Find a book you want, tap the price, then tap Buy Book, or Get Book, if it’s free.
Get information about a book You can read a summary of the book, read reviews, and download a sample
of the book before buying it. After buying the book, you can write a review of your own.
Download a previous purchase Tap Purchased, or tap Download where you usually see the price.
Automatically download purchases made on other iOS devices or computers
Go to Settings > Store, then turn on the kinds of purchases you want to automatically download.
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Syncing books and PDFs

Add a bookmark.
Add a bookmark.
Double-tap to zoom.
Double-tap to zoom.
Go to a different page.
Go to a different page.
Use iTunes to sync your books and PDFs between iPad and your computer, and to buy books from the iTunes Store. When iPad is connected to your computer, the Books pane lets you select which items to sync. You can also add DRM-free ePub books and PDFs to your iTunes library. Books in PDF and ePub format are available on the web.
Sync a book or PDF to iPad: In iTunes on your computer, choose File > Add to Library and select
a .pdf, .epub, or .ibooks le. Connect iPad to your computer and sync.
To add a book or PDF to iBooks without syncing, email the le to yourself from your computer.
Open the email message on iPad, then touch and hold the attachment and choose “Open in iBooks” from the menu that appears.

Reading books

Reading a book is easy. From the bookshelf, tap the book you want to read. If you don’t see the book you’re looking for, tap Collections to go to other collections.
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Read a book while lying down: Use the orientation lock to prevent iPad from rotating the screen
when you turn iPad. See “Viewing in portrait or landscape” on page 15 .
Each book has a particular set of features, based on its contents and format. Some of the capabilities described below might not be available in the book you’re reading. For example, printing is available only for PDFs, and if a book doesn’t include a recorded narration, you won’t see the read aloud icon.
Show the controls Tap near the center of the page.
Turn the page Tap near the right or left margin of the page, or ick left or right. To change
View the table of contents Tap
Add or remove a bookmark Tap . You can have multiple bookmarks.
Chapter 22 iBooks
the direction the page turns when you tap the left margin, go to Settings > iBooks > Tap Left Margin.
. With some books, you can also pinch to see the the table of contents.
To remove a bookmark, tap it. You don’t need to add a bookmark when you close a book, because iBooks
remembers where you left o.
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