Apple A1822 Tablet Device User Manual iPad User Guide
Apple Inc. Tablet Device iPad User Guide
Apple >
Contents
- 1. A1822_RF_Exposure_Info_v1.1
- 2. User_Manual_v1.0_Part1
- 3. User_Manual_v1.0_Part2
User_Manual_v1.0_Part2
iPad User Guide Note: To use iCloud Photo Sharing, iPad must be connected to Wi-Fi. iCloud Photo Sharing works over both Wi-Fi and cellular networks. Cellular data charges may apply. See Cellular data settings. Turn on iCloud Photo Sharing. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Photos. Or go to Settings > Photos & Camera. Share photos and videos. While viewing a photo or video, or after selecting multiple photos or videos, tap , tap iCloud Photo Sharing, add comments, then share to an existing shared album or select a new one. You can invite people to view your shared album using their email address or the mobile phone number they use to receive text messages. Enable a public website. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap People, then turn on Public Website. Tap Share Link if you want to announce the site. Add items to a shared album. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap Done. You can add a comment, then tap Post. , select items, then tap Delete photos from a shared album. Tap Shared, tap an album, tap Select, select the photos or videos you want to delete, then tap . You must be the owner of the shared album or the photo. Delete comments from a shared album. Tap the photo or video that contains the comment. Tap the comment area at the bottom of the screen, touch and hold the comment, then tap Delete. You must be the owner of the shared album or the comment. Rename a shared album. Tap Shared, tap Edit, then tap the name and enter a new one. Add or remove subscribers, or turn Notifications on or off. Select the shared album, then tap People. Page 137 of 292 iPad User Guide Subscribe to a shared album. When you receive an invitation, tap the Shared tab then tap Accept. You can also accept an invitation in an email. Add items to a shared album you subscribed to. Tap Shared, tap an album, then tap . Select items, then tap Done. You can add a comment, then tap Post. See your Family album. When Family Sharing is set up, a shared album called “Family” is automatically created in Photos on all family membersʼ devices. Everyone in the family can contribute photos, videos, and comments to the album, and be notified whenever something new is added. For more information about setting up Family Sharing, see Family Sharing. Other ways to share photos and videos You can share photos and videos in Mail or Messages, or using other apps you install. Share or copy a photo or video. View a photo or video, then tap tap the screen to show the controls. . If you donʼt see Tap More in Sharing to turn on the apps you want to use for sharing. You can share a Live Photo using iMessage, iCloud Photo Sharing, AirDrop, and more. A shared Live Photo plays in Photos on any iOS device with iOS 9 or later, a Mac with OS X 10.11 or later, or on iCloud.com. For devices or services that donʼt support Live Photos, a Live Photo is shared as a still photo. The size limit of attachments is determined by your service provider. iPad may compress photo and video attachments, if necessary. You can also copy a photo or video, then paste it into an email or text message (MMS or iMessage). Share a Memory movie. Tap a Memory movie thatʼs playing, tap option. See Memories. , then choose a share Share or copy multiple photos and videos. While viewing by Moment, tap Select. Select the photos you want to share, tap , then choose a share option. Save or share a photo or video you receive. Email: Tap to download the item if necessary, then touch and hold it to see sharing and other options. Text message: Tap the item in the conversation, then tap Page 138 of 292 iPad User Guide Photos and videos that you receive in messages or save from a webpage are saved to your Photos tab. They can also be viewed in the Camera Roll or, if youʼre using iCloud Photo Library, the All Photos album. Edit photos and trim videos You can edit still photos and Live Photos right on iPad. If your photos are stored in iCloud, your edits are updated across all your devices set up with iCloud, and both your original and edited versions are saved. If you delete a photo, itʼs deleted from all your devices and iCloud. Photo app extensions can provide special editing options. See App extensions. Edit a photo or Live Photo. View the photo full screen, tap Auto-enhance qualities. , then tap a tool. improves a photoʼs exposure, contrast, saturation, and other With the Remove Red-eye tool , tap each eye that needs correcting. To crop the photo, tap . Photos suggests an optimal crop, but you can drag the corners of the grid tool to set your own crop. Move the wheel to tilt or straighten the photo; tap Reset to undo these changes. Tap to rotate the photo 90 degrees. Tap to choose a standard crop ratio, such as 2x3 or Square. With photo filters you can apply different color effects, such as Mono or Chrome. Page 139 of 292 iPad User Guide Tap Adjustments to set Light, Color, and B&W (black & white) options. Tap the down arrow, then tap next to Light, Color, or B&W to choose the element you want to adjust. Move the slider to the desired effect. Compare the edited version to the original. Touch and hold the photo to view the original. Release to see your edits. Donʼt like the results? Tap Cancel, then tap Discard Changes. Tap Done to save changes. Revert to original. After you edit a photo and save your edits, you can revert to the original image. Tap the image, tap Edit, then tap Revert. Mark up a photo. View the photo full screen, tap the photo with the Markup tools. , tap , then tap Markup. Annotate Trim a video. Tap to display the controls, drag either end of the frame viewer, then tap Done. Tap Save as New Clip to save the new video clip in your Videos album (the original video remains unchanged). Set the slow-motion section of a video shot in Slo-mo. Tap , then use the vertical bars beneath the frame viewer. (See Shoot video for information about Slo-mo.) Print to an AirPrint-enabled printer Print photos: Tap , then tap Print. To print multiple photos while viewing a photo album, tap Select, select the photos, tap , then tap Print. See AirPrint. Page 140 of 292 iPad User Guide Import photos and videos You can import photos and videos directly from a digital camera, an SD memory card, or another iOS device that has a camera. Use the Lightning to USB Camera Adapter or the Lightning to SD Card Camera Reader (both sold separately). 1. Insert the camera adapter or card reader into the Lightning connector or 30-pin dock connector on iPad. 2. Do one of the following: Connect a camera: Use the USB cable that came with the camera to connect the camera to the camera adapter. Turn on the camera, then make sure itʼs in transfer mode. For more information, see the documentation that came with the camera. Insert an SD memory card into the card reader: Donʼt force the card into the slot on the reader; it fits only one way. Connect an iOS device: Use the USB cable that came with the iOS device to connect it to the camera adapter. Turn on and unlock the iOS device. 3. Unlock iPad. 4. The Photos app opens and displays the photos and videos available for importing. 5. Select the photos and videos to import. Import all items: Tap Import All. Import just some items: Tap the items you want to import (a checkmark appears for each), tap Import, then tap Import Selected. 6. After the photos and videos are imported, keep or delete them on the camera, card, or iOS device. 7. Disconnect the camera adapter or card reader. A new event in the Last Import album contains all the photos you just imported. To transfer the photos to your computer, connect iPad to your computer and import the images with a photo app such as Photos or Adobe Elements. Page 141 of 292 iPad User Guide Camera Take photos You can take photos and videos with the iSight camera on the back of iPad and the FaceTime camera on the front. Also, with iPad Pro (9.7-inch), you can take Live Photos. Live Photos goes beyond snapshots to capture life the way it happens—in movement and sound. With iPad Pro (9.7-inch), you can use the True Tone flash with the iSight camera and the Retina flash with the FaceTime camera. Choose a photo mode. Camera has several photo modes so you can shoot stills, square-format photos, and panoramas. To choose a mode, drag up or down, or tap the mode labels to choose Photo, Square, or Pano. Take a photo. Thereʼs more than one way to take a photo: Open Camera, choose Photo or Square, then tap the Shutter button, or press either volume button. Swipe left on the Lock screen to make the camera screen appear, then take the picture. Page 142 of 292 iPad User Guide Press the Home button to return to the Lock screen. Note: Adjust the volume of the shutter sound using the Ringer and Alerts settings in Settings > Sounds. Or mute the sound using the volume down button or the Ring/Silent switch, if your iPad has one. (In some countries muting is disabled.) Ask Siri. Say something like: “Open Camera” “Take a photo” Keep it straight. To display a grid that can help you align shots, go to Settings > Photos & Camera, then turn on Grid. Zoom in or out. (iSight camera) Pinch the screen open to zoom in, and pinch closed to zoom out. Take a Live Photo. (9.7-inch iPad Pro) With Live Photos turned on, tap the Shutter button. The camera records what happens just before and after you take your photo, along with the audio. The screen indicates the duration of the Live Photo exposure. You can edit Live Photos and add filters to them in the Photos app. Live Photos works with the iSight and FaceTime cameras. To turn it on or off, tap (Yellow is on.) Take Burst shots. (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4) With the camera in Photo or Square mode, touch and hold the Shutter button to take rapid-fire photos in bursts. The shutter sound is different, and the counter shows how many shots youʼve taken. Lift your finger to stop. To see the suggested shots and select the photos you want to keep, tap the burst thumbnail, then tap Select. The gray dots below the thumbnails mark the suggested photos. To copy a photo from the burst as a separate photo in Photos, tap the circle in the lower-right corner of the photo. To delete the burst of photos, tap the bursts thumbnail, then tap Take a selfie with Retina Flash. (9.7-inch iPad Pro) Use the Retina HD display as a flash for your selfies. Turn on the flash, switch to the FaceTime camera, then tap the Shutter button (the display flashes on exposure). Take a panorama photo. (iSight camera) Choose Pano, tap the Shutter button, then pan slowly in the direction of the arrow. To finish the pan, tap the button again. To pan in the other direction, first tap the arrow. To pan vertically, rotate iPad to landscape orientation. You can reverse the direction of a vertical pan, too. Page 143 of 292 iPad User Guide Use the capture timer. Use the capture timer to give yourself time to be in the shot. First stabilize iPad, then frame your shot. Tap , tap 3s or 10s, then tap the Shutter button. Preserve camera settings. You can preserve your Camera Mode setting so itʼs not reset when you next open Camera. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera, then tap Preserve Settings. Turn on Camera Mode to preserve the last mode you used—Video or Square, for example. You can also preserve Live Photo settings on iPad Pro (9.7-inch). Take a screenshot. To capture whatʼs displayed on your screen, simultaneously press and release the Sleep/Wake and Home buttons. The screenshot is added to the Photos tab in Photos, and you can also view it in the Screenshots album or All Photos album (if youʼre using iCloud Photo Library). Adjust for the perfect shot About auto exposure and face detection. When youʼre taking a picture, a rectangle may briefly appear to indicate where the automatic exposure is set. When you photograph people, face detection balances the exposure across many faces. A rectangle appears for each face detected. Lock the focus and exposure. Exposure is automatic, but you can set the exposure manually for the next shot by tapping an object or area on the screen. To lock the exposure and focus, touch and hold until the rectangle pulses. The screen indicates Page 144 of 292 iPad User Guide when exposure and focus are locked. Take as many photos as you want. When you tap the screen again, exposure and focus unlock, and the automatic settings and face detection turn back on. Note: Tapping the screen sets the focus and the exposure, and face detection is temporarily turned off. Adjust the exposure. Tap to see next to the exposure rectangle, then slide up or down to adjust the exposure. Turn the flash on or off. (9.7-inch iPad Pro) Tap Make it better. You can edit photos and trim videos, right on iPad. See Edit photos and trim videos. Shoot video With Camera you can shoot video, including slow-motion and time-lapse videos. Record a video. Choose Video, then tap the Record button, or press either volume button, to start and stop recording. You can choose to capture 720p or 1080p video at 30 fps (frames per second). On iPad Pro (9.7-inch) you can also capture 1080p video at 60 fps and 4K video at 30 fps. To change video recording settings, go to Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Video. Take it slow. (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4) Choose Slo-mo to capture slow-motion video at 120 fps. Later, when you edit the video, you can set just a portion of it to play back in slow motion, and the rest plays back at regular speed. On iPad Pro (9.7-inch), you can choose between 120 fps and 240 fps. To change Slo-mo settings, go to Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Slo-mo. Set the slow-motion section of a video. Tap the thumbnail, then tap . Slide the vertical bars beneath the frame viewer to define the section you want to play back in slow motion. Zoom in or out when shooting video. (iSight camera) Pinch the image on the screen open to zoom in, and pinch closed to zoom out. Capture an experience with time-lapse. Choose Time-Lapse, set up iPad where you want, then tap the Record button to start capturing a sunset, a flower opening, or other experiences over a period of time. Tap the Record button again to stop. The time-lapse photos are compiled into a short video. Page 145 of 292 iPad User Guide With iOS 9 and later, time-lapse videos have video stabilization, which minimizes the effect of camera movement during capture. HDR HDR (High Dynamic Range) helps you get great shots in high-contrast situations. iPad takes multiple photos in rapid succession, at different exposure settings—and blends them together. The resulting photo has better detail in the bright and mid-tone areas. Use HDR. (iSight camera on iPad 3rd generation and later) Tap HDR. For best results, keep iPad steady and avoid subject motion. On iPad Pro (9.7-inch), you can choose HDR Auto so iPad uses HDR when itʼs most effective. Keep only the HDR version. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera, then turn off Keep Normal Photo. In your albums, HDR versions of photos are marked with “HDR” in the corner. Note: By default, both the normal and HDR versions of the photo appear in Photos. View, share, and print Photos and videos you take on iPad are saved in Photos. With iCloud Photo Library turned on, all new photos and videos are automatically uploaded and available in Photos on all your devices with iOS 8.1 or later that are set up with iCloud Photo Library. When iCloud Photo Library is turned off, you can still collect up to 1000 of your most recent photos in the My Photo Stream album from your devices set up with iCloud. Note: If Location Services is turned on, photos and videos are tagged with location data that can be used by apps and photo-sharing websites. See Location Services. View your photos. In Camera, tap the thumbnail image that appears below the Shutter button, then swipe left or right to see the photos youʼve taken recently. Tap All Photos to see everything in the Photos app. Tap the screen to show or hide the controls. View sharing and printing options. While viewing an image, tap . See Share from apps. Page 146 of 292 iPad User Guide Upload photos and videos. Use iCloud Photo Library to upload photos and videos from your iPad to iCloud. You can access them on your devices with iOS 8.1 or later where youʼre signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID. You can also upload and download your photos and videos from the Photos app on iCloud.com. Sync photos and videos to iPad from your Mac. Use the Photos settings pane in iTunes. See Sync with iTunes. Page 147 of 292 iPad User Guide Contacts Manage contacts Contacts lets you see and edit your contacts lists from personal, business, and other accounts. You can also set up a contact card with your own information. Create a new contact. Tap iPad automatically suggests new contacts from, for example, messages you receive in Mail and invitations in Calendar. To turn this on or off, go to Settings > Contacts > Contacts Found in Apps. Allow sounds and vibrations from texts or calls from a specific contact to come through even if Do Not Disturb is on. Tap the contact, tap Edit, tap Ringtone or Text Tone, then turn on Emergency Bypass. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Whatʼs my brotherʼs work address?” “Sarah Castelblanco is my sister” “Send a message to my sister” Find a contact. Tap the search field at the top of the contacts list, then enter your search. You can also search your contacts using Search (see Search). Page 148 of 292 iPad User Guide Quickly reach a contact. Tap one of the buttons under the contactʼs name to start a message, call, video call, or email. To change the default contact method (for a call, for example), touch and hold the call button, then tap a phone number. If you use a third-party app to make video or audio calls, send messages, or send email, you may be able to set that app as the default. Change how your contacts are sorted and displayed. Go to Settings > Contacts. Share a contact. Tap a contact, then tap Share Contact. See Share from apps. Sharing a contact shares all the info from the contactʼs card. Assign a photo to a contact. Tap a contact, tap Edit, then tap “add photo.” You can take a photo or add one from the Photos app. Change a label. If a field has the wrong label, such as Home instead of Work, tap Edit. Then tap the label and choose one from the list, or tap Custom Field to create one of your own. Add your friendsʼ social profiles. While viewing a contact, tap Edit, then tap “add social profile.” You can add Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, LinkedIn, Myspace, and Sina Weibo accounts, or create a custom entry. Delete a contact. Go to the contactʼs card, then tap Edit. Scroll down, then tap Delete Contact. Set your contact info Set your My Info card. Go to Settings > Contacts, tap My Info, then select the contact card with your name and information. If you donʼt already have a card with your own information, open Contacts, then tap . Edit your My Info card. Tap My Card at the top of your list of contacts, then tap Edit. Add contact accounts Besides adding contacts individually, you can: Use your iCloud contacts: Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud, then turn on Contacts. Page 149 of 292 iPad User Guide Import your Facebook Friends: Go to Settings > Facebook, then turn on Contacts in the “Allow These Apps to Use Your Accounts” list. This creates a Facebook group in Contacts. Use your Google contacts: Go to Settings > Contacts, tap your Google account, then turn on Contacts. Access a Microsoft Exchange Global Address List: Go to Settings > Contacts, then tap your Exchange account. Set up an LDAP or CardDAV account to access business or school directories: Go to Settings > Contacts > Accounts > Add Account, then tap Other. Tap Add LDAP Account or Add CardDAV Account, then enter the account information. Sync contacts from your computer: In iTunes on your computer, turn on contact syncing in the device info pane. For information, see iTunes Help. Import contacts from a vCard: Tap a .vcf attachment in an email or message. Search a directory. Tap Groups, tap the GAL, CardDAV, or LDAP directory you want to search, then enter your search. To save a personʼs info to your contacts, tap Add Contact. Show or hide a group. Tap Groups, then select the groups you want to see. This button appears only if you have more than one source of contacts. Update your contacts using Twitter, Facebook, and Sina Weibo. Go to Settings > Twitter, Settings > Facebook, or Settings > Sina Weibo, then tap Update All Contacts. This updates contact photos and social media account names in Contacts. Hide duplicate contacts When you have contacts from multiple sources, you might have multiple entries for the same person. To keep redundant contacts from appearing in your All Contacts list, contacts from different sources with the same name are linked and displayed as a single unified contact. When you view a unified contact, the title Unified Info appears. Link contacts. If two entries for the same person arenʼt linked automatically, you can unify them manually. Tap one of the contacts, tap Edit, tap Link Contacts, choose the other contact entry to link to, then tap Link. When you link contacts with different first or last names, the names on the individual cards donʼt change, but only one name appears on the unified card. To choose which name appears on the unified card, tap one of the linked cards, tap the contactʼs name on Page 150 of 292 iPad User Guide that card, then tap Use This Name For Unified Card. Note: When you link contacts, those contacts arenʼt merged. If you change or add information in a unified contact, the changes are copied to each source account where that information already exists. Page 151 of 292 iPad User Guide Clock See the time in cities around the world Use the Clock app to view the time in various locations around the world. Ask Siri. Say something like: “What time is it?” “What time is it in London?” Manage your World Clock list. In the World Clock tab, tap Edit. Add a city: Tap Delete a city: Tap , then choose a city. Reorder the cities: Drag up or down. Page 152 of 292 iPad User Guide Set an alarm or bedtime schedule With the Clock app, you can set an alarm that plays a sound at a specific time. You can also set a bedtime schedule that reminds you when to go to sleep and plays a sound when itʼs time to wake up. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Wake me up tomorrow at 7 a.m.” “Set an alarm for 9 a.m. every Friday” “Turn off all my alarms” Set an alarm. Tap Alarm, then tap a name (like “Water the plants”). . Set the time and other options, then give the alarm Change an alarm. Tap Edit, then tap the alarm. Delete an alarm. Swipe left on the alarm, then tap Delete. Set a bedtime schedule. Tap Bedtime, then follow the instructions to set your sleep reminder and wake-up alarm. After youʼve done the initial setup, you can slide and to adjust your sleep and wake times. Tap Options to set the alarm days, wake-up sound, and volume. To turn Bedtime reminders off, tap the Bedtime switch. Fall asleep to music or a podcast. Tap Timer, tap When Timer Ends, then choose Stop Page 153 of 292 iPad User Guide Track time with the timer or stopwatch In the Clock app, you can count down from a specified time with the timer or measure the duration of an event with the stopwatch. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Set the timer for 3 minutes” “Stop the timer” Set the timer. Tap Timer, then set the duration of time and a sound to play when the timer ends. Tip: To quickly access the timer, swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center, then tap . You can access Timer from Control Center even when iPad is locked. Measure the duration of an event and track lap times. Tap Stopwatch, then tap Start. Tap Lap to record a lap or split. The timing continues even if you return to the Home screen, open other apps, or press the Sleep/Wake button. Tap Stop to record the final time. When you finish, tap Reset to clear the stopwatch. Tip: Swipe the Stopwatch to switch between digital and analog clock faces. Page 154 of 292 iPad User Guide Maps Find places WARNING: For important information about navigation and avoiding distractions that could lead to dangerous situations, see Important safety information. Move around Maps by dragging the screen. To face a different direction, rotate with two fingers. To return to north, tap the compass Ask Siri. Say something like: “Find coffee near me” “Show me the Golden Gate Bridge” Zoom in or out. Double-tap with one finger to zoom in; tap with two fingers to zoom out —or pinch open or closed. The scale appears in the upper left while zooming and when you continue touching the screen with two fingers. To change how distance is shown (in miles or kilometers), go to Settings > Maps. Find nearby attractions, services, and more. Tap the search field, tap a category such as Food or Shopping, then tap a result. (For availability, see the iOS Feature Availablity website.) Page 155 of 292 iPad User Guide Search for a location. Tap the search field. You can search for a location in different ways. For example: Intersection (“8th and Market”) Area (“Greenwich Village”) Landmark (“Guggenheim”) Zip code Business (“movies,” “restaurants San Francisco CA,” “Apple Inc New York”) Maps may also list recent locations, searches, or directions that you can choose from. Change the search area. Zoom in or out, or drag the screen to another area, then tap Search Here. Get info about a location. Tap a location, then swipe up to view all of the information about it, or tap to close the info display. Book a table and other actions. If youʼve installed apps that have Map extensions, you may be able to do things like make a reservation at a restaurant. Visit the App Store to find apps that work with Maps. Add a favorite location. When viewing info about a location, scroll to the bottom of the information and tap Add to Favorites. Choose your view. Tap , then choose Map, Transit, or Satellite. If transit information is unavailable, tap View Routing Apps to use an app for public or other modes of transportation. (Not available on iPad 2, iPad 3, or the original iPad mini.) Mark a location. Touch and hold the map until a marker appears. Share a location Tap a marker to display its info, then tap See Share from apps. and choose an option such as Mail or AirDrop. Get more info Get info about a location. Tap a location to display its information. Info might include Yelp reviews, a phone number, a webpage link, and more. Page 156 of 292 iPad User Guide Find out about traffic conditions. From Map or Satellite view, tap , then turn on Traffic. Orange shows slowdowns, and red shows stop-and-go traffic. To see an incident report, tap an incident marker. Find out about the weather. Zoom in until the weather icon, which shows current conditions for that area, appears in the lower-right corner. Help improve Maps. To report an incorrect label, a missing location, or other issue, tap , then tap Report an Issue. Get directions Note: To get directions, iPad must be connected to the Internet. To get directions involving your current location, Location Services must also be on. (See also Location Services.) Ask Siri. Say something like: “Give me directions home” “Transit directions to my dadʼs work” “Whatʼs my ETA?” “Find a gas station” Find a route to a location. Tap a location to display its info, then tap Directions. Directions are from your current location. To get other directions, tap My Location, then enter a different location. Choose a different route. If multiple routes appear, tap the one you want to take. Change the view to show a driving, walking, or transit route. Tap Drive, Walk, or Transit. In select cities, Maps provides public transportation information and multi-modal routing, from walking to a bus stop or train station to hopping off at your destination. Page 157 of 292 iPad User Guide If transit routes are unavailable in your area, tap View Routing Apps to use an app for other modes of transportation. Mark a transit stop as a favorite. When viewing the Transit map, tap a transit stop or station. Scroll to the bottom of the location card, then tap Add to Favorites. You can also add the transit line to the Maps Transit widget in Today View, so you can quickly check the lineʼs operating status. Choose a transit time or date. Find a transit route, tap Leaving Soon to select a time or date for departure or arrival. Tap Transit Options to choose which transit vehicles to consider. Share a route. Find a route, tap Share, then choose an option like Mail or AirDrop. See Share from apps. Get turn-by-turn directions. Find a route, then tap Go. Hear directions (iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular): Maps follows your progress and speaks turnby-turn directions to your destination. If iPad auto-locks, Maps stays onscreen and continues to announce directions. Even if you open another app, Maps continues to give you turn-by-turn directions. To return to Maps, tap the banner across the top of the screen. To automatically pause spoken audio (such as a podcast or an audio book) when Maps speaks a turn-by-turn Page 158 of 292 iPad User Guide instruction, go to Settings > Maps, then turn on Pause Spoken Audio. View directions (iPad Wi-Fi only): Swipe each instruction left. See the route overview: Tap the route card, then tap Overview. To return to turn-byturn directions, tap Resume. View directions as a list: Tap the route card, then tap Details. Choose a faster route (iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular): If you get an alert that suggests a faster route, tap Go to use that route. Or ask Siri something like “Take the faster route” or “Donʼt change my route.” Maps may reroute you automatically in case of road closure. Maps may also alert you to heavy traffic, construction, an accident, or other incidents ahead. Stop turn-by-turn directions. Tap End. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Stop navigating.” Make a quick detour. To make a stop along your route, swipe up on the route card then tap one of the suggested services, such as Gas Stations. Tap Go to add one to your route. Use Maps on your Mac to get directions. Open Maps on your Mac (OS X 10.9 or later), get directions for your trip, then choose File > Share > Send to [your device]. Your Mac and iPad must both be set up with iCloud to use the same Apple ID. You can also use Handoff to pick up directions on one device where you left off on another. See Handoff. Remove markers and routes Remove a marker. Tap the marker, tap Edit Location, then tap Remove Marker. Delete a route. Past routes are listed below the Search field. To remove one, swipe it to the left, then tap Remove. 3D and Flyover With 3D and Flyover, you can see three-dimensional views of, and even fly over, many of the worldʼs major cities. Page 159 of 292 iPad User Guide View a 3D map. Drag two fingers up. (Zoom in for a closer look if the 3D map doesnʼt appear.) For best effect, use the satellite view. Tap , then tap Satellite. Adjust the angle. Drag two fingers up or down. Take a 3D tour with Flyover. An aerial tour is available for select cities and locations. The cities are indicated by next to their names. (If you donʼt see any markers, zoom out while in Map view. If youʼre using Transit or Satellite view, first tap , then choose Map.) Tap the name of a city to display its banner, then tap Flyover Tour to begin the tour. Locations with aerial tours have Flyover Tour in their banners. Tap it to begin the tour. To stop the tour, tap End Flyover Tour. To return to standard view, tap , then tap Map. Page 160 of 292 iPad User Guide Home Home overview Home provides a secure way to control and automate HomeKit-enabled accessories, such as lights, locks, thermostats, window shades, smart plugs, cameras, and more. With Home, you can control any Works with Apple HomeKit accessory using iPad. After you set up your home and its rooms, you can control accessories individually, or use scenes to control multiple accessories with one command. For example, you might create a scene called “going to bed” that turns off the lights around the house, dims the lights in the room “master bedroom” to 30%, then locks the front door and lowers the thermostat. If you have an Apple TV (4th generation or later), or iPad that you leave at home, you can schedule scenes to run automatically at certain times, or when you activate a particular accessory (such as unlocking the front door). This also allows you, and others you invite, to securely control your home while youʼre away. Add and control accessories The first time you open the Home app, the setup assistant helps you create a home, where you can add accessories and define rooms. If you already created a home using another HomeKit-enabled app, youʼll skip this step. Add an accessory to your home. To add an accessory to Home, make sure the accessory is turned on, tap , tap “Add Accessory,” then follow the onscreen Page 161 of 292 iPad User Guide instructions. Youʼll need to scan or enter the 8-digit HomeKit setup code found on the accessory itself (or its box or documentation). You can assign the accessory to a room, as well as give it a name. The name defines how itʼs shown in the Home app, and also how you control it using Siri. Control an accessory. Tap an accessoryʼs button to quickly turn it on or off, or touch and hold the button until controls appear. The available controls depend on the type of accessory it is. For example, with some lightbulbs, you can change colors. You can also control accessories using Control Center. Assign an accessory to a room. Tap Rooms, tap , then choose the room the accessory is currently assigned to. (If itʼs not already assigned, look in Default Room.) Touch and hold the accessoryʼs button until its controls appear, then tap Details. Tap Location to assign it to a room. Rename or edit an accessory. Touch and hold the accessoryʼs button until its controls appear, then tap Details. Edit a room. Tap , tap Room Settings, then choose the room to edit. You can change the roomʼs name, wallpaper, or delete the room. Make an accessory a favorite. Touch and hold an accessoryʼs button until its controls appear, then tap Details. Then turn on “Included in Favorites.” You can access your favorite accessories from the Home tab or Control Center. Change an accessoryʼs icon. Touch and hold an accessoryʼs button until its controls appear, then tap Details. Tap the icon (next to its name) to select a new icon. Not all icons can be changed, but you can change them for lighting accessories, for example. Rearrange your favorites. Tap Edit, then drag the buttons into the arrangement you want. Add more homes. Tap , then tap Add Home. After you add another home, tap choose the one you want to view or control. to Create and use scenes Scenes allow you to control multiple accessories at once. For example, you might define a “Reading” scene that adjusts the lights, closes the drapes, and adjusts the thermostat. Home has some typical scenes already defined for you, but youʼll need to edit them before theyʼll work. Page 162 of 292 iPad User Guide Create a scene. Tap , enter a name for the scene (such as “Dinner Party” or “Watching TV”), then tap Add Accessories. Select the accessories you want this scene to control, then tap Done. Next, set each accessory to change it to the state you want it to be when the scene is run. For example, you can set up a scene that turns on lights in the bedroom, and turns off the kitchen lights, when youʼre going to bed. Run a scene. Tap a scene to run it. If you donʼt see the scene you want to run, look in a different room. Change a scene. Touch and hold a scene, then tap Details. Make a scene a favorite. Touch and hold a scene, tap Details, then tap Show in Favorites. Favorite scenes appear on the Home tab and are handy for scenes that arenʼt automated. Control your home using Siri You can use Siri to control your accessories and scenes. Here are some of the things you might be able to say to Siri, depending on your accessories, how youʼve named them, and the scenes youʼve created: “Turn off the lights” or “Turn on the lights” “Dim the lights” or “Set brightness to 55%” “Is the hallway light on?” “Set the temperature to 68 degrees” "Did I lock the front door?” If you set up rooms, scenes, or more than one home, you can say things like: "Iʼm home” or “Iʼm leaving” “Turn down the kitchen lights” “Turn on the fan in the office” “Set my reading scene” “Turn off the lights in the Chicago house” Page 163 of 292 iPad User Guide Automations and remote access If you have an Apple TV (4th generation or later), or you set up iPad (iOS 10) that you leave at home, you can use automations and remote access. Automations can run scenes automatically based on the time of day, your location, a sensor being activated, or the action of an accessory. The Apple TV or iPad acts as a home hub, which also allows remote access to your accessories. Apple TV 3rd generation can also provide remote access, but does not support creating or editing automations using the Home app. Use iPad for automations and remote access. Go to Settings > Home, then turn on “Use this iPad as a Home Hub.” When iPad is in your home, it will run your Home automations even when your iPhone or iPod touch is not present. If you have an Apple TV using the same iCloud account as your iPad, it will be paired automatically and enabled for automation. Create an automation. Tap the Automation tab, tap Create New Automation, then choose one of the automation triggers described below. When arriving or leaving a location. Tap My Location Changes, then set a geofence and specify if you want the trigger to occur when you arrive or leave the location. You can also set this automation to only occur after sunset, which is useful for turning on lights only when theyʼre needed. At a time of day. Tap A Time of Day Occurs, then choose when you want this automation to run. If you choose Sunset or Sunrise, the time will vary as the season changes. When an accessory changes. Tap An Accessory is Controlled, select an accessory, then tap Next and follow the onscreen instructions. You might use this, for example, to run a scene when you unlock the front door. A sensor detects something. Tap A Sensor Detects Something, select an accessory, then tap Next and follow the onscreen instructions. You might use this, for example, to turn on lights in a stairway when motion is detected nearby. Disable an automation. In the Automations tab, tap the automation, then turn off Enable This Automation. Page 164 of 292 2/27/17, 11'25 AM iPad User Guide Share control with others You can invite others to control the accessories in your home. The people you invite need an iCloud account. If you have an Apple TV (4th generation or later), or you configured an iPad to be used as a home hub, additional controls are available that let you set what guests are able to do. Give others control. Tap the Home tab, then tap Contacts list or enter mail addresses. . Tap Invite, then choose from your Page 165 of 292 iPad User Guide TV TV overview Use the TV app to discover and watch movies and TV episodes from your favorite apps in one place. It works with your participating apps to bring together what youʼre watching so you can continue viewing a movie or TV show, or go to the next episode in a TV series, even when you started watching on another device. This includes movies and TV shows youʼve purchased or rented from the iTunes Store. TV is available only in the U.S. WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety information. Watch a video. Tap the Library tab, then tap Library in the upper left to view a list of videos you own, rented, or downloaded to iPad. Tap a category, then tap a video to watch it. Choose playback quality. Go to Settings > TV > iTunes Videos, tap Playback Quality for Wi-Fi (and for cellular, if youʼve turned on Use Cellular Data), then choose Best Available or Good. Note: High-quality playback requires a faster Internet connection and uses more data. Stream or download movies and TV shows from iTunes. Tap a video, then tap to stream it to iPad, if you have an Internet connection. You can also download iTunes movies and TV show purchases to iPad so that you can watch them when you donʼt have a Wi-Fi or cellular connection. Tap the video, then tap in the video details screen. Stop playing videos automatically. If you often fall asleep while a video plays, open the Clock app and tap Timer, then swipe to set the number of hours and minutes you want to video to play before it stops. Tap the alert tone at the bottom (the Radar tone is the default), scroll to the bottom of the list, choose Stop Playing, tap Set, then tap Start. Watch other types of videos. Music videos: Open the Music app. Podcasts: Open the Podcasts app. iTunes U videos: Download the free iTunes U app from the App Store. Videos youʼve recorded with your iPad camera: Open the Photos app. Page 166 of 292 iPad User Guide Watch Now Discover movies and TV episodes to watch immediately. Use Up Next to continue viewing a movie or TV show you havenʼt finished, or to automatically queue up the next episode in a TV series. Start or continue to watch a recently purchased or rented video. Tap Watch Now. In Up Next, tap the movie or TV show that you want to watch. Discover new videos. Tap Watch Now, then scroll through all the movies and TV shows that are available for instant access and immediate playback. Tap a category such as TV Shows or Kids to narrow your browsing. Remove a video from Up Next. Touch and hold the video. Watch Westworld on HBO NOW with subscription. HBO NOW® is accessible only through participating partners in the U.S. and certain U.S. territories. Certain restrictions apply. ® and © 2016 Home Box Office, Inc. All rights reserved. HBO®, HBO NOW®, and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. Watch Power on STARZ with subscription or authentication. Power © 2016 Starz Entertainment, LLC. All rights reserved. Watch Homeland on Showtime®. Homeland © Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved. SHOWTIME and related marks are registered trademarks of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS company. SHOWTIME is accessible for viewing solely in the United States and its territories and possessions. Minimum high-speed broadband connection is required for viewing. Library The Library tab includes videos you purchased or rented from the iTunes Store and videos you synced from iTunes. Page 167 of 292 iPad User Guide Browse and play your videos. Tap Library in the upper left, tap a category, such as TV Shows or Movies, then tap a video to play it. Store Without leaving the TV app, buy or rent movies or purchase TV shows from the iTunes Store, and download apps for watching movies and TV shows from your favorite channels. Buy or rent a movie. In the TV app, tap Store, tap a movie to show the details screen, then tap Buy or Rent (if renting is an option). For more information, see Purchase, rent, or redeem. The details screen also includes trailers from the movie, related movies, ratings and reviews, cast and crew information, and more. Download a video app. In the Store tab, tap an app to install it. You can also tap a movie or TV show at the top of the Store screen, and if you donʼt have the app to view it, you can install it. Use Single Sign-on to authenticate your cable or satellite subscription credentials. If you have a cable or satellite subscription, go to Settings > TV Provider, select your provider, then sign in. (If you donʼt see your TV provider, sign in directly from the app you want to use.) When you download a video app that supports Single Sign-on, you have immediate access to the appʼs movies and TV shows. Page 168 of 292 iPad User Guide Search for videos Search your video library, iTunes Store, and your video content providers for movies and TV shows. Discover trending videos to watch. Search for a video. Tap Search, then tap the search field and enter a video name. Tap a result to get more information. Choose a provider. Movies and TV shows are sometimes available from multiple providers. On the details screen, tap , then choose a provider. Control playback Note: This information covers playback for movies or TV shows from iTunes. Video playback using third-party apps may vary. Page 169 of 292 iPad User Guide Mad Max: Fury Road is available on iTunes. Scale the video to fill the screen or fit to the screen. Tap or . Or double-tap the video. If you donʼt see the scaling controls, your video already fits the screen perfectly. Start over from the beginning. If the video contains chapters, drag the playhead along the scrubber bar all the way to the left. If there are no chapters, tap Skip to the next or previous chapter. Tap or . You can also press the center button or equivalent on a compatible headset two times (skip to next) or three times (skip to previous). Rewind or fast-forward. Touch and hold or . Or drag the playhead left or right. Move your finger toward the bottom of the screen as you drag for finer control. Select a different audio language. If the video offers other languages, tap , then choose a language from the Audio list. Show subtitles or closed captions. Tap captions. . Not all videos offer subtitles or closed Customize the appearance of closed captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning. See closed captions and subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning, then turn on Closed Captions + SDH. Page 170 of 292 iPad User Guide Watch the video on a TV. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to show Control Center, then tap AirPlay. For more about AirPlay and other ways to connect, see AirPlay Mirroring. Multitask with Picture in Picture. (iPad Pro, 6th generation iPad, iPad Air and later, iPad mini 2 and later) When watching a video, press the Home button or tap . Your video screen scales down to a corner of your display so you can see the Home screen and open other apps. To return to the video, tap in the small video window. For more information, see Picture in Picture. Mad Max: Fury Road © 2015 Warner Bros. Feature Productions Pty Limited. All rights reserved. Transfer and convert videos Transfer videos from your computer. Connect iPad, then sync videos from iTunes on your computer. See Sync with iTunes. Convert a video for iPad. If you try to sync a video from iTunes on your computer and a message says the video canʼt play on iPad, you can convert the video. Select the video in iTunes on your computer, then choose File > Create New Version > Create iPad or Apple TV Version. Then sync the converted video to iPad. Page 171 of 292 iPad User Guide Videos Watch videos Use Videos to watch movies and TV shows on iPad. In Videos, you can also purchase movies and TV shows from the iTunes Store that can be played on your other devices where youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID. Videos has been replaced by the TV app in the U.S. WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss, see Important safety information. Watch a movie or TV show. Tap the video in the list of videos. Stream or download? If appears on a video thumbnail, you can stream the video over your Internet connection. Or, to download the video to iPad and watch it when youʼre offline, tap in the video details. To show only the videos that are downloaded to iPad, go to Settings > Videos, then turn off Show iTunes Purchases. Page 172 of 292 iPad User Guide Stop playing video automatically. If you often fall asleep while a video plays, open the Clock app and tap Timer, then swipe to set the number of hours and minutes. Tap When Timer Ends and choose Stop Playing, tap Set, then tap Start. Watch other types of videos. Music videos: Open the Music app. Podcasts: Open the Podcasts app. iTunes U videos: Download the free iTunes U app from the App Store. Videos you recorded with your iPad camera: Open the Photos app. Add videos to your library Buy or rent videos from the iTunes Store. Tap Store in the Videos app, or open iTunes Store on iPad, then tap Movies or TV Shows. The iTunes Store isnʼt available in all areas. See Find music, movies, TV shows, and more. Transfer videos from your computer. Connect iPad, then sync videos from iTunes on your computer. See Sync with iTunes. Stream videos from your computer. To configure video streaming from your computer to iPad, turn on Home Sharing in iTunes on your computer. On iPad, go to Settings > Videos, then enter the Apple ID and password you use for Home Sharing on your computer. Open Videos on iPad, then tap Shared. Convert a video for iPad. If you try to sync a video from iTunes on your computer and a message says the video canʼt play on iPad, you can convert the video. Select the video in iTunes on your computer, then choose File > Create New Version > Create iPad or Apple TV Version. Then sync the converted video to iPad. Delete a video. Tap Edit in the upper right of your collection, then tap on the video thumbnail. If you donʼt see the Edit button, look for on your video thumbnails—those videos havenʼt been downloaded to iPad, so you canʼt delete them. To delete an individual episode of a series, tap the series, then swipe left on the episode in the Episodes list. Deleting a video from iPad doesnʼt delete it from the iTunes library on your computer or from your purchased videos in iCloud, and you can sync the video or download it to iPad again later. If you donʼt want to sync a deleted video back to iPad, set iTunes to not sync the video. See Sync with iTunes. Page 173 of 292 iPad User Guide Control playback Mad Max: Fury Road is available on iTunes. Scale the video to fill the screen or fit to the screen. Tap or . Or double-tap the video. If you donʼt see the scaling controls, your video already fits the screen perfectly. Start over from the beginning. If the video contains chapters, drag the playhead along the scrubber bar all the way to the left. If there are no chapters, tap Skip to the next or previous chapter. Tap or . You can also press the center button or equivalent on a compatible headset two times (skip to next) or three times (skip to previous). Rewind or fast-forward. Touch and hold or . Or drag the playhead left or right. Move your finger toward the bottom of the screen as you drag for finer control. Select a different audio language. If the video offers other languages, tap , then choose a language from the Audio list. Show subtitles or closed captions. Tap captions. . Not all videos offer subtitles or closed Customize the appearance of closed captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning. Page 174 of 292 iPad User Guide See closed captions and subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning, then turn on Closed Captions + SDH. Choose playback quality. Go to Settings > Video, tap Playback Quality for Wi-Fi (and for cellular, if youʼve turned on Use Cellular Data), then choose Best Available or Good. Note: High-quality playback requires a faster Internet connection and uses more data. Choose where to resume playback. Go to Settings > Videos, tap Start Playing, then choose From Beginning or Where Left Off. Watch the video on a TV. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to show Control Center, then tap AirPlay. For more about AirPlay and other ways to connect, see AirPlay Mirroring. Multitask with Picture in Picture. (iPad Pro, 6th generation iPad, iPad Air and later, iPad mini 2 and later) When watching a video, press the Home button or tap . Your video screen scales down to a corner of your display so you can see the Home screen and open other apps. To return to the video, tap in the small video window. For more information, see Picture in Picture. Mad Max: Fury Road © 2015 Warner Bros. Feature Productions Pty Limited. All rights reserved. Page 175 of 292 iPad User Guide Notes Take notes Use Notes to jot down important information, add attachments—like photos, web links, or maps—sketch ideas, and keep things organized. You can lock a note to keep it private, add people so friends can view and edit a note, and more. Turn on Notes in your iCloud account. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud, then turn on Notes. Your iCloud notes appear on all your iOS devices and Mac computers where youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID. Note: If youʼve been using an earlier version of Notes, you may need to upgrade your iCloud notes to use all the features—sketching, checklists, paragraph styles, password protection, and more. See the Apple Support article Upgrade your notes. Turn on an On My iPad account. Go to Settings > Notes, then turn on On My iPad. Notes in this account appear only on your iPad. Tip: To create and view Notes right from Today View, tap Edit at the bottom of the Today screen, then add the Notes widget. Create a new note. Tap . The first line of the note becomes the noteʼs title. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Create a new note.” Page 176 of 292 iPad User Guide Add a photo or video to your note. Tap . Take a new photo or video, or tap Photo Library to select and add existing photos and videos. If you want photos or videos you take in Notes to be automatically added to the Photos app, go to Settings > Notes, then turn on Save Media to Photos. Make the note fill the screen. While viewing a note, tap orientation. or turn iPad to portrait Tip: Turn iPad Pro (12.9-inch) to landscape orientation, then tap accounts, notes list, and selected note all at once. to see your Set the default account for when you start new notes with Siri or from the Today screen. Go to Settings > Notes > Default Account. Format and edit notes Create checklists, change paragraph styles, and add attachments. Start a checklist. Tap a line in your note, then tap checklist format. Change the text style. Tap a line in your note, tap . Tap again to remove the , then select the style. Set a default formatting style for the first paragraph. Go to Settings > Notes, then tap New Notes Start With. Choose Title, Heading, or Body. Add an attachment. When youʼre in another app and find something that you want to add to Notes (like a location in Maps or a webpage in Safari), tap Share or , then tap Add to Notes. You can create a new note or add the attachment to an existing one. Mark up an image or PDF. For an image, tap it in your note, tap a PDF, tap it in your note, then tap . , then tap Markup. For Change the preview size of attachments. Touch and hold an image, sketch, or PDF attachment in a note, then choose a size for the preview. Page 177 of 292 iPad User Guide Delete notes Delete a note. In a note, tap . Or in the notes list, swipe the note left. Didnʼt mean to delete that note? If you change your mind, open the Recently Deleted folder. Tap the note you want to keep, tap in the note, then tap Recover. Create a sketch Sometimes you may want a sketch to help you capture an idea or plan. Start a sketch using the pencil, marker, or pen tool. Switch to the eraser if you make a mistake. If you have iPad Pro, you can sketch with Apple Pencil. Sketch in your note. Tap , use your finger to sketch, then tap Done. Your sketch appears in your note. Tap the sketch to edit it. View more color choices. Swipe the color palette left or right to see more colors. Draw straight lines. Tap the ruler tool to make it appear on your canvas. Draw a line along the edge of the ruler. Tap the ruler tool again to make it disappear. Move the ruler without changing its angle. Drag the ruler with one finger. Adjust the angle of the ruler. Touch and hold the ruler with two fingers, then rotate your fingers. Mask a part of your sketch. Place the ruler along the edge of the area you want to cover, then start your sketch. Draw lines that start away from the rulerʼs edge, then come toward it. Page 178 of 292 iPad User Guide Hide the toolbar. Swipe the toolbar down to hide it and see just the tool youʼre using. Tap the tool youʼre using to see the toolbar again. Zoom in. Pinch open so you can sketch the details, then pinch closed to zoom back out. Tip: Drag two fingers to navigate when youʼre zoomed in. Scroll through all your sketches in a note. Swipe a sketch left or right with two fingers. Add another sketch to your note. Tap . Or, if you already have multiple sketches, swipe your last sketch left with two fingers. Edit a sketch. Open the note that contains a sketch, then tap the sketch. Start over. Touch and hold the eraser tool, then tap Erase All. Organize your notes Search for a note. Scroll to the top of the notes list to reveal the search field. If a note is locked, only its title appears in the search results. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Show notes from today.” Sort your notes. Go to Settings > Notes, then choose to sort notes by date edited, date created, or title. Search for a specific attachment. Tap in the lower-left corner of the notes list to see thumbnails of sketches, photos, links, documents, and other attachments. (Attachments in locked notes aren't shown.) To go to a note with a specific attachment, touch and hold the attachment thumbnail, then tap Show in Note. Create a folder to organize your notes. From the Notes list, tap to view your folders. Tap New Folder (at the bottom of the folders list), then name your folder. Delete a folder. From the Notes list, tap tap Delete. Print a note. Tap to view your folders. Swipe a folder left, then at the top of the note. For more information about printing, see AirPrint. Move notes from one folder or account to another. Swipe the note left in the notes list, tap Move, then choose the folder or account. To move several notes from one folder or account to another, tap Edit in the upper-right corner of the notes list, tap the notes you want to move, then tap Move To. Page 179 of 292 iPad User Guide Collaborate in Notes Invite people to view and make edits to notes in your iCloud account, and everyone will see the latest changes. Note: You canʼt share a locked note. Invite friends to share. In a note, tap , then choose how to send your invitation. Add people, remove them, or stop sharing a note. In a note youʼve shared, tap Use notes in multiple accounts View and edit notes from other accounts (such as Google, Yahoo!, or AOL). Go to Settings > Notes > Accounts, then add your account. These notes appear in Notes on all your other iOS devices and Mac computers where youʼre also signed in to that account. Notes from these accounts canʼt use many of the Notes app features. Page 180 of 292 iPad User Guide Lock notes Use a single password to lock and unlock notes in your iCloud account or in your On My iPad account. On iPad Pro, iPad (5th generation), iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3 and later you can also lock and unlock your notes with Touch ID (if itʼs enabled). You can view locked notes that are in your iCloud account on your iOS devices with iOS 9.3 or later and Mac computers with OS X 10.11.4 or later. You can lock notes that include images, sketches, maps, and web attachments, but not other types of attachments like PDFs and iWork documents. You canʼt lock notes that youʼve shared. Set a password. Go to Settings > Notes > Password. Set Touch ID to unlock your notes. Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then turn on Use Touch ID (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, and iPad mini 3 and later). Add a lock to a note. In the note, tap , then tap Lock Note. When a note is locked, the title remains visible in the notes list. Unlock your notes. Tap a locked note, tap View Note, then follow the onscreen instructions. Unlocking one note unlocks all of your notes until your session times out, you tap the lock icon at the top of the screen, you tap Lock Now at the bottom of the notes list, or you lock your iPad. Remove a lock from a note. Tap , then tap Remove Lock. Page 181 of 292 iPad User Guide Change your password. Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then tap Change Password. Forgot your password? Go to Settings > Notes > Password, then tap Reset Password. You canʼt access your locked notes if you forget your password and havenʼt turned on Touch ID. However, you can set a new password for any notes you want to protect going forward. For more information, see the Apple Support article Keep your notes secure with password-protection. Import notes from another app to Notes Import notes from another app. (Upgraded notes only) Export the notes from a supported app. Then, with an Evernote file, for example, touch and hold the exported file attachment (it has a .enex filename extension) in Mail, then choose Add to Notes. After you import notes, you can find them in the Imported Notes folder. For more information, see the Apple Support article Import your notes and files to the Notes app. Page 182 of 292 iPad User Guide Reminders Reminder lists With Reminders you can keep track of all the things you need to do. Add a reminder. Tap a list, then tap a blank line. Share a list using iCloud. Tap a list, then tap Edit. Tap Sharing, then tap Add Person. The people you share with also need to be iCloud users. Anyone who accepts the invitation can add, delete, and mark items as completed. Family members can also share a list. See Family Sharing. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Remember to take an umbrella” “Add artichokes to my groceries list” “Read my work to-do list” “Remind me to call my mom at 5” Page 183 of 292 iPad User Guide Delete a list. While viewing a list, tap Edit, then tap Delete List. All of the reminders in the list are also deleted. Set a default list for new reminders. Go to Settings > Reminders. Delete a reminder. Swipe the reminder left, then tap Delete. Change the order of lists or reminders. Tap Edit, then touch and move the item. What list was that in? When you enter text in the search field, reminders in all lists are searched by the reminderʼs name. Keep your reminders up to date on other devices. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud, then turn on Reminders. Some other types of accounts, such as Exchange, also support Reminders. You can change how reminders in the past are synced in Settings > Reminders. With OS X 10.10 or later, you can hand off reminders youʼre editing between your Mac and iPad. See Handoff. Scheduled reminders Scheduled reminders notify you when theyʼre due. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Remind me to take my medicine at 6 a.m. tomorrow.” Schedule a reminder. Swipe a reminder to the left, tap More, then turn on “Remind me on a day.” Tap Alarm to set the date and time. Tap Repeat to schedule the reminder for regularly occurring intervals. Donʼt bother me now. You can turn off Reminders notifications in Settings > Notifications. To silence notifications temporarily, turn on Do Not Disturb. Location-based reminders On iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular models, Reminders can alert you when you arrive at or leave a location. Page 184 of 292 iPad User Guide Be reminded when you arrive at or leave a location. Swipe a reminder to the left, tap More, then turn on “Remind me at a location.” Tap Location, then choose a location from the list or enter an address. After you define a location, you can drag to change the size of the geofence on the map, which sets the approximate distance at which you want reminded. You canʼt save a location reminder in Outlook or Microsoft Exchange accounts. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Remind me to stop at the grocery store when I leave here.” Add common locations to your My Info card. When you set a location reminder, locations in the list include addresses from your My Info card in Contacts. Add your work, home, and other favorite addresses to your card for easy access in Reminders. Page 185 of 292 iPad User Guide News Get started with News News collects all the stories you want to read, from your favorite sources, based on the topics that interest you most. You can explore recommended publications (called channels in News), be notified of important stories from favorite channels, search for specific channels or topics, save and share your favorite stories, and subscribe to receive premium stories from select publishers. The first time you open News, you can personalize it based on your interests. Note: You need a Wi-Fi or cellular connection to read News. News isnʼt available in all areas. Add channels and topics. Open News, then add your preferred channels (publications, such as magazines, newspapers, or news-based websites). You can also add topics such as Sports and Entertainment. To see more channels and topics, swipe up. The stories that appear in For You are influenced by your choices. Add notifications. Tap Customize Notifications, then choose the publications you want to deliver the most important stories of the day to your Lock screen. Receive stories by email. To receive an email with the best Apple News stories selected by Appleʼs editors, tap Sign Me Up on the Get News in Your Inbox screen. Seek out additional channels and topics. After you set up News, tap Explore to browse suggested channels and topics. Or tap a topic such as Travel, Arts, or Sports to browse it. To add a channel or topic to the Favorites tab, tap For You For You presents the best stories from the publications and topics you add to Favorites. For You also includes top stories of the day, trending stories that are popular with other News readers, featured stories selected by Apple editors, and more. Page 186 of 292 iPad User Guide Read more stories within a group. Tap the arrow at the bottom of the group. Play a video in the story list. Tap Get newer stories. Pull down to refresh For You with the latest stories. Love, dislike, save, or share a story. When viewing a story, tap , then choose Love Story, Dislike Story, or Save, or select a sharing option. You can also report a story, open it in Safari, and more. To remove a dislike or love, tap from Story. , then tap Remove Dislike from Story or Remove Love Dislike a channel. To prevent a channelʼs stories from appearing in For You, tap tap Dislike Channel. Love or dislike a topic group. Tap or , then next to a topic group in For You. When you love a topic group, related stories appear more often in For You, and the topic appears in Favorites. When you dislike a topic group, fewer related stories appear in For You, and the topic appears among the disliked channels and topics in Favorites. Page 187 of 292 iPad User Guide Read stories Read a story. Tap a story to read it. Web stories delivered through an RSS feed show a preview. To view an RSS story in full, swipe up. To always view the full story, go to Settings > News, then turn off Show Story Previews. Read the next story. Tap the arrow on the top-right of the screen. You can also swipe left to read the next story or right to read the previous story. Swipe from the left edge to return to the list of stories. Tell News what stories you love and dislike. When viewing a story, tap takes your feedback into account for future recommendations. Change the text size. Tap (Not available in all stories.) or . News , then tap the smaller or larger letter to change the size. Share stories. When viewing a story, tap Message or Twitter. , then choose a sharing option such as Report a concern. If you believe a story youʼre viewing is mislabeled, inappropriate, offensive, or doesnʼt display properly, tap , then tap Report a Concern. Favorites The channels and topics you select when you first open News appear in Favorites. Favorites also includes channels and topics you add later. Page 188 of 292 iPad User Guide Add a channel or topic as a favorite. Tap in a channel, in Explore, or next to a search result. To add a trending topic as a favorite, tap Search, tap a topic, then tap Browse a channelʼs stories. Tap a channel or topic to see the most recently published stories. In some channels, you can browse sections, such as Politics, Sports, or Entertainment. Dig deeper into a topic. Tap a topic to see recent related stories. Edit your favorites. Tap Edit, then tap wish to follow. to delete a channel or topic that you no longer Sort favorites. Tap Favorites at the top of the screen, then choose Sort by Name, Sort by Most Recent, or Sort by Most Visited. Manage notifications. Tap , then turn notifications on or off for your favorite channels and the channels recommended by Apple editors. Show disliked channels and topics. Tap Show Disliked at the bottom of the Favorites screen to show the channels and topics youʼve disliked. To see stories from that channel or topic again in For You, tap the channel or topic, then tap Search News keeps track of a wide variety of topics, which makes it easy to find the stories that interest you. Page 189 of 292 iPad User Guide Search for channels and topics. Tap Search, then enter the name of a channel (CNN or Wired, for example) or a topic (fashion, business, or politics, for example). In the results list, tap to add an item to Favorites. View trending topics. Search shows trending topics to get you started. Tap a topic to see related stories, then tap to add a topic to Favorites. Save stories In News you can save stories to read later, online or offline. Save a story. When viewing a list of stories or reading a story, tap read a saved story, tap Saved, then tap the story. , then tap Save. To Delete a saved story. Tap Saved, then swipe a story left. Check your reading history. Tap the History tab to see what youʼve read. Swipe a story to the left to delete it. To clear your News history or the information used to create recommendations, tap Clear, then choose one or both options. Page 190 of 292 iPad User Guide Subscriptions in News Subscribe to channels. With News you can read premium stories from select publishers. There are three ways to access subscriptions in News: Subscribe within News: You can purchase a subscription directly in News. In a channel that offers subscriptions, tap a story that requires a subscription to read, then tap Subscribe Now. Access an existing subscription purchased from iTunes or the App Store: News checks your iTunes Store account for subscriptions you bought as in-app purchases in publishersʼ apps. If any subscriptions youʼve purchased are also available in News, youʼre automatically granted access in News. See the About in-app purchases website. Access an existing subscription purchased from a publisher: If youʼve purchased a subscription directly from a publisherʼs ecosystem, the publisher may allow you to sign in to your account in News to access your subscription there. To sign in, tap a story that requires a subscription to read, then tap Already a Subscriber? Enter the user name and password for your existing subscription. When you subscribe to a channel, itʼs automatically added to Favorites, and stories from the channel appear in For You. For more information, see the About subscriptions in Apple News website. Page 191 of 292 iPad User Guide iTunes Store Find music, movies, TV shows, and more Use the iTunes Store to add music, movies, TV shows, and ringtones to iPad. Note: You need an Internet connection and an Apple ID to use the iTunes Store. The iTunes Store isn't available in all areas. Browse by category or genre. Tap a category (Music, Movies, or TV Shows). To refine the list, tap Genres. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Look for kidsʼ shows in iTunes.” If you know what youʼre looking for, tap Search. You can tap a search term thatʼs trending among other iTunes users, or enter info in the search field, then tap Search on the keyboard. Ask Siri to tag it. When you hear music playing around you, ask Siri “What song is playing?” Siri tells you the name and artist of the song and gives you an easy way to purchase it. The song is also tagged so you can preview or buy it later. To see your list of tagged songs, tap Music, tap , then tap Siri. Preview a song or video. Tap it. Page 192 of 292 iPad User Guide Add to your Wish List. To track a song you might want to buy later, add it to your Wish List. View the song, tap , then tap Add to Wish List. To view your Wish List, tap then tap Wish List. Purchase, rent, or redeem Sign in with your Apple ID. If you aren't signed in with your Apple ID, the iTunes Store asks you to do so before you make a purchase. To view or edit your Apple ID, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then tap your Apple ID. If you donʼt have an Apple ID, you can create one at the time of purchase. Buy and download an item. Tap the itemʼs price, then tap Buy. If the item is free, tap Get. If you see instead of a price, youʼve already purchased the item, and you can download it again without a charge. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Purchase song title by artist.” View and download your previous purchases. Tap Purchased. To automatically download items that you purchased on other Apple devices, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then turn on Automatic Downloads. Limit downloads to Wi-Fi connections (Wi-Fi + Cellular models). To prevent downloads from using cellular data, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then turn off Use Cellular Data. See the progress of a download. Tap Downloads. Rent a movie. Tap the movieʼs rental price, then tap Rent. You can choose to stream the movie to iPad or download the movie to play when youʼre offline. To start or continue the movie on another iOS device (iOS 10.3 or later), Apple TV (tvOS 10.3 or later), or Mac (with iTunes 12.6 or later), make sure youʼre signed in to the iTunes Store with the same Apple ID on each device. You have 30 days to start watching a rented movie. After you start watching a movie, you can play it as many times as you want during the rental period (24 hours in the U.S. iTunes Store; 48 hours in other countries). When the rental period ends, the movie is deleted. Note: Movie rentals and streaming are not available in all areas or for all movies. Page 193 of 292 iPad User Guide Approve purchases with Family Sharing. With Family Sharing set up, the family organizer can review and approve purchases made by family members under a certain age. For more information, see Family Sharing. View and download family membersʼ purchases. With Family Sharing set up, you can view and download songs, TV shows, and movies purchased by your family members. Tap Purchased, tap My Purchases, then choose a family member. Hide individual purchases. Using iTunes on a computer, family members can hide any of their purchases so other family members canʼt view or download them. Send a gift. To give an item, view it, tap , then tap Gift. To give an iTunes gift certificate, tap a category (Music, Movies, or TV Shows), scroll to the bottom, then tap Send Gift. Redeem a gift card or code. Tap Music, scroll to the bottom, then tap Redeem. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Redeem an iTunes Store gift card.” Page 194 of 292 iPad User Guide App Store Find apps Use the App Store to find, purchase, and download apps to iPad. Your apps update automatically over Wi-Fi (unless you turn off this feature), so you can keep up with the latest improvements and features. Note: You need an Internet connection and an Apple ID to use the App Store. The App Store isn't available in all areas. Browse by category. Tap Categories, then choose a category—for example, Education, Medical, or Sports. Find a specific app. Enter enter the name in the search field, then tap Search on the keyboard. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Find apps by Apple.” Tell a friend about an app. View the app, tap apps. , then choose an option. See Share from Add an item to your Wish List. To track an app you might want to purchase later, view the app, tap , then tap Add to Wish List. (Not available for free apps or apps you already purchased.) Page 195 of 292 iPad User Guide See your Wish List. Tap Purchase, redeem, and download Sign in with your Apple ID. If you aren't signed in with your Apple ID, the App Store asks you to do so before you make a purchase. To view or edit your Apple ID, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then tap your Apple ID. If you donʼt have an Apple ID, you can create one at the time of purchase. Buy and download an app. Tap the appʼs price, then tap Buy. If the app is free, tap Get, then tap Install. If you see instead of a price, youʼve already purchased the app and you can download it again without a charge. While the app is downloading or updating, its icon appears on the Home screen with a progress indicator. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Purchase app name.” View and download your previous purchases. Tap Purchased. To automatically download apps that you purchased on other Apple devices, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then turn on Automatic Downloads. Limit downloads to Wi-Fi connections (Wi-Fi + Cellular models). To prevent downloads from using cellular data, go to Settings > iTunes & App Store, then turn off Use Cellular Data. Approve purchases with Family Sharing. With Family Sharing set up, the family organizer can review and approve purchases made by other family members under a certain age. For more information, see Family Sharing. View and download family membersʼ app purchases. With Family Sharing set up, you can view and download apps purchased by your family members. Tap Updates, tap Purchased, then choose a family member. Hide individual purchases. Using iTunes on a computer, family members can hide any of their purchases so other family members canʼt view or download them. Restrict in-app purchases. Many apps provide extra content or enhancements for a fee. To prevent in-app purchases, go to Settings > General > Restrictions, make sure Restrictions is enabled, then turn off In-App Purchases. You can also set other restrictions, such as limiting app downloads by age ratings. Give an app. View the app, tap , then tap Gift. (Not available for all apps.) Page 196 of 292 iPad User Guide Give an iTunes gift certificate. Tap Featured, scroll to the bottom, then tap Send Gift. Redeem a gift card or code. Tap Featured, scroll to the bottom, then tap Redeem. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Redeem an iTunes Store gift card.” Manage your apps. Arrange your apps Organize with folders Remove apps Page 197 of 292 iPad User Guide iBooks Get books Get books from the iBooks Store. In iBooks, use the buttons at the bottom of the screen to access the iBooks Store. Tap Featured to browse the latest releases, or Top Charts to view the most popular. To find a specific book, tap the Search field that appears after you access the iBooks Store. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Find books by author name.” Read a book Open a book. Tap the book you want to read. If you donʼt see it in on the bookshelf, swipe left or right to see other collections. Show the controls. Tap near the center of a page. Not all books have the same controls, but some of the things you can do include searching, viewing the table of contents, and sharing what youʼre reading. Close a book. Pinch the page, or tap . Page 198 of 292 iPad User Guide Enlarge an image. Tap, or with some books double-tap, the image. Read by columns. In books that support it, double-tap a column of text to zoom in, then swipe up or to the left to move to the next column. Go to a specific page. Use the page navigation controls at the bottom of the screen. Or tap and enter a page number, then tap the page number in the search results. Get a definition. Touch and hold a word, then tap Look Up in the menu that appears. (Definitions arenʼt available for all languages.) Remember your place. Tap to add a bookmark, or tap again to remove it. You can have multiple bookmarks—to see them all, tap , then tap Bookmarks. You donʼt need to add a bookmark when you close the book, because iBooks remembers where you left off. Remember the good parts. Some books let you add notes and highlights. To add a highlight, touch and hold a word, then move your finger to draw the highlight. To add a note, double-tap a word to select it, move the grab points to adjust the selection, then tap Note or Highlight in the menu that appears. Share the good parts. Tap some highlighted text, then, in the menu that appears, tap . If the book is from the iBooks Store, a link to the book is included automatically. (Sharing may not be available in all regions.) Share a link to a book. Tap near the center of a page to display the controls, tap then tap . Change the way a book looks. Some books let you change the font, font size, and color of the page. (Tap .) You can change justification and hyphenation in Settings > iBooks. These settings apply to all books that support them. Change the brightness. Tap . If you donʼt see , tap first. Page 199 of 292 iPad User Guide Dim the screen when itʼs dark. Turn on Auto-Night Theme to automatically change the bookshelf, page color, and brightness when using iBooks in low-light conditions. (Not all books support Auto-Night Theme.) Interact with multimedia Some books have interactive elements, such as movies, diagrams, presentations, galleries, and 3D objects. To interact with a multimedia object, tap, swipe, or pinch it. To view an element full screen, pinch open with two fingers. When you finish, pinch it closed. Study notes and glossary terms In books that support it, you can review all of your highlights and notes as study cards. See all your notes. Tap . Search your notes, or tap a chapter to see notes you made in that chapter. You can sync your notes with your other devices in Settings > iBooks. Delete notes. Tap , select some notes, then tap Delete. Review your notes as study cards. Tap Study Cards. Swipe to move between cards. Tap Flip Card to see its back. Shuffle your study cards. Tap , then turn on Shuffle. Study glossary terms. If a book includes a glossary, tap your study cards. to include those words in Page 200 of 292 iPad User Guide Listen to an audiobook Open an audiobook. Audiobooks are identified by a on the cover. Tap the book you want to listen to. If you donʼt see it in the library, swipe left or right to view other collections. Skip farther forward or back. Touch and hold the arrows, or slide and hold the cover. To change the number of seconds that skipping moves, go to Settings > iBooks. Speed it up, or slow it down. Tap the playback speed in the lower-right corner, then choose a different speed. 1x is normal speed, 0.75x is three-quarters speed, and so on. Go to a chapter. Tap , then tap a chapter. (Some books donʼt define chapter markers.) Go to a specific time. Drag the playhead, located underneath the book cover. Where you started listening during this session is marked with a small circle on the timeline. Tap the mark to jump to that spot. Set a sleep timer. Before starting playback, tap , then choose a duration until the audio automatically stops. Download an audiobook previously purchased from the iBooks Store. You can download an audiobook again from the Purchased list in the iBooks Store anytime, free of charge. Page 201 of 292 iPad User Guide Organize books View books by title or cover. Tap or View only audiobooks or PDFs. Tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the screen) then choose PDFs or Audiobooks. Organize your books with collections. Tap Select, then select some books and tap Move. Create or edit collections. Tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the screen). Some built-in collections, such as PDFs, canʼt be renamed or deleted. You can sync your collections with your other devices in Settings > iBooks. Rearrange books. While viewing books by cover, touch and hold a cover then drag it to a new location. While viewing books by title, sort the list using the buttons at the top of the screen. The All Books collection is automatically arranged for you; switch to another collection if you want to manually arrange your books. Search for a book. Pull down to reveal the Search field at the top of the screen. Searching looks for the title and the authorʼs name. Remove books. Tap Select, select some books, tap Delete, then choose an option. Page 202 of 292 iPad User Guide Hide books you havenʼt downloaded. If you see on a cover or next to a title, you can download the book again without charge. To remove from view the books that arenʼt downloaded, tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the screen), then turn on Hide iCloud Books. Read PDF documents Add a PDF email attachment to iBooks. Open the email message, touch and hold its PDF attachment, then tap Copy to iBooks. Or, tap the PDF attachment to open it, tap any page, tap , then tap Import with iBooks. Print a PDF document. With the document open, tap , then choose Print (you need an AirPrint-compatible printer). For more about AirPrint, see AirPrint. Email a PDF document. With the document open, tap , then choose Mail. Access your entire library in iCloud You can store your PDF files and other books in iCloud and access them on your other devices. Turn on iCloud for iBooks. Turn on Settings > [your name] > iCloud > iCloud Drive > iBooks. When you add a PDF file (or a book that doesnʼt come from the iBooks Store) to iBooks, the document is uploaded to iCloud. The document is also added to your other devices where youʼve turned on iCloud for iBooks and youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID. To change whether to use iCloud for iBooks, go to Settings > iCloud > iCloud Drive, then turn iBooks on or off. Note: The books in your Purchased list in the iBooks Store are available anytime and donʼt count against your available iCloud storage space. Page 203 of 292 iPad User Guide Podcasts Get podcasts and episodes With the Podcasts app, you can browse, subscribe to, and play your favorite audio or video podcasts on iPad. Podcasts are free shows that you can play like you would a radio or TV show. Some podcasts are individual episodes; some are series. You can stream them over your Internet connection, or you can download them to iPad to play when youʼre offline. Ask Siri. Say something like: “Play podcasts” “Skip back 15 seconds” “Skip to the next episode” “Play ‘Freakonomics Radioʼ podcast” Tip: To quickly access recently played podcasts, use the Podcasts widget in Today View. See Today View. Discover podcasts. Tap Featured or Top Charts. Page 204 of 292 iPad User Guide Search for podcasts and episodes. Tap Search, then type the name of a podcast or episode. Play an episode. Tap it. If the episode isnʼt downloaded, itʼs streamed to iPad. Download an episode. For podcasts that you havenʼt subscribed to, tap next to an episode to download it. You can play it later, even when youʼre offline. If you subscribe to a podcast but havenʼt downloaded an episode, you see next to the episode in your library. To download the episode, tap next to it, then tap Download Episode or Save Episode. (Either tap downloads the episode to your library. When you tap Save Episode, the episode appears in its podcastʼs Saved tab to help you return to it later. See Manage your podcast library.) Subscribe to a podcast. Get new episodes as theyʼre released. If youʼre browsing Featured podcasts or Top Charts, tap the podcast, then tap Subscribe. If youʼve already downloaded episodes of a podcast you want to subscribe to, tap My Podcasts, tap the podcast below Not Subscribed, tap , then turn on Subscribed. To sync your podcast subscriptions on all your devices, go to Settings > Podcasts, then turn on Sync Podcasts. To choose how frequently Podcasts checks your subscriptions for new episodes, go to Settings > Podcasts > Refresh Every, then choose an option. Change the download settings for a subscribed podcast. You can turn off automatic downloads or specify whether to download all unplayed episodes or only new episodes. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap , tap Download Episodes, then tap an option. To change the default setting for all podcasts, go to Settings > Podcasts > Download Episodes. Limit downloads to Wi-Fi connections (Wi-Fi + Cellular models). To prevent podcast downloads from using cellular data, go to Settings > Podcasts, then turn on Only Download on Wi-Fi. Unsubscribe from a podcast. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap Subscribed. , then turn off Page 205 of 292 iPad User Guide Manage your podcast library Your library consists of: Podcasts youʼve subscribed to. The episodes are available for streaming and downloading. Episodes youʼve downloaded, whether or not youʼve subscribed to their podcasts. View your podcast library. Tap My Podcasts. Tap a podcast to see its episodes. Find unplayed episodes. To find episodes that you havenʼt heard or watched yet, tap a podcast, then tap Unplayed above the list of episodes. To see the unplayed episodes of all podcasts in your library, tap Unplayed at the bottom of the screen. Search your library. Tap My Podcasts, then drag down the left side of the screen to reveal the search field. Remove a download. Tap next to an episode, then tap Remove Download. (The episode isnʼt deleted from your library. However, if the podcast is no longer available from its publisher, you canʼt stream or download it again.) For information about deleting a podcast, see Delete episodes and podcasts. Get more info about an episode. Tap next to an episode, then tap View Full Description. Tap any links to open them in Safari. Add an episode to Up Next. Tap Next. next to an episode, then tap Add to Up Next or Play Browse for more episodes. To see additional episodes of a podcast, tap My Podcasts, tap the podcast, then tap Feed. Save multiple episodes at once. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap Edit, select individual episodes, then tap Save. Or, tap Unplayed, tap Edit, select individual episodes, then tap Save. Saving an episode always downloads it. (To help you find downloads you want to return to, saved downloads are marked as Saved in the list of episodes.) Find saved episodes. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, then tap Saved above the list of episodes. List oldest episodes first. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap , then tap Sort Order. Share an episode. Tap next to an episode in your podcast library, tap Share Episode, then choose a sharing option. Page 206 of 292 iPad User Guide Share a podcast. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap choose a sharing option. next to an episode, then Control playback Use the playback controls on the Now Playing screen to go forward and back in a podcast, set the speed, reorder the Up Next list, and more. Show the Now Playing screen. Tap the player near the bottom of the screen. To hide Now Playing, swipe down the podcast image, or tap See podcast info while you listen. Tap the podcast image on the Now Playing screen. Skip forward or back within the episode. Tap a circular arrow. Skip forward or back with greater accuracy. Move your finger toward the top of the screen as you drag the playhead left or right. When youʼre close to the playback controls, you can scan quickly through the entire episode. When youʼre close to the top of the screen, you can scan one second at a time. See whatʼs up next. Tap reorder the list. Set a sleep timer. Tap . Tap an episode to play it and those that follow. Drag to , then choose how long the podcast plays before it stops. Page 207 of 292 iPad User Guide Play the podcast on an AirPlay-enabled device. Tap , then choose a device. For more about AirPlay and other ways to connect, see AirPlay Mirroring. Delete episodes and podcasts Delete an episode. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, then swipe an episode to the left. The episode disappears from your library. If the episode was downloaded, the download is also removed. Delete multiple episodes. Tap My Podcasts, tap a podcast, tap Edit, select individual episodes, then tap Delete. Or, tap Unplayed, tap Edit, select individual episodes, then tap Delete. Save played episodes. By default, a podcast is automatically deleted soon after you play it. To automatically keep all episodes youʼve played, go to Settings > Podcasts, then turn off Delete Played Episodes. To turn the option on or off for an individual podcast, tap My Podcasts, tap the podcast, tap , then tap Delete Played Episodes. To save an individual episode, tap the episode, tap , then tap Save Episode. Delete a podcast. Tap My Podcasts, tap Edit, then tap next to the podcast. Organize your favorites into stations Organize your favorite podcasts into custom stations. Create a station. Tap My Podcasts, tap , then tap Add Station. Name your station, tap Save, then add podcasts. To play the podcasts in your station, tap My Podcasts, then tap next to the station. Change the order of the station list. Tap My Podcasts, tap Edit above the station list, then drag up or down. Change the playback order of shows in a station. Tap a station, tap Edit at the topright of the screen, then drag up or down. Delete a station. Tap My Podcasts, tap Edit above the station list, then tap next to the station. Page 208 of 292 iPad User Guide Photo Booth Take photos Use Photo Booth to take photos with fun effects. Take a photo. Aim iPad and tap the shutter button. When you take a photo, iPad makes a shutter sound. You can use the volume buttons on the side of iPad to control the volume of the shutter sound. See Volume controls. Note: In some regions, sound effects are played even if the Side Switch (available on some models) is set to silent. Select an effect. Tap , then tap the effect you want. Change a distortion effect: Drag your finger across the screen. Alter a distortion: Pinch, swipe, or rotate the image. See recent shots. Tap the thumbnail of one of your shots. To display the controls, tap the thumbnail again. Switch between cameras. Tap at the bottom of the screen. Page 209 of 292 iPad User Guide Manage photos The photos you take with Photo Booth are saved to the Camera Roll album in the Photos app on iPad. Delete a photo. Select a thumbnail, then tap Share or copy a photo. Tap a thumbnail, tap , then tap a share option or choose Copy. View photos in the Photos app. In the Photos app, tap Photos. Or tap Albums, tap All Photos (or Camera Roll if iCloud Photo Library is turned off), then tap a thumbnail. Swipe left or right to see the next or previous photo. See View photos and videos. Share photos on all your devices. If you use iCloud Photo Library, you can share your photos with other devices (iOS 8.1 or later), Mac computers (OS X 10.10.3 or later), and on iCloud.com. You must be signed in using the same Apple ID. See iCloud Photo Library. Upload photos to your computer. Connect iPad to your computer using the included USB cable. Mac: Select the photos to upload, then click the Import or Download button in Photos or other supported photo app on your computer. PC: Follow the instructions that came with your photo app. If you delete the photos from iPad when you upload them to your computer, theyʼre removed from Photos. You can use the Photos settings pane in iTunes to sync photos to the Photos app on iPad. Page 210 of 292 iPad User Guide iCloud Drive iCloud Drive overview iCloud Drive stores your documents—including your presentations, spreadsheets, and images—in iCloud so you can access them from any of your devices set up with iCloud. iCloud Drive allows your apps to share documents so you can work on the same file across multiple apps. iCloud Drive works with devices with iOS 8 or later, Mac computers with OS X 10.10 or later, PCs with iCloud for Windows 5 or later, or on iCloud.com. To access iCloud Drive, you must be signed in to iCloud using your Apple ID. Storage limits are subject to your iCloud storage plan. Set up iCloud Drive Set up iCloud Drive. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud, then turn on iCloud Drive. If youʼre asked to upgrade to iCloud Drive, see the Apple Support article iCloud Drive FAQ. Choose which apps use iCloud Drive. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud. Below the control showing that iCloud Drive is turned on, a list shows which apps support iCloud Drive. Turn each app on or off. Use the iCloud Drive app Typically youʼll access documents in Cloud Drive using the app that created them. For example, with Keynote, you can access all of your presentation documents directly in iCloud Drive. If you want to see all of the documents in iCloud Drive at once, use the iCloud Drive app. Page 211 of 292 iPad User Guide Open a document. Tap a documentʼs icon to open it in the app that created the file. If you donʼt have the app installed, a preview of it opens in Quick Look. Open a copy of a document in another app. Tap open. Then tap and choose a sharing action. Rename a document. Tap name to edit it. next to the document you want to next to the document you want to rename. Then tap the Move or delete a document. Tap Select, then select the documents and folders you want, then tap either Move or Delete. For information about how to recover a file you deleted, see iCloud Drive FAQ. Create a new folder. Tap Select, then tap New Folder. Save a copy of a document to iCloud Drive. When youʼre viewing a document, such as a photo using Quick Look, tap , then tap Save to iCloud Drive. Page 212 of 292 iPad User Guide Sharing Share from apps In many apps, you can tap Share or to choose how to share your information. The choices vary depending on the app youʼre using. Additional options may appear if youʼve downloaded apps with sharing options. For more information, see App extensions. Use Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Vimeo, or other third-party apps with sharing options. Sign in to your account in Settings. The third-party sharing buttons take you to the appropriate setting if youʼre not yet signed in. Customize the different ways you share, view, and organize your information. Tap the More button, then touch and drag to move items to new positions. Share files with AirDrop AirDrop lets you share your photos, videos, websites, locations, and other items wirelessly with other nearby devices (iOS 7 or later). With iOS 8 or later, you can share with Mac computers with OS X 10.10 or later. AirDrop transfers information using Wi-Fi and Bluetooth—both must be turned on. To use AirDrop, you need to be signed in to iCloud using your Apple ID. Transfers are encrypted for security. Share an item using AirDrop. Tap Share , then tap the name of a nearby AirDrop user. Page 213 of 292 iPad User Guide Receive AirDrop items from others. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center. Tap AirDrop, then choose to receive items from Contacts only or from Everyone. You can accept or decline each request as it arrives. For more information, see the Apple Support article How to use AirDrop with your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. Family Sharing With Family Sharing, up to six family members can share their iTunes Store, iBooks Store, and App Store purchases, a family calendar, and family photos, all without sharing accounts. For more information about a family subscription to Apple Music, see Access music. Family Sharing requires you to sign in to iCloud with your Apple ID. You will also be asked to confirm the Apple ID you use for the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store. Family Sharing is available on devices with iOS 8 or later, Mac computers with OS X 10.10 or later, and PCs with iCloud for Windows 5 or later. You can be part of only one family group at a time. Set up Family Sharing. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Set Up Family Sharing. Follow the onscreen instructions to set up Family Sharing as the family organizer. The family organizer invites family members to join the family group and agrees to pay for any iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store purchases those family members initiate while part of the family group. When a family member initiates a purchase, it is billed directly to the family organizerʼs account. Once purchased, the item is added to the initiating family memberʼs account and is shared with the rest of the family. If Family Sharing is ever disabled, purchased items remain with the person who chose to purchase them, even if they were paid for by the family organizer. Create an Apple ID for a child. Go to Settings > [your name] > Family Sharing, scroll to the bottom of the screen, then tap “Create an Apple ID for a child.” For more information, see the Apple Support article Family Sharing and Apple ID for your child. Accept an invitation to Family Sharing. Tap Accept in your invitation. Or, if you are near the organizer during the setup process, you can enter the Apple ID and password you use for iCloud on the organizerʼs device. Page 214 of 292 iPad User Guide Access shared purchases from the iTunes Store. Open iTunes Store, tap Purchased, tap My Purchases, then choose a family member. Access shared purchases from the iBooks Store. Open iBooks, tap Purchased, then choose a family member. Access shared purchases from the App Store. Open App Store, tap Purchased, tap My Purchases, then choose a family member. Turn on Ask to Buy. The family organizer can require young family members to request approval for purchases or free downloads. Go to Settings > [your name] > Family Sharing, then tap the personʼs name. Note: Age restrictions for Ask to Buy vary by area. In the United States, the family organizer can enable Ask to Buy for any family member under age 18; for children under age 13, itʼs enabled by default. Hide your iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store purchases. To hide all your purchases from family members, go to Settings > [your name] > Family Sharing > [your name], then turn off Share My Purchases. On your computer, you can also hide specific purchases so they arenʼt available to other family members. For more information, see the Apple Support article Hide and unhide iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store purchases. Share photos or videos with family members. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared album called Family is automatically created in the Photos app on all family membersʼ devices. To share a photo or video with family members, open the Photos app, Page 215 of 292 iPad User Guide then view a photo or video or select multiple photos or videos. Tap , tap iCloud Photo Sharing, add comments, then share to your shared family album. See iCloud Photo Sharing. Add an event to the family calendar. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared calendar called Family is automatically created in the Calendar app on all family membersʼ devices. To add a family event, open the Calendar app, create an event, then choose to add the event to the family calendar. See Share iCloud calendars. Set up a family reminder. When you set up Family Sharing, a shared list is automatically created in the Reminders app on all family membersʼ devices. To add a reminder to the family list, open the Reminders app, tap the family list, then add a reminder to the list. See Reminder lists. Share your location with family members. Family members can share their location by tapping Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Share My Location. To find a family memberʼs location, use the Find My Friends app. Or, use the Messages app (iOS 8 or later required). For more information about using Messages to share or view locations, see Share photos, videos, and audio. Keep track of your familyʼs devices. If family members enabled Share My Location in iCloud, you can help them locate missing devices. Open Find iPhone on your device or at iCloud.com. For more information, see Find your iPad. Leave Family Sharing. Go to Settings > [your name] > Family Sharing > [your name], then tap Leave Family Sharing. If you are the organizer, tap Stop Family Sharing. For more information, see the Apple Support article Leave Family Sharing. Page 216 of 292 iPad User Guide iPad and other devices AirPlay Mirroring Use AirPlay to mirror your iPad on Apple TV. A blue bar appears at the top of the iPad screen when AirPlay Mirroring is turned on. If you donʼt see your AirPlay-enabled devices when you tap , make sure everything is on the same Wi-Fi network. Display the AirPlay controls. Swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen to open Control Center, then tap Stream content. Tap , then choose the device you want to stream to. Switch back to iPad. Tap tap , then choose iPad. , then tap Turn Off AirPlay Mirroring. From a streaming app, You can also connect iPad to a TV, projector, or other external display using the appropriate Apple cable or adapter. For more information, see the Apple Support article About Apple Digital AV Adapters for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. AirPrint Use AirPrint to print wirelessly to an AirPrint-enabled printer from apps such as Mail, Photos, and Safari. Many apps available on the App Store also support AirPrint. iPad and the printer must be on the same Wi-Fi network. For more information about AirPrint, see the Apple Support article About AirPrint. Print a document. Tap or (depending on the app youʼre using). See the status of a print job. Double-click the Home button, then tap Print Center. The badge on the icon shows how many documents are in the queue. Cancel a job. Select it in Print Center, then tap Cancel Printing. Bluetooth devices You can use Bluetooth devices such as wireless headphones, speakers, and more with iPad. For information, see the Apple Support article Supported Bluetooth profiles. Page 217 of 292 iPad User Guide WARNING: For important information about avoiding hearing loss and avoiding distractions that could lead to dangerous situations, see Important safety information. Note: The use of certain accessories with iPad may affect wireless performance. Not all iPhone and iPod touch accessories are fully compatible with iPad. Turning on Airplane Mode may eliminate audio interference between iPad and an accessory. Reorienting or relocating iPad and the connected accessory may improve wireless performance. Turn Bluetooth on or off. Go to Settings > Bluetooth. You can also turn Bluetooth on or off in Control Center. Pair with a Bluetooth device. Follow the instructions that came with the device to put it in discovery mode. Then go to Settings > Bluetooth, and tap the device in the Devices list to connect. iPad must be within about 33 feet (10 meters) of the Bluetooth device. If you have AirPods, and you set them up with one iOS device or Mac computer, they are automatically set up with your other devices where youʼre signed in using the same iCloud account (iOS 10, macOS Sierra, watchOS 3 required). For more information about setting up AirPods, go to the AirPods Support website. For information about Apple Wireless Keyboard, see Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard. Switch audio output between a connected Bluetooth device and iPad. Open Control Center, swipe left, then choose your audio output. Output returns to iPad if the Bluetooth device moves out of range. Unpair a device. Go to Settings > Bluetooth, tap next to the device, then tap Forget This Device. If you donʼt see the Devices list, make sure Bluetooth is on. If you have AirPods and you tap Forget This Device, they are automatically removed from other devices that are set up through your iCloud account. Page 218 of 292 iPad User Guide Continuity Continuity connects iPad with your iPhone, iPod touch, and Mac so they work together. The following are some examples of what you can do with Continuity: Use Handoff to start an email or document on iPad, then pick up where you left off on your iPhone. Copy an image on iPad, and Use Universal Clipboard to paste it on your Mac. If you have iPhone, use Continuity to make phone calls and send SMS and MMS text messages with your iPad. If you have iPhone or iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular, use Instant Hotspot to provide Internet access to iPod touch or your Mac. For more information about Continuity, see the Apple Support article Use Continuity to connect your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Mac. For information about which devices support specific Continuity features, see the Apple Support article System requirements for Continuity. Handoff Continue working on one device where you left off on another. You can use Handoff with many Apple apps—for example, Mail, Safari, Pages, Numbers, Keynote, Maps, Messages, Reminders, Calendar, and Contacts—and even some third-party apps. To use Handoff, you must be signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID on all your devices. Your devices must have Bluetooth on and be within Bluetooth range of one another (about 33 feet or 10 meters). Switch devices. From Mac to iPad: The Handoff icon of the app youʼre using on your Mac appears on iPad in the bottom-left corner of the Lock screen. Swipe up to continue working in the app. Or, double-click the Home button on iPad to see the app switcher, then tap the app. From iPad to Mac: The Handoff icon of the app youʼre using on iPad appears on your Mac at the left end of the Dock (or the top, depending on the Dock position). Click the icon to continue working in the app. Disable Handoff on your devices. Page 219 of 292 iPad User Guide iOS devices: Go to Settings > General > Handoff. Mac: Choose Apple Menu > System Preferences > General, then turn off “Allow Handoff between this Mac and your iCloud devices.” Universal Clipboard Cut or copy content (a block of text or an image, for example) on your iPad, then paste it on another iOS device or Mac computer, and vice versa. For Universal Clipboard to work, you must be signed in to iCloud using the same Apple ID on all your devices. Your devices must be connected to Wi-Fi, be within Bluetooth range of one another (about 33 feet or 10 meters), have Bluetooth on, and have Handoff enabled. Universal Clipboard requires iOS 10 and macOS Sierra. You must cut, copy, and paste your content within a short period of time. Copy or cut. Touch and hold a word or image to display the selection options, then choose Copy or Cut. Paste. Double-tap to place an insertion point and display the selection options, then choose Paste. For more information about selecting text or placing the insertion point, see Type and edit text. Make and receive phone calls Continuity lets you make calls on your iPad by relaying calls through your iPhone, which must be turned on and connected to a cellular network. To make calls this way, you need iOS 8 or later and OS X 10.10 or later. You must be signed in to iCloud and FaceTime on all your devices using the same Apple ID as on iPhone, and all devices must be connected to the same Wi-Fi network. Wi-Fi Calling lets you make and receive phone calls on your iPad (iOS 9 or later), as long as youʼre signed in to iCloud and FaceTime on your iPhone and iPad with the same Apple ID. Your iPhone doesnʼt need to be on the same network as your iPad or even turned on. Note: Wi-Fi Calling on other devices is available with some carriers, and cellular charges may apply. Page 220 of 292 iPad User Guide You must first set up your iPhone (iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, and later), and then your iPad (iPad Pro, 6th generation iPad, iPad Air and later, or iPad mini and later). On iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular models, you can also make Wi-Fi calls over a cellular data connection when a Wi-Fi network is not available, which may incur additional charges (available with some carriers). To avoid using your cellular data connection for Wi-Fi Calling, go to Settings > Cellular Data, then turn off FaceTime. Note: If you turn off FaceTime in Settings > Cellular Data, this keeps your iPad Wi-Fi + Cellular model from using a cellular data connection for FaceTime video or audio calls. Turn on Wi-Fi Calling on your iPhone. Go to Settings > Phone > Wi-Fi Calling, then turn on Wi-Fi Calling on This iPhone. If you see Add Wi-Fi Calling For Other Devices, turn it on to allow calls from other devices that arenʼt on the same Wi-Fi network as your iPhone. Otherwise, you can still use your other devices to make phone calls, but your iPhone must be turned on and on the same network as those devices. Turn on Wi-Fi Calling on your iPad. Go to Settings > FaceTime, then turn on FaceTime. If asked, turn on Wi-Fi Calling. Note: If you enable Wi-Fi Calling, emergency calls may be made over Wi-Fi, and your deviceʼs location information may be used for emergency calls to aid response efforts, regardless of whether you enable Location Services. Some carriers may use the address you registered with the carrier when signing up for Wi-Fi Calling as your location. Receive a call on your iPad. Swipe the notification to answer, ignore, or respond with a quick message. Make a phone call on your iPad. Tap a phone number in Contacts, Calendar, FaceTime, Messages, Spotlight, or Safari. For more information about Wi-Fi calls, see the Apple Support article Make a call with Wi-Fi Calling. Instant Hotspot You can use Instant Hotspot on your iPhone (with iOS 8 or later) or iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models with iOS 8 or later) to provide Internet access to your other devices (iOS 8 or later) and Mac computers (OS X 10.10 or later) where youʼre signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID. Instant Hotspot uses your iPhone or iPad Personal Hotspot, without you having to enter a password or even turn on Personal Hotspot. Page 221 of 292 iPad User Guide Use Instant Hotspot. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi on your iOS (models without cellular capabilities). Under Personal Hotspots, choose your iPhone or iPad network. On your Mac, choose your iPhone or iPad network from your Wi-Fi settings. When youʼre not using the hotspot, your devices disconnect to save battery life. For more information about ways to set up a Personal Hotspot see Personal Hotspot. Note: This feature may not be available with all carriers. Additional fees may apply. Contact your carrier for more information. Personal Hotspot Use Personal Hotspot to share your iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models) Internet connection. Computers can share your Internet connection using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or a USB cable. Other iOS devices can share the connection using Wi-Fi. Personal Hotspot works only if iPad is connected to the Internet over the cellular data network. Note: This feature may not be available with all carriers. Additional fees may apply. Contact your carrier for more information. Share an Internet connection. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, then tap Personal Hotspot —if it appears—to set up the service with your carrier. After you turn on Personal Hotspot, other devices can connect in the following ways: Wi-Fi: On the device, choose your iPad from the list of available Wi-Fi networks. USB: Connect iPad to your computer using the cable that came with it. In your computerʼs Network preferences, choose iPad, then configure the network settings. Bluetooth: On iPad, go to Settings > Bluetooth, then turn on Bluetooth. To pair and connect iPad with your Bluetooth device, refer to the documentation that came with your device. Note: When a device is connected, a blue band appears at the top of the iPad screen. The Personal Hotspot icon appears in the status bar of iOS devices using Personal Hotspot. Change the Wi-Fi password for iPad. Go to Settings > Personal Hotspot > Wi-Fi Password, then enter a password of at least eight characters. Page 222 of 292 iPad User Guide Change the name of your Personal Hotspot. You can change the name of your Personal Hotspot by changing the name of your iPad. Go to Settings > General > About > Name. Monitor your cellular data network usage. Go to Settings > Cellular. See Cellular data settings. Use iTunes to transfer files You can transfer files between iPad and your computer or other iOS devices with iCloud Drive, AirDrop, email attachments, or by connecting iPad to your computer and using iTunes. Transfer files using iTunes. Connect iPad to your computer using the included cable. In iTunes on your computer, select iPad, then click Apps. Use the File Sharing section to transfer documents between iPad and your computer. Apps that support file sharing appear in the Apps list. To delete a file, select it in the Documents list on your computer, then press the Delete key. For more information, see the Apple Support article About File Sharing on iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Page 223 of 292 iPad User Guide Privacy and security Privacy Location Services Location Services lets location-based apps such as Reminders, Maps, and Camera gather and use data indicating your location. Your approximate location is determined using available information from local Wi-Fi networks, if you have Wi-Fi turned on. The location data collected by Apple isnʼt collected in a form that personally identifies you. When an app is using Location Services, appears in the status bar. Privacy settings let you see and control which apps and system services have access to Location Services, and to Contacts, Calendars, Reminders, and Photos. Turn Location Services on or off. Go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services. You can turn it off for some or for all apps and services. If you turn off Location Services, youʼre asked to turn it on again the next time an app or service tries to use it. Turn Location Services off for system services. Several system services, such as location-based ads, use Location Services. To see their status, turn them on or off, or show in the status bar when these services use your location, go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > System Services. Turn off access to private information. Go to Settings > Privacy. You can see which apps and features have requested, and you have granted, access to private information. You can turn off each appʼs access to each of these categories of information: Contacts Calendar Reminders Photos Bluetooth Sharing Microphone Page 224 of 292 iPad User Guide Camera HomeKit Media Library Motion & Fitness Twitter Facebook Review the terms and privacy policy for each third-party app to understand how it uses the data itʼs requesting. For more information, see the Apple Support article About privacy and Location Services. Advertising Turn off location-based ads and offers. Go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > System Services, then turn off Location-Based Apple Ads. Reset or limit Ad Tracking. Go to Settings > Privacy > Advertising (at the bottom of the screen). To clear the data used to determine which ads might be relevant to you, tap Reset Advertising Identifier. To opt out of targeted advertising, turn on Limit Ad Tracking. Note: If you turn on Limit Ad Tracking, you may still receive the same number of ads, but they may be less relevant to you. View the information Apple uses to deliver targeted ads. Go to Settings > Privacy > Advertising > View Ad information. The information is used by Apple to deliver more relevant ads in Apple News and the App Store. Your personal data is not provided to other parties. For more information, go to Settings > Privacy > Advertising > About Advertising & Privacy. Page 225 of 292 iPad User Guide Security Use a passcode with data protection For better security, you can set a passcode that must be entered each time you turn on or wake up iPad. Set, change, or turn off the passcode. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3 and later) or Settings > Passcode (other models). To adjust when iPad automatically locks (and then requires the passcode to unlock), go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Auto-Lock. Setting a passcode turns on data protection, using your passcode as a key to encrypt Mail messages and attachments stored on iPad, using 256-bit AES encryption. (Other apps may also use data protection.) Increase security. Turn off Simple Passcode and use a longer passcode. To enter a passcode thatʼs a combination of numbers and letters, you use the keyboard. If you prefer to unlock iPad using the numeric keypad, set up a longer passcode using numbers only. Add fingerprints and set options for the Touch ID sensor. (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3 and later) Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode. See Touch ID. Allow access to features when iPad is locked. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3 and later) or Settings > Passcode (other models). Optional features include: Today View (see Notifications) Notifications View (see Notifications) Siri (if enabled, see Make requests) Home Control (see Home overview) Allow access to Control Center when iPad is locked. Go to Settings > Control Center. See Control Center. Page 226 of 292 iPad User Guide Erase data after ten failed passcode attempts. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3 and later) or Settings > Passcode (other models), then tap Erase Data. After ten failed passcode attempts, all settings are reset, all your information and media are erased, and you must restore iPad from a backup or set it up again as new. Use two-factor authentication for security Two-factor authentication is an extra layer of security for your Apple ID designed to ensure that youʼre the only person who can access your account, even if someone knows your password. Itʼs built into iOS 9 and later, and OS X 10.11 and later. Turn on two-factor authentication. Turn it on when asked while setting up iPad. Or, go to Settings > [your name] > Password & Security, then tap Turn On Two-Factor Authentication. When asked, verify your identity with a six-digit verification code (as described below). You wonʼt be asked for a verification code again on your iPad unless you sign out completely, erase your iPad, sign in to your Apple ID account page in Safari on your iPad, or need to change your Apple ID password for security reasons. Verify your identity with a six-digit verification code. When youʼre asked on your iPad for the code, look for a notification on any of your trusted devices or at a trusted phone number. On a trusted device, tap or click Allow to make a code appear on that device. To send the code to a trusted phone number, tap “Didnʼt get a verification code?”, then choose the phone number. Enter the code on your iPad. If you canʼt receive a verification code automatically on your trusted devices (described below), and a trusted phone number (described below) is unavailable, you can get a verification code from Settings on a trusted device, even if your device is offline. On a trusted iOS device, go to Settings > [your name] > Password & Security, then tap Get Verification Code. On a trusted Mac, choose Apple Menu > System Preferences > iCloud > Account Details > Security, then click Get Verification Code. Add another iOS device (iOS 9 or later) or a Mac (OS X El Capitan or later) as a trusted device. After you turn on two-factor authentication, use the same Apple ID to sign in to iCloud on another device. If you previously signed in, sign in again. (On an iOS device, go to Settings > [your name]. On a Mac, choose Apple Menu > System Preferences > iCloud.) Verify your identity with a six-digit verification code (as described above). You can receive verification codes on all your trusted devices. Page 227 of 292 iPad User Guide You wonʼt be asked for a verification code again on a trusted device unless you sign out completely, erase your device, sign in to your Apple ID account page in Safari on that device, or need to change your Apple ID password for security reasons. Add a trusted phone number. Go to Settings > [your name] > Password & Security, tap Edit (above the list of trusted phone numbers), then tap Add a Trusted Phone Number. You must verify at least one trusted phone number to enroll in two-factor authentication. You should also consider verifying other phone numbers you can access, such as a home phone, or a number used by a family member or close friend. Trusted phone numbers donʼt automatically receive verification codes. If you canʼt access any trusted devices when setting up a new device for two-factor authentication, tap “Didnʼt get a verification code?” on the new device, then choose one of your trusted phone numbers to receive the verification code. Remove a trusted phone number. Go to Settings > [your name] > Password & Security, tap Edit (above the list of trusted phone numbers), then tap next to the phone number. Get a verification code on a trusted iPad, even when youʼre offline. If you need to enter a verification code on another device when setting it up for two-factor authentication, but you canʼt receive the code on a trusted iPad automatically, you can get a verification code from Settings on the trusted iPad. Go to Settings > [your name] > Password & Security, then tap Get Verification Code. View or remove trusted devices. Go to Settings > [your name]. A list of the devices associated with your Apple ID appears near the bottom of the screen. To see if a listed device is trusted, tap it, then look for “This device is trusted and can receive Apple ID verification codes.” To remove a device, tap it, then tap Remove From Account. Turn off two-factor authentication. Sign in to your Apple ID account page, tap Security, tap Edit, then tap Turn Off Two-Factor Authentication. For more help with two-factor authentication, see the Apple Support article Two-factor authentication for Apple ID. Touch ID On iPad Pro, iPad (5th generation), iPad Air 2, and iPad mini 3 and later, you can unlock iPad by placing a finger on the Home button. Touch ID also lets you: Use your Apple ID password to make purchases in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store Page 228 of 292 iPad User Guide Provide debit and credit card info, billing and shipping addresses, and contact info when paying in an app that offers Apple Pay as a method of payment Set up the Touch ID sensor. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode. Set whether you want to use a fingerprint to unlock iPad, and to make purchases. Tap Add a Fingerprint, then follow the onscreen instructions. You can add multiple fingerprints (both of your thumbs and forefingers, for example, and one for your spouse). Note: If you turn iPad off after setting up the Touch ID sensor, youʼre asked to confirm your passcode when you turn iPad back on and unlock it the first time. Youʼre also asked for your Apple ID password for the first purchase you make in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store. Delete a fingerprint. Tap the fingerprint, then tap Delete Fingerprint. If you have more than one fingerprint, place a finger on the Home button to find out which fingerprint it is. Name a fingerprint. Tap the fingerprint, then enter a name, such as “Thumb.” Use the Touch ID sensor to make a payment in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store. When purchasing from the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBooks Store, follow the prompts to enable purchases with your fingerprint. Or go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode, then turn on iTunes & App Store. Use Touch ID to make a payment within an app that supports Apple Pay. Go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode to ensure that Apple Pay is enabled with your Touch ID. For more information about Apple Pay, go to the Apple Pay website. iCloud Keychain iCloud Keychain keeps your Safari website user names and passwords, credit card information, and Wi-Fi network information up to date across all of your approved devices (iOS 7 or later) and Mac computers (OS X 10.9 or later). iCloud Keychain is secured with 256-bit AES encryption during storage and transmission, and its data cannot be read by Apple. iCloud Keychain works with Safari Password Generator and AutoFill. When youʼre setting up a new account, Safari Password Generator suggests unique, hard-to-guess passwords. You can use AutoFill to have iPad enter your user name, password, and credit card info automatically. To protect your personal information, set a passcode if you turn on iCloud Keychain and AutoFill. Note: Some websites do not support AutoFill. Page 229 of 292 iPad User Guide iCloud Keychain can also keep the accounts you use in Mail, Contacts, Calendar, and Messages up to date across all of your iOS devices and Mac computers. To learn more about iCloud Keychain, see the Apple Support article Frequently asked questions. Set up iCloud Keychain. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Keychain. Turn on iCloud Keychain, then follow the onscreen instructions. When you set up iCloud Keychain, you create an iCloud Security Code. You can use your iCloud Security Code to authorize additional devices to use your iCloud Keychain. Itʼs also used to verify your identity so that you can perform other iCloud Keychain actions, such as recovering your iCloud Keychain if you lose all your devices. Set up iCloud Keychain on additional devices. Set up iCloud Keychain for each device that you want to add. When you turn on iCloud Keychain on an additional device, your other devices that use iCloud Keychain receive a notification requesting approval for the additional device. After you approve the additional device, your iCloud Keychain automatically begins updating on that device. To approve iCloud Keychain on an additional device when you donʼt have access to your other devices, follow the onscreen instructions to use your iCloud Security Code. Forgot your iCloud Security Code? If you enter the wrong iCloud Security Code too many times when using iCloud Keychain, your iCloud Keychain is disabled on that device, and your keychain in iCloud is deleted. To reset or create a new iCloud Security Code, see the Apple Support article If you enter your iCloud Security Code incorrectly too many times. Find your iPad If you misplace your iPad, the Find My iPhone app can help you locate it and protect your data. Use the Find My iPhone app on another iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch—or use the Find My iPhone web app on any Mac or PC—to locate your iPad on a map, lock it remotely, play a sound, display a message, or erase all its data. Find My iPhone includes a feature called Activation Lock that prevents anyone else from activating and using your iPad, even if itʼs completely erased. You can also use Find My iPhone to locate your AirPods, your Apple Watch, and your other iOS devices. Note: For more information about Find My iPhone, refer to the Help in the app. Page 230 of 292 iPad User Guide Allow Find My iPhone to locate your iPad. Go to Settings > [your name] > iCloud, then turn on Find My iPad. Also turn on Send Last Location to have iPad send its last location prior to the battery running out. (See iCloud if you need help setting up iCloud.) Important: To use these features, the Find My iPad setting must be turned on before your iPad is lost. iPad must be able to connect to the Internet for you to locate and secure the device. Use Find My iPhone. On iPad or another iOS device, open Find My iPhone. Or on a computer, go to the Find My iPhone web app. Sign in, then select the device you want to locate. Play Sound: Play a sound at full volume for two minutes, even if the ringer is set to silent. Lost Mode: Immediately lock your missing iPad with a passcode and display a custom message on the screen with a contact number. Find My iPhone tracks and reports the location of your iPad, so you can see where itʼs been. When iPad is in Lost Mode on devices that support Apple Pay, Find My iPhone attempts to suspend the ability to pay with credit and debit cards used for Apple Pay. Erase iPad: Protect your privacy by erasing all the information and media on your iPad and restoring it to its original factory settings. Activation Lock prevents anyone else from activating and using your iPad, even after you erase it with Find My iPhone. On devices that support Apple Pay, erasing iPad also removes the ability to pay with credit and debit cards used for Apple Pay. Before you sell or give away your iPad, you should completely erase it in Settings, which removes Activation Lock. The next owner can then activate and use the device normally. Page 231 of 292 iPad User Guide Restart, update, reset, and restore Restart an app or iPad If something isnʼt working right, try restarting the problem app or iPad. Restart an app. If an app isnʼt working properly, you can force it to quit, then try to reopen it. (Typically, there is no reason to quit an app; quitting it doesnʼt save battery power, for example.) Double-click the Home button, then drag the app up from the app switcher display to quit the app. Opening it again may resolve the problem. Restart iPad. Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the slider appears. Slide your finger across the slider to turn off iPad. To turn iPad back on, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears. Force restart iPad. If iPad isnʼt responding, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button and the Home button at the same time for at least ten seconds, until the Apple logo appears. If iPad still doesnʼt respond or turn on, see the Apple Support article If your iPad wonʼt turn on. Update iOS software You can update the iOS software in Settings or by using iTunes. Your content and settings remain unchanged. Before you update, make a backup of iPad using iCloud or iTunes. Update wirelessly on iPad. If a message says that an update is available, tap Install Now. Or go to Settings > General > Software Update to check for available software updates. Update software using iTunes. iTunes checks for available software updates each time you sync iPad using iTunes. For more information, see the Apple Support articles Update the iOS software and If you canʼt update or restore your device. Page 232 of 292 iPad User Guide Reset iPad settings Without erasing your content, you can return iPad settings to their defaults. If you want to save your settings, back them up in iCloud or back them up using iTunes before resetting them. If you want to use iTunes to delete your content along with your settings, and then restore iPad to factory settings, see Restore iPad. If you want to completely erase all content and settings, see Erase iPad. Return settings to their defaults. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then choose an option: WARNING: If you choose the Erase All Content and Settings option, all of your content is removed. See Erase iPad. Reset All Settings: All settings are reset. Reset Network Settings: Only network settings are removed. When you reset network settings, previously used networks and VPN settings that werenʼt installed by a configuration profile or mobile device management (MDM) are removed. Wi-Fi is turned off and then back on, disconnecting you from any network youʼre on. The Wi-Fi and Ask to Join Networks settings remain turned on. To remove VPN settings installed by a configuration profile, go to Settings > General > Profiles & Device Management, select the configuration profile, then tap Delete Profile. This also removes other settings and accounts provided by the profile. For more information, see Profiles settings in this guide. To remove network settings installed by MDM, go to Settings > General > Profiles & Device Management, select the management, then tap Remove Management. This also removes other settings and certificates provided by MDM. For more information, see “Mobile device management (MDM)” in the iOS Deployment Reference. Reset Keyboard Dictionary: You add words to the keyboard dictionary by rejecting words iPad suggests as you type. Resetting the keyboard dictionary erases only the words youʼve added. Reset Home Screen Layout: Returns the built-in apps to their original layout on the Home screen. Reset Location & Privacy: Resets the location services and privacy settings to their defaults. Page 233 of 292 iPad User Guide Restore iPad To restore copies of your content and settings to iPad, you must first create a backup of your iPad. See Back up iPad with iCloud Backup and Back up iPad with iTunes. If youʼre asked to enter your passcode or Apple ID password and youʼve forgotten either, see Forgot your Apple ID, iPad passcode, or iCloud Security Code? Erase then restore iPad from a backup. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then tap Erase All Content and Settings. After iPad restarts, follow the setup assistant to restore iPad from an iCloud or iTunes backup. Restore iPad from an iTunes backup. Connect iPad to the computer you normally sync with, then in iTunes choose File > Devices > Restore from Backup. Restore iPad to factory settings using iTunes. Connect iPad to a computer, open iTunes on the computer, click the iPad button near the top of the iTunes window, then click Restore iPad in the Summary pane. All of the content and settings on iPad are deleted, and the latest iOS software is installed. Important: Restoring iPad to factory settings using iTunes deletes all your information and settings, but doesnʼt erase it. Deleted information canʼt be accessed through the iPad interface, but it remains on your device. For information about erasing all content and settings, see Erase iPad. For more information, see the Apple Support articles Restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch from a backup and If you can‘t update or restore your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. For more information about iTunes, refer to the Help in the app. Restore purchased items You can download items purchased from the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store again, free of charge. If your family sets up Family Sharing, you can download items purchased by other family members, too. If you see next to an item, itʼs already been purchased, and you can download it again. To find purchases that arenʼt on your iPad, do the following: iTunes Store: Tap Purchased, tap a category (Music, Movies, or TV Shows), then tap Not on this iPad. To see purchases from other family members, tap My Purchases (or a family memberʼs purchases) in the top-left corner, then choose a family member. Page 234 of 292 iPad User Guide App Store: Tap Purchased, then tap Not on this iPad. To see purchases from other family members, tap My Purchases (or a family memberʼs purchases) in the top-left corner, then choose a family member. iBooks Store: Tap Purchased, tap a category from your purchases (or from a family memberʼs purchases), then tap Not on this iPad. Erase iPad When you delete data, itʼs no longer accessible through the iPad interface, but it isnʼt erased from iPad. To remove all of your content and settings, erase iPad. If you want to save your content and settings, back them up in iCloud or back them up using iTunes before erasing iPad. Important: Erase iPad before you sell or give it away. If you previously turned on Find my iPad, Activation Lock is removed when you erase iPad, making it ready for a new owner. For more information, see the Apple Support article What to do before selling or giving away your iPad. Erase all content and settings from iPad. Go to Settings > General > Reset, then tap Erase All Content and Settings. (If youʼre asked to enter your passcode or Apple ID password and youʼve forgotten either, see Forgot your Apple ID, iPad passcode, or iCloud Security Code?) After iPad restarts, follow the setup assistant to either set up iPad as new or restore it from an iCloud or iTunes backup. Page 235 of 292 iPad User Guide Accessibility Accessibility features iPad offers many accessibility features: Vision VoiceOver Support for braille displays Zoom Magnifier Set display accommodations Speak Selection Speak Screen Typing feedback Large, bold, and high-contrast text Button Shapes Reduce motion On/off switch labels Assignable tones Audio Descriptions Hearing Hearing devices Mono audio and balance Subtitles and closed captions Page 236 of 292 iPad User Guide Interaction Siri Widescreen keyboards Guided Access Switch Control overview AssistiveTouch Touch Accommodations Software and hardware keyboards Turn on accessibility features. You can turn on many accessibility features just by asking Siri (“turn on VoiceOver,” for example). See Siri and Make requests. Or go to Settings > General > Accessibility, or use Accessibility Shortcut. Use iTunes on your computer to configure accessibility on iPad. In iTunes you can enable a limited number of accessibility features, including VoiceOver, Switch Control, Guided Access, zoom, invert colors, speak auto-text, mono audio, and show closed captions where available. Click Summary, then click Configure Accessibility at the bottom of the Summary screen. For more information about iPad accessibility features, go to the Apple Accessibility website. Accessibility Shortcut Accessibility Shortcut lets you quickly turn accessibility features on and off by tripleclicking the Home button. Set up Accessibility Shortcut. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Accessibility Shortcut, then select the features you use the most: VoiceOver Invert Colors Color Filters Reduce White Point Page 237 of 292 iPad User Guide Zoom Switch Control AssistiveTouch Magnifier (available after you set up Magnifier) Touch Accommodations (available after you set up Touch Accommodations) Guided Access (available after you set up Guided Access) Hearing Devices (available after you pair Made for iPhone hearing aids) Use Accessibility Shortcut. Triple-click the Home button. Slow down the double-click or triple-click speed for the Home button. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Home Button. Page 238 of 292 iPad User Guide VoiceOver VoiceOver VoiceOver describes aloud what appears onscreen, so that you can use iPad even if you are blind or have difficulty seeing the screen. VoiceOver tells you about each item you select. The VoiceOver cursor (a black outline) encloses the item and VoiceOver speaks its name or describes it. Touch the screen or drag your finger over it to hear the items on the screen, including icons and text. To interact with items, such as buttons and links, use VoiceOver gestures. When you go to a new screen, VoiceOver plays a sound, then selects and speaks the first item on the screen (typically in the upper-left corner). It lets you know when the display changes to landscape or portrait orientation, when the screen becomes dimmed or locked, and is active on the Lock screen when you wake iPad. Note: VoiceOver is available in many languages. Go to Settings > General > Language & Region to choose a language. Use iPad with VoiceOver Turn VoiceOver on or off. Press and hold the Home button and tell Siri “turn VoiceOver on.” To turn VoiceOver off, tell Siri “turn VoiceOver off.” You can also go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, or use Accessibility Shortcut. Unlock iPad. Press either the Sleep/Wake or Home button, then double-tap the screen. On iPad models with Touch ID, you can unlock iPad by placing your finger on the Home button. See Home button. Enter your passcode silently. To avoid having your passcode spoken as you enter it, enable handwriting mode or type onscreen braille. Unlock iPad with Touch ID. You can unlock iPad by pressing your finger on the Home button if you set up Touch ID (iPad Pro, iPad 5th generation, iPad Air 2, and iPad mini 3 and later). To use Touch ID by resting your finger on the Home button, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Home Button, then turn on Rest Finger to Open. Open an app, toggle a switch, or tap an item. Tap the item, then double-tap the screen. Page 239 of 292 iPad User Guide Double-tap the selected item. To invoke a command normally executed by tapping twice on the screen—selecting a word or zooming an image, for example—tap three times. Adjust a slider. Tap the slider, then swipe up or down with one finger. Use a standard gesture. Double-tap and hold your finger on the screen until you hear three rising tones, then make the gesture. When you lift your finger, VoiceOver gestures resume. For example, to drag a volume slider with your finger instead of swiping up and down, select the slider, double-tap and hold, wait for the three tones, then slide left or right. Scroll a list or area of the screen. Swipe up or down with three fingers. Use the list index: Some lists have an alphabetical table index along the right side. Select the index, then swipe up or down to move through the index. You can also double-tap, hold, then slide your finger up or down. Reorder a list: You can change the order of items in some lists, such as the Rotor items in Accessibility settings. Tap to the right of an item, double-tap and hold until you hear three rising tones, then drag up or down. Open Notification Center. Tap any item in the status bar, then swipe down with three fingers. Or, touch and hold the top of the screen until you hear a sound, then swipe down. To dismiss Notification Center, do a two-finger scrub (move two fingers back and forth three times quickly, making a “z”) or press the Home button. Open Control Center. Tap any item in the status bar, then swipe up with three fingers. Or, touch and hold the bottom of the screen until you hear a sound, then swipe up. To dismiss Control Center, do a two-finger scrub or press the Home button. Open Spotlight Search. Swipe down with three fingers from the middle of the Home screen. Activate Slide Over. Tap any item in the status bar, then swipe left with three fingers. Or, touch and hold the right edge of the screen until you hear a sound, then swipe left. Select the divider: Tap the divider. Turn on Split View: Double-tap the divider. Resize the divider: Double-tap and hold the divider, then drag it. Page 240 of 292 iPad User Guide Switch apps. Double-click the Home button to display open apps, swipe left or right with one finger to select an app, then double-tap to switch to it. Or, set the rotor to Actions while viewing open apps, then swipe up or down to cycle through the apps. Rearrange apps on your Home screen. Use one of the following methods: Drag and drop: Tap an icon on the Home screen, then double-tap and hold your finger on the screen until you hear three rising tones. The itemʼs relative location is described as you drag. Lift your finger when the icon is in its new location. Drag an icon to the edge of the screen to move it to another Home screen. You can continue to select and move items until you press the Home button. Move actions: Tap an app and swipe down to hear available actions. When you hear “Arrange Apps," double-tap to start arranging apps. Find the app you wish to move, then swipe down to the "Move" action and double-tap. Move the VoiceOver to the new destination for this app, and choose from the available actions: Cancel Move, Create New Folder, Add to Folder, Move Before, or Move After. You can continue to select and move items until you press the Home button. Speak iPad status information. Tap the status bar at the top of the screen, then swipe left or right to hear information about the time, battery state, Wi-Fi signal strength, and more. Speak notifications. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn on Always Speak Notifications. Notifications, including the text of incoming text messages, are spoken as they occur, even if iPad is locked. Unacknowledged notifications are repeated when you unlock iPad. Turn the screen curtain on or off. Triple-tap with three fingers. When the screen curtain is on, the screen contents are active even though the display is turned off. Set audio routing options. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Audio. Device-specific options are shown if you connect additional devices, such as a instrument amplifier or a DJ mixer. Learn VoiceOver gestures Important: VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control iPad. When VoiceOver is on, you must use VoiceOver gestures to operate iPad—even to turn VoiceOver off. When VoiceOver is on, standard touchscreen gestures have different effects, and additional gestures let you move around the screen and control individual items. VoiceOver gestures include two-, three-, and four-finger taps and swipes. For best Page 241 of 292 iPad User Guide results using multifinger gestures, let your fingers touch the screen with some space between them. You can use different techniques to perform VoiceOver gestures. For example, you can perform a two-finger tap using two fingers on one hand, or one finger on each hand. You can even use your thumbs. Some people use a split-tap gesture: instead of selecting an item and double-tapping, touch and hold an item with one finger, then tap the screen with another finger. Try different techniques to discover which works best for you. If a gesture doesnʼt work, try a quicker movement, especially for a double-tap or swipe gesture. To swipe, try brushing the screen quickly with your finger or fingers. In VoiceOver settings, you can enter a special area where you can practice VoiceOver gestures without affecting iPad or its settings. Practice VoiceOver gestures. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then tap VoiceOver Practice. When you finish practicing, tap Done. If you donʼt see the VoiceOver Practice button, make sure VoiceOver is turned on. Here are some key VoiceOver gestures: Page 242 of 292 iPad User Guide Navigate and read Tap: Select and speak the item. Swipe right or left: Select the next or previous item. Swipe up or down: Depends on the rotor setting. See Use the VoiceOver rotor. Two-finger swipe up: Read all from the top of the screen. Two-finger swipe down: Read all from the current position. Two-finger tap: Stop or resume speaking. Two-finger scrub: Move two fingers back and forth three times quickly (making a “z”) to dismiss an alert or go back to the previous screen. Three-finger swipe up or down: Scroll one page at a time. Three-finger swipe right or left: Go to the next or previous page (on the Home screen, for example). Three-finger tap: Speak additional information, such as position within a list or whether text is selected. Four-finger tap at top of screen: Select the first item on the page. Four-finger tap at bottom of screen: Select the last item on the page. Page 243 of 292 iPad User Guide Activate Double-tap: Activate the selected item. Triple-tap: Double-tap an item. Split-tap: As an alternative to selecting an item and double-tapping to activate it, touch and hold an item with one finger, then tap the screen with another. Double-tap and hold (1 second) + standard gesture: Use a standard gesture. The double-tap and hold gesture tells iPad to interpret the next gesture as standard. For example, you can double-tap and hold your finger on the screen until you hear three rising tones, and then without lifting your finger, drag your finger on a slider. Two-finger double-tap: This gesture initiates an action or halts or pauses an action in progress. For example, you can: Play or pause in Music, Videos, or Photos (slideshows). Take a photo or start or pause recording in Camera. Start or stop the stopwatch. Two-finger double-tap and hold: Change an itemʼs label to make it easier to find. Two-finger triple-tap: Open the Item Chooser. Three-finger double-tap: Mute or unmute VoiceOver. If both VoiceOver and Zoom are enabled, use the three-finger triple-tap gesture. Three-finger triple-tap: Turn the screen curtain on or off. If both VoiceOver and Zoom are enabled, use the three-finger quadruple-tap gesture. Use the VoiceOver rotor Use the rotor to choose what happens when you swipe up or down with VoiceOver turned on, or to select special input methods such as Braille Screen Input or Handwriting. Operate the rotor. Rotate two fingers on the screen around a point between them. If you prefer to use one finger on each hand, simultaneously flick up with one finger and flick down with the other. Page 244 of 292 iPad User Guide Choose your rotor options. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then select the options you want to include in the rotor. The available rotor options and their effects depend on what youʼre doing. For example, if youʼre reading an email, you can use the rotor to switch between hearing text spoken word-by-word or character-by-character when you swipe up or down. If youʼre browsing a webpage, you can set the rotor to speak all the text (either word-by-word or characterby-character), or to jump from one item to another of a certain type, such as headings or links. When you use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to control VoiceOver, the rotor lets you adjust settings such as volume, speech rate, use of pitch or phonetics, typing echo, and reading of punctuation. VoiceOver basics Important: VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control iPad. When VoiceOver is on, you must use VoiceOver gestures—even to turn VoiceOver off. Explore. Drag your finger over the screen. VoiceOver speaks each item you touch. Lift your finger to leave an item selected. Select an item: Tap once to select an item, double-tap to invoke it. Select the next or previous item: Swipe right or left with one finger. Item order is leftto-right, top-to-bottom. Select the first or last item on the screen: Tap with four fingers at the top or bottom of the screen. Select an item by name: Triple-tap with two fingers anywhere on the screen to open the Item Chooser. Then type a name in the search field, or swipe right or left to move through the list alphabetically, or tap the table index to the right of the list and swipe up or down to move quickly through the list of items. You can also use handwriting to select an item by writing its name; see Write with your finger. To dismiss the Item Chooser without making a selection, double-tap. Page 245 of 292 iPad User Guide Change an itemʼs name so itʼs easier to find: Select the item, then double-tap and hold with two fingers anywhere on the screen. Speak the text of the selected item: Set the rotor to characters or words, then swipe down or up with one finger. See Use the VoiceOver rotor. Hear additional detail about using a button or feature: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn Speak Hints on or off. Use phonetic spelling: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Phonetic Feedback. Speak the entire screen, from the top: Swipe up with two fingers. Speak from the current item to the bottom of the screen: Swipe down with two fingers. Pause speaking: Tap once with two fingers. Tap again with two fingers to resume, or select another item. Mute VoiceOver: Double-tap with three fingers; repeat to unmute. If both VoiceOver and Zoom are enabled, triple-tap with three-fingers. If youʼre using an external keyboard, press the Control key. Silence sound effects: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Audio, then turn off Use Sound Effects. Use a larger VoiceOver cursor. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then turn on Large Cursor. Adjust the speaking voice. You can adjust the VoiceOver speaking voice: Change the volume: Use the volume buttons on iPad. You can also add volume to the rotor, then swipe up and down to adjust; see Use the VoiceOver rotor. Change the speech rate: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then drag the Speaking Rate slider. You can also set the rotor to Speech Rate, then swipe up or down to adjust. Use pitch change: VoiceOver uses a higher pitch when speaking the first item of a group (such as a list or table) and a lower pitch when speaking the last item of a group. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver. Speak punctuation: Set the rotor to Punctuation, then swipe up or down to select how much you want to hear. Page 246 of 292 iPad User Guide Control audio ducking: To choose whether audio thatʼs playing is turned down while VoiceOver speaks, set the rotor to Audio Ducking, then swipe up or down. Change the language for iPad: Go to Settings > General > Language & Region. VoiceOver pronunciation of some languages is affected by the Region Format you choose there. Change pronunciation: Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Language is available in the rotor only if you select more than one pronunciation in Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech > Rotor Languages. Choose which dialects are available in the rotor: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech > Rotor Languages. To adjust voice quality or speaking rate, tap a language. To remove languages from the rotor or change their order, tap Edit, tap the Delete button or drag up or down, then tap Done. Set the default voice for the current iPad language: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech > Voice. Download an enhanced quality reading voice: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech, tap a language, then choose an enhanced voice. If youʼre using English, you can choose to download Alex (869 MB), the same highquality U.S. English voice used for VoiceOver on Mac computers. Specify the pronunciation of certain words: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech > Pronunciations. Tap , enter a phrase, then dictate or spell out how you want the phrase to be pronounced. Use the onscreen keyboard When you activate an editable text field, the onscreen keyboard appears (unless you have an Apple Wireless Keyboard attached). Activate a text field. Select the text field, then double-tap. The insertion point and the onscreen keyboard appear. Choose a typing style. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Typing Style. Or, set the rotor to Typing Mode, then swipe up or down. Enter text. Type characters using the onscreen keyboard: Standard typing: Select a key on the keyboard by swiping left or right, then doubletap to enter the character. Or move your finger around the keyboard to select a key and, while continuing to touch the key with one finger, tap the screen with another Page 247 of 292 iPad User Guide finger. VoiceOver speaks the key when itʼs selected, and again when the character is entered. Touch typing: Touch a key on the keyboard to select it, then lift your finger to enter the character. If you touch the wrong key, slide your finger to the key you want. VoiceOver speaks the character for each key as you touch it, but doesnʼt enter a character until you lift your finger. Direct Touch typing: VoiceOver is disabled for the keyboard only, so you can type just as you do when VoiceOver is off. Move the insertion point. Swipe up or down to move the insertion point forward or backward in the text. Use the rotor to choose whether you want to move the insertion point by character, by word, or by line. To jump to the beginning or end, double-tap the text. VoiceOver makes a sound when the insertion point moves, and speaks the character, word, or line that the insertion point moves across. When moving forward by words, the insertion point is placed at the end of each word, before the space or punctuation that follows. When moving backward, the insertion point is placed at the end of the preceding word, before the space or punctuation that follows it. Move the insertion point past the punctuation at the end of a word or sentence. Use the rotor to switch back to character mode. When moving the insertion point by line, VoiceOver speaks each line as you move across it. When moving forward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the next line (except when you reach the last line of a paragraph, when the insertion point is moved to the end of the line just spoken). When moving backward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the line thatʼs spoken. Change typing feedback. By default, VoiceOver speaks characters as well as words when you type. To hear no feedback, hear characters only, or hear words only, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Typing Feedback, then choose an option. Use phonetics in typing feedback. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Phonetic Feedback. Text is read character by character. VoiceOver first speaks the character, then its phonetic equivalent—for example, “f” and then “foxtrot.” Delete a character. Use with any of the VoiceOver typing styles. VoiceOver speaks each character as itʼs deleted. If Use Pitch Change is turned on, VoiceOver speaks deleted characters in a lower pitch. Page 248 of 292 iPad User Guide Select text. Set the rotor to Edit, swipe up or down to choose Select or Select All, then double-tap. If you choose Select, the word closest to the insertion point is selected when you double-tap. To increase or decrease the selection, do a two-finger scrub to dismiss the pop-up menu, then pinch. Cut, copy, or paste. Set the rotor to Edit, select the text, swipe up or down to choose Cut, Copy, or Paste, then double-tap. Undo. Shake iPad, swipe left or right to choose the action to undo, then double-tap. Enter an accented character. In standard typing style, select the plain character, then double-tap and hold until you hear a sound indicating alternate characters have appeared. Drag left or right to select and hear the choices. Release your finger to enter the current selection. In touch typing style, touch and hold a character until the alternate characters appear. Change the keyboard language. Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Choose “default language” to use the language specified in Language & Region settings. The Language rotor item appears only if you select more than one language in Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Speech. Write with your finger Handwriting mode lets you enter text by writing characters on the screen with your finger. In addition to normal text entry, use handwriting mode to enter your iPad passcode silently or open apps from the Home screen. Enter handwriting mode. Use the rotor to select Handwriting. If Handwriting isnʼt in the rotor, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then add it. Choose a character type. Swipe up or down with three fingers to choose lowercase, numbers, uppercase, or punctuation. Hear the selected character type. Tap with three fingers. Enter a character. Trace the character on the screen with your finger. Enter an alternate character. To use an alternate character (a character with an accent or umlaut, for example), write the character, then swipe up or down with two fingers until you hear the type of character you want. Enter a space. Swipe right with two fingers. Go to a new line. Swipe right with three fingers. Page 249 of 292 iPad User Guide Delete the character before the insertion point. Swipe left with two fingers. Select an item on the Home screen. Start writing the name of the item. If there are multiple matches, continue to spell the name until itʼs unique, or swipe up or down with two fingers to choose from the current matches. Enter your passcode silently. Set the rotor to Handwriting on the passcode screen, then write the characters of your passcode. Use a table index to skip through a long list. Select the table index to the right of the table (for example, next to your Contacts list or in the VoiceOver Item Chooser), then write the letter. Set the rotor to a web browsing element type. Write the first letter of a page element type. For example, write “l” to have up or down swipes skip to links, or “h” to skip to headings. Exit handwriting mode. Do a two-finger scrub, or set the rotor to a different selection. Type onscreen braille If you turn on Braille Screen Input, you can use your fingers to enter 6-dot, 8-dot, or contracted braille directly on the iPad screen. Enter braille with iPad laying flat in front of you (tabletop mode), or hold iPad with the screen facing away so your fingers curl back to tap the screen (screen away mode). Turn on Braille Screen Input. Use the rotor to select Braille Screen Input. If you donʼt find it in the rotor, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor, then add it. Enter braille. Place iPad flat in front of you or hold it with the screen facing away, then tap the screen with one or several fingers at the same time. Adjust entry dot positions. To move the entry dots to match your natural finger positions, double-tap six or eight fingers at the same time. Switch between 6-dot, 8-dot, and contracted braille. Swipe to the right with three fingers. To set the default, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille > Braille Screen Input. Enter a space. Swipe right with one finger. (In screen away mode, swipe to your right.) Delete the previous character. Swipe left with one finger. Page 250 of 292 iPad User Guide Move to a new line (typing). Swipe right with two fingers. Cycle through spelling suggestions. Swipe up or down with one finger. Select an item on the Home screen. Start entering the name of the item. If there are multiple matches, continue to spell the name until it is unique, or swipe up or down with one finger to cycle through match suggestions. Open the selected app. Swipe right with two fingers. Lock the screen orientation. Swipe up or down with three fingers. Use Exploring Mode. To have iPad read dots aloud as they are tapped and released, tap and hold dots, then wait for the timer tones and announcement. Turn braille contractions on or off. Swipe to the right with three fingers. Translate immediately (when contractions are enabled). Swipe down with two fingers. Turn off Braille Screen Input. Do a two-finger scrub, or set the rotor to another setting. Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard You can control VoiceOver using an Apple Wireless Keyboard paired with iPad. See Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard. Use the following VoiceOver keyboard commands to navigate the screen, select items, read screen contents, adjust the rotor, and perform other VoiceOver actions. For the commands, you can use the Control-Option key combination or the Caps Lock key, abbreviated in the list that follows as “VO.” (To choose a modifier key, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Modifier Keys.) You can use VoiceOver Help to learn the keyboard layout and the actions associated with various key combinations. VoiceOver Help speaks keys and keyboard commands as you type them, without performing the associated action. VoiceOver keyboard commands VO = Control-Option Turn on VoiceOver Help: VO–K Turn off VoiceOver Help: Escape Page 251 of 292 iPad User Guide Select the next or previous item: VO–Right Arrow or VO–Left Arrow Double-tap to activate the selected item: VO–Space bar Press the Home button: VO–H Touch and hold the selected item: VO–Shift–M Move to the status bar: VO–M Read from the current position: VO–A Read from the top: VO–B Pause or resume reading: Control Copy the last spoken text to the clipboard: VO–Shift–C Search for text: VO–F Mute or unmute VoiceOver: VO–S Open Notification Center: Fn–VO–Up Arrow Open Control Center: Fn–VO–Down Arrow Open the Item Chooser: VO–I Change the label of the selected item: VO–/ Double-tap with two fingers: VO–”-” Swipe up or down: VO–Up Arrow or VO–Down Arrow Adjust the rotor: VO–Command–Left Arrow or VO–Command–Right Arrow Adjust the setting specified by the rotor: VO–Command–Up Arrow or VO–Command– Down Arrow Turn the screen curtain on or off: VO–Shift–S Return to the previous screen: Escape Switch apps: Command–Tab or Command–Shift–Tab Quick Nav Turn on Quick Nav to control VoiceOver using the arrow keys. Page 252 of 292 iPad User Guide Turn Quick Nav on or off: Left Arrow–Right Arrow Select the next or previous item: Right Arrow or Left Arrow Select the next or previous item specified by the rotor: Up Arrow or Down Arrow Select the first or last item: Control–Up Arrow or Control–Down Arrow Tap an item: Up Arrow–Down Arrow Scroll up, down, left, or right: Option–Up Arrow, Option–Down Arrow, Option–Left Arrow, or Option–Right Arrow Adjust the rotor: Up Arrow–Left Arrow or Up Arrow–Right Arrow Single-key Quick Nav for web browsing When you view a webpage with Quick Nav on, you can use the following keys on the keyboard to navigate the page quickly. Typing the key moves to the next item of the indicated type. To move to the previous item, hold the Shift key as you type the letter. Turn on Single-key Quick Nav: VO-Q Heading: H Link: L Text field: R Button: B Form control: C Image: I Table: T Static text: S ARIA landmark: W List: X Item of the same type: M Level 1 heading: 1 Level 2 heading: 2 Page 253 of 292 iPad User Guide Level 3 heading: 3 Level 4 heading: 4 Level 5 heading: 5 Level 6 heading: 6 Text editing Use these commands (with Quick Nav turned off) to work with text. VoiceOver reads the text as you move the insertion point. Go forward or back one character: Right Arrow or Left Arrow Go forward or back one word: Option–Right Arrow or Option–Left Arrow Go up or down one line: Up Arrow or Down Arrow Go to the beginning or end of the line: Command–Left Arrow or Command–Down Arrow Go to the beginning or end of the paragraph: Option–Up Arrow or Option–Down Arrow Go to the previous or next paragraph: Option–Up Arrow or Option–Down Arrow Go to the top or bottom of the text field: Command–Up Arrow or Command–Down Arrow Select text as you move: Shift + any of the insertion point movement commands above Select all text: Command–A Copy, cut, or paste the selected text: Command–C, Command–X, or Command–V Undo or redo last change: Command–Z or Shift–Command–Z Support for braille displays You can use a Bluetooth braille display to read VoiceOver output, and you can use a braille display with input keys and other controls to control iPad when VoiceOver is turned on. For a list of supported braille displays, go to the Braille Displays for iOS website. Page 254 of 292 iPad User Guide Connect a braille display. Turn on the display, then go to Settings > Bluetooth and turn on Bluetooth. Then, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille and choose the display. Adjust Braille settings. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille, where you can: Choose contracted, uncontracted 8-dot, or uncontracted 6-dot braille input or output Turn on the status cell and choose its location Turn on Nemeth code for mathematical equations Display the onscreen keyboard Choose to have the page turned automatically when panning Change the braille translation from Unified English Change the alert display duration For information about common braille commands for VoiceOver navigation, and for information specific to certain displays, see the Apple Support article Common braille commands for VoiceOver navigation using iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Set the language for VoiceOver. Go to Settings > General > Language & Region. If you change the language for iPad, you may need to reset the language for VoiceOver and your braille display. You can set the leftmost or rightmost cell of your braille display to provide system status and other information. For example: Announcement History contains an unread message The current Announcement History message hasnʼt been read VoiceOver speech is muted The iPad battery is low (less than 20% charge) iPad is in landscape orientation The screen display is turned off The current line contains additional text to the left Page 255 of 292 iPad User Guide The current line contains additional text to the right Set the leftmost or rightmost cell to display status information. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille > Status Cell, then tap Left or Right. See an expanded description of the status cell. On your braille display, press the status cellʼs router button. Read math equations VoiceOver can read aloud math equations encoded using: MathML on the web MathML or LaTeX in iBooks Author Hear an equation. Have VoiceOver read the text as usual. VoiceOver says “math” before it starts reading an equation. Explore the equation. Double-tap the selected equation to display it full screen and move through it one element at a time. Swipe left or right to read elements of the equation. Use the rotor to select Symbols, Small Expressions, Medium Expressions, or Large Expressions, then swipe up or down to hear the next element of that size. You can continue to double-tap the selected element to “drill down” into the equation to focus on the selected element, then swipe left or right, up or down to read one part at a time. Equations read by VoiceOver can also be output to a braille device using Nemeth code, as well as the codes used by Unified English Braille, British English, French, and Greek. See Support for braille displays. Use VoiceOver with Safari Search the web. Select the search field, double-tap to invoke the keyboard, enter your search, then swipe right or left to move down or up the list of suggested search phrases. Then double-tap the screen to search the web using the selected phrase. Skip to the next page element of a particular type. Set the rotor to the element type, then swipe up or down. Set the rotor options for web browsing. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Rotor. Tap to select or deselect options, or drag up or down to reposition an item. Page 256 of 292 iPad User Guide Skip images while navigating. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Navigate Images. You can choose to skip all images or only those without descriptions. Reduce page clutter for easier reading and navigation. Select the Reader item in the Safari address field (not available for all pages). If you pair an Apple Wireless Keyboard with iPad, you can use single-key Quick Nav commands to navigate webpages. See Use VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard. Use VoiceOver with Maps You can use VoiceOver to explore a region, browse points of interest, follow roads, zoom in or out, select a pin, or get information about a location. Control how the map tracks your current location. Double-tap until you hear the tracking option you want: Tracking on: The map automatically centers on your current location. Tracking on with heading: The map automatically centers on your current location and rotates so that the heading youʼre facing is at the top of the screen. In this mode, iPad speaks street names and points of interest as you approach them. Tracking off: The map doesnʼt automatically center on your current location. Explore the map. Drag your finger around the screen, or swipe left or right to move to another item. Zoom in or out. Select the map, set the rotor to Zoom, then swipe down or up with one finger. Pan the map. Swipe with three fingers. Browse visible points of interest. Set the rotor to Points of Interest, then swipe up or down with one finger. Follow a road. Hold your finger down on the road, wait until you hear “pause to follow,” then move your finger along the road while listening to the guide tone. The pitch increases when you stray from the road. Select a pin. Touch a pin, or swipe left or right to select the pin. Get information about a location. With a pin selected, double-tap to display the information flag. Swipe left or right to select the More Info button, then double-tap to display the information page. Page 257 of 292 iPad User Guide Edit videos with VoiceOver You can use VoiceOver gestures to trim Camera videos. Trim a video. While viewing a video in Photos, double-tap the screen to display the video controls, then select the beginning or end of the trim tool. Then swipe up to drag to the right, or swipe down to drag to the left. VoiceOver announces the amount of time the current position will trim from the recording. To complete the trim, select Trim, then double-tap. Zoom Many apps let you zoom in or out on specific items. For example, you can double-tap or pinch to look closer in Photos or expand webpage columns in Safari. Thereʼs also a general Zoom feature that lets you magnify the screen no matter what youʼre doing. You can zoom the entire screen (Full Screen Zoom) or zoom part of the screen in a resizable window and leave the rest of the screen unmagnified (Window Zoom). And, you can use Zoom together with VoiceOver. Turn Zoom on or off. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn Zoom on or off. Or use Accessibility Shortcut. Zoom in or out. With Zoom turned on, double-tap the screen with three fingers. Adjust the magnification. Double-tap with three fingers, then drag up or down. This gesture is similar to a double-tap, except you donʼt lift your fingers after the second tap —instead, drag your fingers on the screen. You can also triple-tap with three fingers, then drag the Zoom Level slider in the zoom controls that appear. To limit the maximum magnification, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then drag the Maximum Zoom Level slider all the way to the left. Pan to see more. Drag the screen with three fingers. Or hold your finger near the edge of the screen to pan to that side. Move your finger closer to the edge to pan more quickly. Or, if you have detached the Zoom Controller, drag it. Switch between Full Screen Zoom and Window Zoom. Triple-tap with three fingers, then tap Window Zoom or Full Screen Zoom in the zoom controls that appear. To choose the mode thatʼs used when you turn on Zoom, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom > Zoom Region. Resize the zoom window (Window Zoom). Triple-tap with three fingers, tap Resize Lens, then drag any of the round handles that appear. Page 258 of 292 iPad User Guide Move the zoom window (Window Zoom). Drag the handle at the bottom of the zoom window. Show the zoom controller. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then turn on Show Controller, or triple-tap with three fingers, then choose Show Controller. Then you can double-tap the floating Zoom Controls button to zoom in or out, single-tap the button to display the zoom controls, or drag it to pan. To move the Zoom Controls button, touch and hold the button, then drag it to a new location. To adjust the transparency of the zoom controller, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom > Idle Visibility. Have Zoom track your selections or the text insertion point. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then turn on Follow Focus. Then, for example, if you use VoiceOver, the zoom window magnifies each element on the screen as you select it. Zoom in on your typing without magnifying the keyboard. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then turn on Follow Focus. When you zoom in while typing (in Messages or Notes, for example), the area immediately around the text you type is magnified while all of the keyboard remains visible. Turn on Smart Typing, and the entire window (except the keyboard) is magnified. Display the magnified part of the screen in grayscale or inverted color. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom > Zoom Filter, then choose an option. Or triple-tap with three fingers, then tap Choose Filter in the zoom controls that appear. While using Zoom with an Apple Wireless Keyboard, the screen image follows the insertion point, keeping it in the center of the display. See Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard. Magnifier Turn your iPad into a magnifying glass to zoom in on objects near you. Set up Magnifier. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Magnifier, then turn on Magnifier. This adds Magnifier to Accessibility Shortcut. Start Magnifier. Triple-click the Home button. If you have multiple accessibility shortcuts, tap Magnifier. Adjust the magnification level. Drag the Zoom Level slider. Add more light. Tap to turn the flashlight on or off. Page 259 of 292 iPad User Guide Lock the focus. Tap . Tap again to unlock the focus. Freeze the frame. Tap . To adjust the magnification, drag the Zoom Level slider. To save the image, touch and hold the image, then tap Save Image. To unfreeze the frame, tap again. Apply color filters. Tap . Tap the different color filters to preview their effects. To adjust the brightness and contrast, drag the sliders. To invert the colors, tap . To apply the selected filter and return to Magnifier screen, tap again. Turn off Magnifier. Click the Home button. Set display accommodations You can invert the colors, apply color filters, or reduce the white point to make the screen easier to read. Invert the screen colors. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Display Accommodations, then turn on Invert Colors. Or, you can triple-click the Home button, then choose Invert Colors. Apply color filters. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Display Accommodations > Color Filters, then turn on Color Filters. Or, you can triple-click the Home button, then choose Color Filters. Tap a filter to apply it. To adjust the intensity or hue, drag the sliders. Reduce the intensity of bright colors. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Display Accommodations, then turn on Reduce White Point. You can also apply these effects to only the contents of the zoom window. See Zoom. Speak Selection Even with VoiceOver turned off, you can have iPad read aloud any text you select. Turn on Speak Selection. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech. There you can also: Adjust the speaking rate Choose to have individual words highlighted as theyʼre read Page 260 of 292 iPad User Guide Have text read to you. Select the text, then tap Speak. You can also have iPad read the entire screen to you. See Speak Screen. Speak Screen iPad can read the contents of the screen to you, even if you donʼt use VoiceOver. Turn on Speak Screen. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech. Have iPad speak the screen. Swipe down from the top of the screen with two fingers. Use the controls that appear to pause speaking or adjust the rate. Highlight whatʼs being spoken. Turn on Highlight Content (a command that appears when you turn on Speak Screen), and the current word is highlighted as itʼs spoken. Ask Siri. Say “speak screen.” You can also have iPad read just text you select—see Speak Selection. Typing feedback As you type, iPad can provide feedback and speak text corrections and suggestions. You can choose to have iPad speak each character, entire words, auto-corrections, autocapitalizations, and typing predictions. Turn on and configure typing feedback. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech > Typing Feedback. Speak typing predictions. Go to Settings > General > Keyboards, and turn on Predictive. Then, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speech > Typing Feedback, and turn on Hold to Speak Predictions. Touch and hold a prediction to hear it spoken. Large, bold, and high-contrast text Display larger text in apps such as Settings, Calendar, Contacts, Mail, Messages, and Notes. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Larger Text, then turn on Larger Accessibility Sizes. Display bolder text on iPad. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on Bold Text. Page 261 of 292 iPad User Guide Increase text contrast where possible. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Increase Contrast. You can choose to reduce transparency and darken colors. Button Shapes iPad can add a colored background shape or an underline to buttons so theyʼre easier to see. Emphasize buttons. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on Button Shapes. Reduce motion If you have sensitivity to motion effects or screen movement on your iPad, you can stop or reduce the movement of some screen elements, such as: Parallax effect of wallpaper, apps, and alerts Screen transitions Siri animations Typing autocompletion Animated effects in Messages Reduce motion. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Reduce Motion, then turn on Reduce Motion. If you donʼt want to automatically play bubble and full-screen effects in Messages, turn off Auto-play Message Effects. To manually play effects in Messages, tap Replay under the message bubble. On/off switch labels To make it easier to distinguish whether a setting is on or off, you can have iPad show an additional label on on/off switches. Add switch-setting labels. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then turn on the On/Off Labels switch. Page 262 of 292 iPad User Guide Assignable tones You can assign distinctive ringtones to people in your contacts list for audible FaceTime caller ID. You can also assign distinct tones to alert you of a variety of other events, including new voicemail, new mail, sent mail, Tweet, Facebook Post, and reminders. See Sounds and silence. You can purchase ringtones from the iTunes Store on iPad. See Find music, movies, TV shows, and more. Audio Descriptions Audio Descriptions provides an audible description of video scenes. If you have a video that includes audio descriptions, iPad can play them for you. Hear audio descriptions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Audio Descriptions, then turn on Prefer Audio Descriptions. Hearing devices If you have Made for iPhone hearing aids (compatible with iPad Pro, iPad 4th generation and later, and iPad mini), you can use iPad to adjust their settings, stream audio, or use iPad as a remote mic. Pair with iPad. If your hearing aids arenʼt listed in Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Devices, you need to pair them with iPad. To start, open the battery door on each hearing aid. Next, on iPad, go to Settings > Bluetooth, and make sure Bluetooth is turned on. Then, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Devices. Close the battery doors on your hearing aids and wait until their name appears in the list of devices (this could take a minute). When the name appears, tap it and respond to the pairing request. When pairing is finished, you hear a series of beeps and a tone, and a checkmark appears next to the hearing aids in the Devices list. Pairing can take as long as 60 seconds—donʼt try to stream audio or otherwise use the hearing aids until pairing is finished. You should only need to pair once (and your audiologist might do it for you). After that, each time you turn your hearing aids back on, they reconnect to iPad. Page 263 of 292 iPad User Guide Turn on Hearing Aid Mode. Hearing Aid Mode may reduce interference with some hearing aid models. To turn it on, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Devices. Adjust hearing aid settings and view status. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Devices, or choose Hearing Devices in Accessibility Shortcut. Hearing aid settings appear only after you pair your hearing aids with iPad. To access shortcuts from the Lock screen, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Devices, then turn on Control on Lock Screen. From the Lock screen, you can: Check hearing aid battery status. Adjust ambient microphone volume and equalization. Choose which hearing aids (left, right, or both) receive streaming audio. Control Live Listen. Stream audio to your hearing aids. To stream audio from Siri, Music, Videos, and more, see Bluetooth devices. Use iPad as a remote microphone. You can use Live Listen to stream sound from the microphone in iPad to your hearing aids. This can help you hear better in some situations —for example, when having a conversation in a noisy environment. Triple-click the Home button, choose Hearing Devices, tap Start Live Listen, then position iPad near the sound source. Use your hearing aids with more than one iOS device. If you pair your hearing aids with more than one iOS device (both iPad and iPhone, for example), the connection for your hearing aids automatically switches from one to the other when you do something that generates audio on the other device, or when you receive a phone call on iPhone. Changes you make to hearing aid settings on one device are automatically sent to your other iOS devices. To enable this feature, sign in to iCloud using the same Apple ID on all the devices, and connect all the devices to the same Wi-Fi network. Mono audio and balance Mono Audio combines the sound from the left and right channels into a mono signal played on both channels. This way you can hear everything with either ear, or through both ears with one channel set louder. Turn on Mono Audio. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Mono Audio. Page 264 of 292 iPad User Guide Adjust the balance. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility, then drag the Left Right Stereo Balance slider. Subtitles and closed captions The Videos app includes an Alternate Track button you can tap to choose subtitles and captions offered by the video youʼre watching. Standard subtitles and captions are usually listed, but if you prefer special accessible captions, such as subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing (SDH), you can set iPad to list them instead, if theyʼre available. Prefer accessible subtitles and closed captions for SDH. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning, then turn on Closed Captions + SDH. This also turns on subtitles and captions in the Videos app. Choose from available subtitles and captions. Tap Videos. while watching a video in Customize your subtitles and captions. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles & Captioning > Style, where you can choose an existing caption style or create a new style based on your choice of: Font, size, and color Background color and opacity Text opacity, edge style, and highlight Note: Not all videos include subtitles or closed captions. Siri Siri is often the easiest way to start using accessibility features with iPad. With Siri, you can open apps, turn many settings on or off (for example, VoiceOver), or use Siri for what it does best—acting as your assistant. Siri knows when VoiceOver is on, so will often read more information back to you than appears on the screen. You can also use VoiceOver to read what Siri shows on the screen. See Make requests. Widescreen keyboards All built-in iPad apps show a larger onscreen keyboard when you rotate iPad to landscape view. You can also type using an Apple Wireless Keyboard. Page 265 of 292 iPad User Guide LED Flash for Alerts If you canʼt hear the sounds that announce incoming calls and other alerts, you can have iPad flash its LED (next to the camera lens on the back of iPad). Tip: This is a great feature for all users who, when in a loud environment, may miss the tones associated with calls, texts, and other alerts. Turn on LED Flash for Alerts. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > LED Flash for Alerts. Guided Access Guided Access helps an iPad user stay focused on a task. Guided Access dedicates iPad to a single app, and lets you control which app features are available. Use Guided Access to: Temporarily restrict iPad to a particular app Disable areas of the screen that arenʼt relevant to a task, or areas where an accidental gesture might cause a distraction Limit how long someone can use an app Disable the iPad hardware buttons Use Guided Access. While using an app, tell Siri “turn on Guided Access” or go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Guided Access, then turn on Guided Access. Within the Guided Access screen you can: Turn Guided Access on or off Tap Passcode Settings to set a passcode that controls the use of Guided Access (preventing someone from leaving a session), and turn on Touch ID (as a way to end Guided Access) Tap Time Limits to set a sound or have the remaining Guided Access time spoken before time ends Set whether other accessibility shortcuts are available during a session Start a Guided Access session. After turning on Guided Access, open the app, then triple-click the Home button. Adjust settings for the session, then tap Start. Page 266 of 292 iPad User Guide Disable app controls and areas of the app screen: Draw a circle or rectangle around any part of the screen you want to disable. Drag the mask into position or use the handles to adjust its size. Enable the Sleep/Wake or volume buttons: Tap Options below Hardware Buttons. Prevent iPad from switching from portrait to landscape or from responding to other motions: Tap Options, then turn off Motion. Prevent typing: Tap Options, then turn off Keyboards. Ignore all screen touches: Turn off Touch at the bottom of the screen. Set a session time limit: Tap Time Limit Options at the bottom of the screen. End the session. Triple-click the Home button, then enter the Guided Access passcode, or use Touch ID (if enabled). Page 267 of 292 iPad User Guide Switch Control Switch Control overview If you have a motor impairment, Switch Control lets you control iPad using one or more connected physical switches. Use any of several methods to perform actions such as selecting, tapping, dragging, typing, invoking multitasking options on devices that support them, and even free-hand drawing. You use a switch to select an item or location on the screen, and then use the same (or different) switch to choose an action to perform on that item or location. Three basic methods are: Item scanning (default), which highlights different items on the screen until you select one. Point scanning, which lets you use scanning crosshairs to pick a screen location. Manual selection, which lets you move from item to item on demand (requires multiple switches). Whichever method you use, when you select an individual item (rather than a group), a menu appears so you can choose how to act on the selected item (tap, drag, or pinch, for example). If you use multiple switches, you can set up each switch to perform a specific action and customize your item selection method. For example, instead of automatically scanning screen items, you can set up switches to move to the next or previous item on demand. You can adjust the behavior of Switch Control in a variety of ways, to suit your specific needs and style. Add a switch and turn on Switch Control You can use the following as a switch: An external adaptive switch: Choose a Bluetooth switch or a Made For iPhone switch that plugs into the lightning port. The iPad screen: Tap the screen to trigger the switch. Add a switch and choose its action. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Switches. If you use only one switch, it is your Select Item switch by default. Page 268 of 292 iPad User Guide If youʼre adding an external switch, you need to connect it to iPad before it will appear in the list of available switches. Follow the instructions that came with the switch. If it connects using Bluetooth, you need to pair it with iPad—turn on the switch, go to Settings > Bluetooth, tap the switch, then follow the onscreen instructions. For more information, see Bluetooth devices. Turn on Switch Control. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, then turn on Switch Control. Or triple-click the Home button. See Accessibility Shortcut. Turn off Switch Control. Use any scanning method to select and tap Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, then turn off Switch Control. Or triple-click the Home button. Basic techniques Whether you use item scanning or point scanning, the Switch Control basics are the same. Select an item. Trigger your Select Item switch when the item is highlighted (item scanning) or under the crosshairs (point scanning). Perform an action on the selected item. Choose a command from the control menu that appears when you select the item. The layout of the menu depends on how you configure tap behavior. (To choose an option, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Tap Behavior.) With Default on: The control menu usually includes only the Tap button and the More button (two dots at the bottom). If youʼre in a scrollable area of the screen, a Scroll button also appears. To tap the highlighted item, trigger your Select Item button when Tap is highlighted. To see additional action buttons, choose More at the bottom of the menu. If you have multiple switches, you can set one up specifically for tapping. With Auto Tap on: To tap the item, do nothing—the item is automatically tapped when the Auto Tap interval expires (0.75 seconds if you havenʼt changed it). To see the control menu, trigger your Select Item button before the Auto Tap interval expires. The control menu skips the Tap button and goes right to the full set of action buttons. With Always Tap on: Tap to select the highlighted item rather than display the control menu. Wait until the end of the scan cycle, then tap a button to display the control menu. Page 269 of 292 iPad User Guide Note: Always Tap applies only when you choose item scanning. When point scanning, the default behavior applies. Work with recipes. A recipe lets you temporarily assign a special action to a switch. For example, you can choose a recipe to turn pages in iBooks or control a game. To create, edit, or launch a recipe, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Recipes. Dismiss the Scanner Menu without choosing an action. Tap while the original item is highlighted and all the icons in the control menu are dimmed. The menu goes away after cycling the number of times you specify in Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Loops. Perform screen gestures. Choose Gestures from the Scanner Menu. Scroll the screen. Select an item in a scrollable part of the screen, then: With Auto Tap off: Choose the Scroll Down button (next to the Tap button) in the Scanner Menu. Or, for more scrolling options, choose More, then choose Scroll. With Auto Tap on: Choose Scroll from the control menu. If many actions are available, you might have to choose More first. Tap the Home button. Choose Home from the Scanner Menu. Perform other hardware actions. Select any item, then choose Device from the menu that appears. Use the menu to mimic these actions: Double-click the Home button for multitasking Open Notification Center or Control Center Press the Sleep/Wake button to lock iPad Rotate iPad On iPad models with a side switch, flip the Side Switch to mute iPad volume Press the volume buttons Show the Search screen Press and hold the Home button to open Siri Triple-click the Home button Page 270 of 292 iPad User Guide Shake iPad Press the Home and Sleep/Wake buttons simultaneously to take a screenshot Swipe down from the top with two fingers to speak the screen (if you have Speak Screen turned on) Use Switch Control on another iOS device. Ensure that you sign in to iCloud with the same Apple ID on the other iOS device, then choose the other device from the menu. Item scanning Item scanning alternately highlights each item or group of items on the entire screen until you trigger your Select Item switch. If there are many items, Switch Control highlights them in groups. When you select a group, highlighting continues with the items in the group. When you select a unique item, scanning stops and the control menu appears. Item scanning is the default when you first turn on Switch Control. You can choose from three scanning styles—auto scanning, manual scanning, and single-switch step scanning. Auto scanning automatically highlights items, one after the other. With manual scanning, you use one switch to highlight an item and another to activate it. Single-switch step scanning uses a switch to move the highlight from item to item. If you take no action after a period of time, the highlighted item activates. Select an item or enter a group. Watch (or listen) as items are highlighted. When the item you want to control (or the group containing the item) is highlighted, trigger your Select Item switch. Work your way down the hierarchy of items until you select the individual item you want to control. Back out of a group. Trigger your Select Item switch when the dashed highlight around the group or item appears. Dismiss the control menu without performing an action. Trigger your Select Item switch when the item itself is highlighted. Or choose Escape from the control menu. Hear the names of items as they are highlighted. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, then turn on Speech. Or choose Settings from the control menu, then choose Speech On. Slow down or speed up the scanning. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control > Auto Scanning Time. Page 271 of 292 iPad User Guide Point scanning Point scanning lets you select an item on the screen by pinpointing it with scanning crosshairs. Switch to point scanning. Use item scanning to choose Point Mode from the control menu. The vertical crosshair appears when you close the menu. Select an item. Trigger your Select Item switch when the item you want is within the broad, horizontal scanning band, then trigger again when the fine scanning line is on the item. Repeat for vertical scanning. Refine your selection point. Choose Refine Selection from the control menu. Return to item scanning. Choose Item Mode from the control menu. Page 272 of 292 iPad User Guide Settings and adjustments Adjust basic settings. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Switch Control, where you can: Add switches and specify their function Choose, create, and edit recipes Choose a scanning style Adjust how rapidly items are scanned Set scanning to pause on the first item in a group Choose how many times to cycle through the screen before hiding Switch Control Choose a tap behavior and set the interval for performing a second switch action to show the control menu Choose whether Switch Control resumes scanning at an item you tap or from the beginning Set whether a movement action is repeated when you press and hold a switch, and how long to wait before repeating Add another action to a switch by pressing and holding the switch for a long duration Choose which items appear in menus and the order in which they appear Set whether and how long you need to hold a switch down before itʼs accepted as a switch action Have Switch Control ignore accidental repeated switch triggers Adjust the point scanning speed Turn on sound effects or have items read aloud as they are scanned Choose what to include in the Switch Control menu Set whether items should be grouped while item scanning Make the selection cursor larger or a different color Save custom gestures to the control menu (in Gestures > Saved) Page 273 of 292 iPad User Guide Fine-tune Switch Control. Choose Settings from the control menu to: Adjust scanning speed Change the location of the control menu Turn sound or speech accompaniment on or off Turn off groups to scan items one at a time AssistiveTouch AssistiveTouch helps you use iPad if you have difficulty touching the screen or pressing the buttons. You can use AssistiveTouch without any accessory to perform gestures that are difficult for you. You also can use a compatible adaptive accessory (such as a joystick) together with AssistiveTouch to control iPad. To configure the AssistiveTouch menu, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch. The AssistiveTouch menu lets you perform actions such as these by just tapping (or the equivalent on your accessory): Press the Home button Summon Siri Perform multifinger gestures Access Control Center or Notification Center Adjust iPad volume Shake iPad Capture a screenshot Add more actions (for a total of eight) Double-tap Turn on AssistiveTouch. Tell Siri “turn on AssistiveTouch,” go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch, or use Accessibility Shortcut. When AssistiveTouch is on, the floating menu button appears on the screen. Show or hide the menu. Tap the floating menu button, or click the secondary button on your accessory. Page 274 of 292 iPad User Guide Simulate pressing the Home button. Tap the menu button, then tap Home. Lock or rotate the screen, adjust iPad volume, or simulate shaking iPad. Tap the menu button, then tap Device. Perform a swipe or drag that uses 2, 3, 4, or 5 fingers. Tap the menu button, tap Device > More > Gestures, then tap the number of digits needed for the gesture. When the corresponding circles appear on the screen, swipe or drag in the direction required by the gesture. When you finish, tap the menu button. Perform a pinch gesture. Tap the menu button, tap Custom, then tap Pinch. When the pinch circles appear, touch anywhere on the screen to move the pinch circles, then drag them in or out to perform a pinch gesture. When you finish, tap the menu button. Create your own gesture. You can add your own favorite gestures to the control menu (for example, touch and hold or two-finger rotation). Tap the menu button, tap Custom, then tap an empty gesture placeholder. Or go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch > Create New Gesture. Example 1: To create the rotation gesture, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch > Create New Gesture. On the gesture recording screen that asks you to touch to create a gesture, rotate two fingers on the iPad screen around a point between them. (You can do this with a single finger or stylus—just create each arc separately, one after the other.) If it doesnʼt turn out quite right, tap Cancel, then try again. When it looks right, tap Save, then give the gesture a name—maybe “Rotate 90.” Then, to rotate the view in Maps, for example, open Maps, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button, and choose Rotate 90 from Custom. When the blue circles representing the starting finger positions appear, drag them to the point around which you want to rotate the map, then release. You might want to create several gestures with different degrees of rotation. Example 2: Letʼs create the touch-and-hold gesture that you use to start rearranging icons on your Home screen. This time, on the gesture recording screen, touch and hold your finger in one spot until the recording progress bar reaches halfway, then lift your finger. Be careful not to move your finger while recording, or the gesture will be recorded as a drag. Tap Save, then name the gesture. To use the gesture, tap the AssistiveTouch menu button, then choose your gesture from Custom. When the blue circle representing your touch appears, drag it over a Home screen icon and release. If you record a sequence of taps or drags, theyʼre all played back at the same time. For example, using one finger or a stylus to record four separate, sequential taps at four locations on the screen creates a simultaneous four-finger tap. Page 275 of 292 iPad User Guide Exit a menu without performing a gesture. Tap anywhere outside the menu. To return to the previous menu, tap the arrow in the middle of the menu. Move the menu button. Drag it anywhere along the edge of the screen. Touch Accommodations If you have trouble using the touchscreen or Home button, use Touch Accommodations to change how your device responds to your touch. Choose how long you must touch the screen before a touch is recognized. You can configure iPad to respond only to touches of a certain duration. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Touch Accommodations, turn on Hold Duration, then use the Gesture Delay plus and minus buttons to choose a duration (the default is 0.10 seconds). Choose the duration in which multiple touches are treated as a single touch. If you have trouble touching the screen just once, turn on Ignore Repeat. Then, if you touch the screen several times quickly, iPad treats the touches as one. To change the amount of time between touches before iPad treats them as one, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Touch Accommodations, turn on Ignore Repeat, then use the Gesture Delay plus and minus buttons to adjust the timing. Choose the location where iPad responds to the first or the last place you touch. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Touch Accommodations, then choose a Tap Assistance option (Use Initial Touch Location or Use Final Touch Location). When you choose Use Initial Touch Location, iPad uses the location of your first tap— when you tap an app on the Home screen, for example. Choose Use Final Touch Location, and iPad registers the tap where you lift your finger. iPad responds to a tap when you lift your finger within a certain period of time. Use the Gesture Delay plus and minus buttons to adjust the timing. Your device can respond to other gestures, such as drags, if you wait longer than the gesture delay. Choose how iPad responds when you press and hold the Home button. Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Home Button, then choose Siri or Off. Software and hardware keyboards If you have difficulty distinguishing characters on the iPad keyboard or manipulating a hardware keyboard, find help by going to Settings > General > Accessibility > Keyboard. You can adjust settings to: Page 276 of 292 iPad User Guide Show only uppercase keys on the iPad keyboard. Adjust the key repeat rate on hardware keyboards. Use Sticky Keys to press and hold modifier keys, such as Command and Option, as you press another key. Use Slow Keys to adjust the time between when a key is pressed and when itʼs activated. Accessibility in macOS Take advantage of the accessibility features in macOS when you use iTunes to sync information and content from your iTunes library to iPad. In the Finder, choose Help > Help Center (or Help > Mac Help in OS X 10.11 or later), then search for “accessibility.” For more information about iPad and macOS accessibility features, go to the Apple Accessibility website. Page 277 of 292 iPad User Guide Safety, handling, and support Important safety information WARNING: Failure to follow these safety instructions could result in fire, electric shock, injury, or damage to iPad or other property. Read all the safety information below before using iPad. Handling Handle iPad with care. It is made of metal, glass, and plastic and has sensitive electronic components inside. iPad or its battery can be damaged if dropped, burned, punctured, or crushed, or if it comes in contact with liquid. If you suspect damage to iPad or the battery, discontinue use of iPad, as it may cause overheating or injury. Donʼt use iPad with a cracked screen, as it may cause injury. If youʼre concerned about scratching the surface of iPad, consider using a case or cover. Repairing Donʼt open iPad and donʼt attempt to repair iPad yourself. Disassembling iPad may damage it or may cause injury to you. If iPad is damaged, malfunctions, or comes in contact with liquid, contact Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider. You can find more information about getting service at the iPad Repair website. Battery Donʼt attempt to replace the iPad battery yourself. The lithium-ion battery in iPad should be replaced by Apple or an authorized service provider. Improper replacement or repair could damage the battery, cause overheating, or result in injury. The battery must be recycled or disposed of separately from household waste. Donʼt incinerate the battery. For information about battery services and recycling, go to the Battery Service and Recycling website. Distraction Using iPad in some circumstances may distract you and might cause a dangerous situation (for example, avoid using headphones while riding a bicycle and avoid typing a text message while driving a car). Observe rules that prohibit or restrict the use of mobile devices or headphones. Navigation Maps depends on data services. These data services are subject to change and may not be available in all areas, resulting in maps and location-based information that may be unavailable, inaccurate, or incomplete. Compare the information provided in Maps to your surroundings. Use common sense when navigating. Always observe current road conditions and posted signs to resolve any discrepancies. Some Maps features require Location Services. Page 278 of 292 iPad User Guide Charging Charge iPad with the included USB cable and power adapter, or with other third-party “Made for iPad” cables and power adapters that are compatible with USB 2.0 or later, or power adapters compliant with applicable country regulations and with one or more of the following standards: EN 301489-34, IEC 62684, YD/T 1591-2009, CNS 15285, ITU L.1000, or another applicable mobile phone power adapter interoperability standard. Using damaged cables or chargers, or charging when moisture is present, can cause fire, electric shock, injury, or damage to iPad or other property. When you use the Apple USB Power Adapter to charge iPad, make sure the USB cable is fully inserted into the power adapter before you plug the adapter into a power outlet. Lightning cable and connector Avoid prolonged skin contact with the connector when the Lightning to USB Cable is plugged into a power source because it may cause discomfort or injury. Sleeping or sitting on the Lightning connector should be avoided. Prolonged heat exposure iPad and its power adapter comply with applicable surface temperature standards and limits. However, even within these limits, sustained contact with warm surfaces for long periods of time may cause discomfort or injury. Use common sense to avoid situations where your skin is in contact with a device or its power adapter when itʼs operating or plugged into a power source for long periods of time. For example, donʼt sleep on a device or power adapter, or place them under a blanket, pillow, or your body, when itʼs plugged into a power source. Itʼs important to keep iPad and its power adapter in a well-ventilated area when in use or charging. Take special care if you have a physical condition that affects your ability to detect heat against the body. Hearing loss Listening to sound at high volumes may damage your hearing. Background noise, as well as continued exposure to high volume levels, can make sounds seem quieter than they actually are. Turn on audio playback and check the volume before inserting anything in your ear. For information about how to set a maximum volume limit on iPad, see Play music. For more information about hearing loss, go to the Sound and Hearing website. To avoid hearing damage, use only compatible receivers, earbuds, headphones, speakerphones, or earpieces with iPad. The headsets sold with iPhone 4s or later in China (identifiable by dark insulating rings on the plug) are designed to comply with Chinese standards and are only compatible with iPhone 4s and later, iPad 2 and later, iPad Pro, iPad mini and later, and iPod touch 5th generation and later. WARNING: To prevent possible hearing damage, do not listen at high volume levels for long periods. Page 279 of 292 iPad User Guide Radio frequency exposure iPad uses radio signals to connect to wireless networks. For information about radio frequency (RF) energy resulting from radio signals, and steps you can take to minimize exposure, go to Settings > General > About > Legal > RF Exposure, or go to the RF Exposure website. Radio frequency interference Observe signs and notices that prohibit or restrict the use of mobile devices (for example, in healthcare facilities or blasting areas). Although iPad is designed, tested, and manufactured to comply with regulations governing radio frequency emissions, such emissions from iPad can negatively affect the operation of other electronic equipment, causing them to malfunction. Turn off iPad or use Airplane Mode to turn off the iPad wireless transmitters when use is prohibited, such as while traveling in aircraft, or when asked to do so by authorities. Medical device interference iPad contains components and radios that emit electromagnetic fields. iPad also contains magnets along the left edge of the device and on the right side of the front glass, which may interfere with pacemakers, defibrillators, or other medical devices. The iPad Smart Cover, iPad Smart Case, iPad Pro Smart Cover, and iPad Pro Smart Keyboard also contain magnets. These electromagnetic fields and magnets may interfere with pacemakers, defibrillators, or other medical devices. Maintain a safe distance of separation between your medical device and iPad, the iPad Smart Cover, the iPad Smart Case, the iPad Pro Smart Cover, and the iPad Pro Smart Keyboard. Consult your physician and medical device manufacturer for information specific to your medical device. If you suspect iPad is interfering with your pacemaker, defibrillator, or any other medical device, stop using iPad. Not a medical device iPad is not designed or intended for use in the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease. Medical conditions If you have any medical condition that you believe could be affected by iPad (for example, seizures, blackouts, eyestrain, or headaches), consult with your physician prior to using iPad. Explosive atmospheres Charging or using iPad in any area with a potentially explosive atmosphere, such as areas where the air contains high levels of flammable chemicals, vapors, or particles (such as grain, dust, or metal powders), may be hazardous. Obey all signs and instructions. Repetitive motion When you perform repetitive activities such as typing or playing games on iPad, you may experience discomfort in your hands, arms, wrists, shoulders, neck, or other parts of your body. If you experience discomfort, stop using iPad and consult a physician. Page 280 of 292 iPad User Guide High-consequence activities This device is not intended for use where the failure of the device could lead to death, personal injury, or severe environmental damage. Choking hazard Some iPad accessories may present a choking hazard to small children. Keep these accessories away from small children. Important handling information Cleaning Clean iPad immediately if it comes in contact with anything that may cause stains or other damage—for example, dirt or sand, ink, makeup, soap, detergent, acids or acidic foods, and lotions. To clean: Disconnect all cables and turn iPad off (press and hold the Sleep/Wake button, then slide the onscreen slider). Use a soft, lint-free cloth—for example, a lens cloth. Avoid getting moisture in openings. Donʼt use cleaning products or compressed air. The front of iPad is made of glass with a fingerprint-resistant oleophobic (oil-repellant) coating. This coating wears over time with normal usage. Cleaning products and abrasive materials will further diminish the coating and may scratch the glass. Using connectors, ports, and buttons Never force a connector into a port or apply excessive pressure to a button, because this may cause damage that is not covered under the warranty. If the connector and port donʼt join with reasonable ease, they probably donʼt match. Check for obstructions and make sure that the connector matches the port and that you have positioned the connector correctly in relation to the port. Lightning to USB Cable Discoloration of the Lightning connector after regular use is normal. Dirt, debris, and exposure to moisture may cause discoloration. If your Lightning cable or connector become warm during use or your iPad wonʼt charge or sync, disconnect it from your computer or power adapter and clean the Lightning connector with a soft, dry, lint-free cloth. Do not use liquids or cleaning products when cleaning the Lightning connector. Certain usage patterns can contribute to the fraying or breaking of cables. The Lightning to USB Cable, like any other metal wire or cable, is subject to becoming weak or brittle if repeatedly bent in the same spot. Aim for gentle curves instead of angles in the cable. Regularly inspect the cable and connector for any kinks, breaks, bends, or other damage. Should you find any such damage, discontinue use of the Lightning to USB Cable. Page 281 of 292 iPad User Guide Operating temperature iPad is designed to work in ambient temperatures between 32° and 95° F (0° and 35° C) and stored in temperatures between -4° and 113° F (-20° and 45° C). iPad can be damaged and battery life shortened if stored or operated outside of these temperature ranges. Avoid exposing iPad to dramatic changes in temperature or humidity. When youʼre using iPad or charging the battery, it is normal for iPad to get warm. If the interior temperature of iPad exceeds normal operating temperatures (for example, in a hot car or in direct sunlight for extended periods of time), you may experience the following as it attempts to regulate its temperature: iPad stops charging. The screen dims. A temperature warning screen appears. Some apps may close. Important: You may not be able to use iPad while the temperature warning screen is displayed. If iPad canʼt regulate its internal temperature, it goes into deep sleep mode until it cools. Move iPad to a cooler location out of direct sunlight and wait a few minutes before trying to use iPad again. For more information, see the Apple Support article Keeping iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch within acceptable operating temperatures. Forgot your Apple ID, iPad passcode, or iCloud Security Code? Recover your Apple ID or reset your Apple ID password. Go to Appleʼs I Forgot website. Reset the iPad passcode. If you enter the wrong passcode to iPad six times in a row, you'll be locked out, and a message will say that iPad is disabled. If you canʼt remember your passcode, you can erase iPad, then set a new passcode. (If you made an iCloud or iTunes backup before you forgot your passcode, you can restore your data and settings from the backup.) For more information, see the Apple Support article If you forgot the passcode for your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch, or your device is disabled. Page 282 of 292 iPad User Guide Reset or create a new iCloud Security Code. If you enter the wrong iCloud Security Code too many times when using iCloud Keychain, your iCloud Keychain will be disabled on that device, and your keychain in iCloud will be deleted. Go to the Apple Support article If you enter your iCloud Security Code incorrectly too many times. iPad Support site Comprehensive support information is available online at the iPad Support website. To contact Apple for personalized support (not available in all areas), see the Apple Support website. An app doesnʼt fill the screen Most apps for iPhone and iPod touch can be used with iPad, but they might not take advantage of the large screen. In this case, tap to zoom in on the app. Tap to return to the original size. Check the App Store to see if thereʼs a version of the app thatʼs optimized for iPad, or a universal version thatʼs optimized for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Onscreen keyboard doesnʼt appear If iPad is paired with a Bluetooth keyboard, the onscreen keyboard doesnʼt appear. To make the onscreen keyboard appear, press the Eject key on a Bluetooth keyboard. You can also make the onscreen keyboard appear by moving the Bluetooth keyboard out of range or turning it off. Get information about your iPad View overall storage availability and storage used per app. Go to Settings > General > Storage & iCloud Usage, where you can manage iCloud storage. For more information, see the Apple Support articles Check your storage on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch and Manage your iCloud storage. See Battery Usage. Go to Settings > Battery to see the elapsed time since iPad has been charged. You can also display battery level as a percentage. See Charge and monitor the battery in this guide. Page 283 of 292 iPad User Guide View cellular usage. Go to Settings > Cellular. See Cellular data settings in this guide. See more information about iPad. Go to Settings > General > About. The items you can view include: Name Network Number of songs, videos, photos, and apps Capacity and available storage space iOS version (Cellular models) Carrier Model number Serial number (Cellular models) Cellular Data Number Wi-Fi and Bluetooth addresses (Cellular models) IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) (Cellular models) ICCID (Integrated Circuit Card Identifier, or Smart Card) for GSM networks (Cellular models) MEID (Mobile Equipment Identifier) for CDMA networks Modem firmware Legal (including legal notices, and license, warranty, and RF exposure information) To copy the serial number and other identifiers, touch and hold the identifier until Copy appears. To see regulatory marks, go to Settings > General > Regulatory. View or turn off diagnostic information. Go to Settings > Privacy > Diagnostics & Usage. To help Apple improve products and services, iPad sends diagnostic and usage data. This data doesnʼt personally identify you, but may include location information. Page 284 of 292 iPad User Guide Cellular data settings To activate cellular data service on iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular models), turn cellular use on or off, or add a Personal Identification Number (PIN) to lock the SIM card, go to Settings > Cellular Data. With some carriers, you can also change your data plan. Note: Contact for help with cellular network services and billing, contact your wireless service provider. If Cellular Data is off, all data services will use only Wi-Fi—including email, web browsing, push notifications, and other services. If Cellular Data is on, carrier charges may be incurred. For example, using certain features and services that transfer data, such as Messages, could result in charges to your data plan. Turn Cellular Data on or off. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, then turn Cellular Data on or off. The following options may also be available: Monitor and manage your cellular data network usage: You can see which apps use cellular data and turn off the option, if you want. Turn LTE on or off: Turning on LTE loads data faster. Turn Data Roaming on or off: Turning off Data Roaming avoids carrier charges when using a network provided by a different carrier. Set up Personal Hotspot: Personal Hotspot shares the Internet connection on iPad with your computer and other iOS devices. See Personal Hotspot in this guide. Turn Wi-Fi Assist on or off: If Wi-Fi connectivity is poor, Wi-Fi Assist uses cellular data to boost the signal. Note: Using data over a cellular network may incur additional fees. Set whether cellular data is used for apps and services. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, then turn cellular data on or off for any app that can use cellular data. If a setting is off, iPad uses only Wi-Fi for that service. The iTunes setting includes both iTunes Match and automatic downloads from the iTunes Store and the App Store. Activate, view, or change your cellular data account. Go to Settings > Cellular Data, tap View Account, then follow the onscreen instructions. Lock the SIM card. Go to Settings > Cellular Data > SIM PIN. Locking the SIM card with a PIN means you need to enter the PIN to use a cellular connection on iPad. Page 285 of 292 iPad User Guide For more information about GSM, CDMA, and LTE cellular data networks, see the Apple Support article About cellular data networks. VPN settings A VPN (virtual private network) provides secure access over the Internet to private networks, such as the network at your organization. You may need to install a VPN app from the App Store that configures iPad to access a network. Contact your system administrator for information about the app and settings you need. Profiles settings Configuration profiles define settings for using iPad with corporate or school networks or accounts. You might be asked to install a configuration profile that was sent to you in an email, or one that is downloaded from a webpage. iPad asks for your permission to install the profile, and displays information about what it contains, when you open the file. You can see the profiles you have installed in Settings > General > Profiles & Device Management. If you delete a profile, all of the settings, apps, and data associated with the profile are also deleted. Sell or give away iPad Before you sell or give away your iPad, see the Apple Support article What to do before selling or giving away your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch, and be sure to perform the following tasks: Back up iPad with iCloud Backup or back up iPad with iTunes. If you replace one iPad with another, you can use the setup assistant to restore the backup to your new iPad. Erase all content and settings, which includes your personal information. Learn more, service, and support Refer to the following resources to get more iPad-related safety, software, service, and support information. Page 286 of 292 iPad User Guide To learn about Do this Using iPad safely See Important safety information. iPad service and support, tips, forums, and Apple software downloads Go to the iPad Support website. The latest information about iPad Go to the iPad website. Managing your Apple ID account Sign in to your Apple ID account page. Using iCloud See iCloud Help. Using iTunes Open iTunes, then choose Help > iTunes Help. For an online iTunes tutorial (not available in all areas), go to the iTunes Support website. Using other Apple iOS apps Go to the iOS Apps Support website. Finding your iPad serial number or IMEI You can find your iPad serial number or International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) on the iPad packaging. Or, on iPad, choose Settings > General > About. For more information, go to the Apple Support article Find the serial number and other information on your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. Obtaining warranty service First follow the advice in this guide. Then go to the iPad Support website. Viewing iPad regulatory information On iPad, go to Settings > General > Regulatory. Battery service Go to the Battery Service and Recycling website. Using iPad in an enterprise environment Go to the iPad in Business website. Using iPad in education Go to the Education website. FCC compliance statement This device complies with part 15 of the FCC rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Page 287 of 292 iPad User Guide Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Important: Changes or modifications to this product not authorized by Apple could void the electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and wireless compliance and negate your authority to operate the product. This product has demonstrated EMC compliance under conditions that included the use of compliant peripheral devices and shielded cables between system components. It is important that you use compliant peripheral devices and shielded cables between system components to reduce the possibility of causing interference to radios, televisions, and other electronic devices. Responsible party (contact for FCC matters only): Apple Inc. Corporate Compliance 1 Infinite Loop, MS 91-1EMC Cupertino, CA 95014 Page 288 of 292 iPad User Guide Canadian regulatory statement This device complies with Industry Canada licence-exempt RSS standard(s). Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. Operation in the band 5150–5250 MHz is only for indoor use to reduce the potential for harmful interference to co-channel mobile satellite systems. Users are advised that high-power radars are allocated as primary users (i.e., priority users) of the bands 5250–5350 MHz and 5650–5850 MHz and that these radars could cause interference and/or damage to LE-LAN devices. Le présent appareil est conforme aux CNR dʼIndustrie Canada applicables aux appareils radio exempts de licence. Lʼexploitation est autorisée aux deux conditions suivantes : (1) lʼappareil ne doit pas produire de brouillage, et (2) lʼutilisateur de lʼappareil doit accepter tout brouillage radioélectrique subi, même si le brouillage est susceptible dʼen compromettre le fonctionnement. La bande 5 150 – 5 250 MHz est réservée uniquement pour une utilisation à lʼintérieur afin de réduire les risques de brouillage préjudiciable aux systèmes de satellites mobiles utilisant les mêmes canaux. Les utilisateurs êtes avisés que les utilisateurs de radars de haute puissance sont désignés utilisateurs principaux (c.-à-d., quʼils ont la priorité) pour les bandes 5 250 – 5 350 MHz et 5 650 – 5 850 MHz et que ces radars pourraient causer du brouillage et/ou des dommages aux dispositifs LAN-EL. CAN ICES-3 (B)/NMB-3(B) Apple and the environment At Apple, we recognize our responsibility to minimize the environmental impacts of our operations and products. For more information, go to the Apple and the Environment website. Disposal and recycling information Apple Recycling Program (available in some areas): For free recycling of your old iPad, a prepaid shipping label, and instructions, go to the Recycling website. Page 289 of 292 iPad User Guide This symbol indicates that this product and/or battery should not be disposed of with household waste. You must dispose of iPad properly according to local laws and regulations. When iPad reaches its end of life, contact local authorities to learn about disposal and recycling options, or simply drop it off at your local Apple Retail Store or return it to Apple. The battery will be removed and recycled in an environmentally friendly manner. For more information, go to the Recycling website. European Union—Disposal Information The symbol above means that according to local laws and regulations your product and/or its battery shall be disposed of separately from household waste. When this product reaches its end of life, take it to a collection point designated by local authorities. The separate collection and recycling of your product and/or its battery at the time of disposal will help conserve natural resources and ensure that it is recycled in a manner that protects human health and the environment. Brasil—Informações sobre descarte e reciclagem O símbolo acima indica que este produto e/ou sua bateria não devem ser descartados no lixo doméstico. Quando decidir descartar este produto e/ou sua bateria, faça-o de acordo com as leis e diretrizes ambientais locais. Para informações sobre substâncias de uso restrito, o programa de reciclagem da Apple, pontos de coleta e telefone de informações, visite www.apple.com/br/environment. Información sobre eliminación de residuos y reciclaje El símbolo de arriba indica que este producto y/o su batería no debe desecharse con los residuos domésticos. Cuando decida desechar este producto y/o su batería, hágalo de conformidad con las leyes y directrices ambientales locales. Para obtener información sobre el programa de reciclaje de Apple, puntos de recolección para reciclaje, sustancias restringidas y otras iniciativas ambientales, visite www.apple.com/la/environment o www.apple.com/mx/environment. Turkey environmental information Türkiye Cumhuriyeti: AEEE Yönetmeliğine Uygundur. Battery service: The lithium-ion battery in iPad should be serviced by Apple or an authorized service provider. For more information about battery services and recycling, go to the Battery Service and Recycling website. Dispose of batteries according to your local environmental laws and guidelines. Page 290 of 292 iPad User Guide Battery charger energy efficiency Taiwan battery statement China battery statement ENERGY STAR® compliance statement To save energy, iPad is set to lock after two minutes of user inactivity. To change this setting, go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Auto-Lock. To unlock iPad, press the Sleep/Wake button or the Home button. iPad meets the ENERGY STAR guidelines for energy efficiency. Reducing energy consumption saves money and helps conserve valuable resources; for more information, go to the Energy Star website. Apple Inc. © 2017 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, AirDrop, AirPlay, AirPort, AirPrint, Apple Music, Apple Pay, Apple TV, EarPods, FaceTime, Finder, Flyover, GarageBand, Guided Access, Handoff, iBooks, iMessage, iPad, iPad Air, iPad Pro, iPhone, iPod, iPod touch, iSight, iTunes, iTunes U, Keychain, Keynote, Lightning, Mac, Numbers, OS X, Pages, Photo Booth, the Podcast Logo, Retina, Safari, Siri, Smart Cover, Spotlight, Touch ID, and True Tone are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. AirPods, Apple Pencil, HomeKit, iPad mini, Live Photos, macOS, and Multi-Touch are trademarks of Apple Inc. Apple Store, App Store, Genius, iCloud, iCloud Keychain, iTunes Extras, iTunes Match, and iTunes Store are service marks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. iBooks Store and iTunes Plus are service marks of Apple Inc. Apple 1 Infinite Loop Page 291 of 292 iPad User Guide Cupertino, CA 95014-2084 408-996-1010 www.apple.com Beats 1 is a service mark of Beats Electronics, LLC. IOS is a trademark or registered trademark of Cisco in the U.S. and other countries and is used under license. The Bluetooth® word mark and logos are registered trademarks owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and any use of such marks by Apple Inc. is under license. ENERGY STAR® is a U.S. registered trademark. Adobe and Photoshop are trademarks or registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the U.S. and/or other countries. Other company and product names mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective companies. Every effort has been made to ensure that the information in this manual is accurate. Apple is not responsible for printing or clerical errors. Some apps are not available in all areas. App availability is subject to change. Page 292 of 292
Source Exif Data:
File Type : PDF File Type Extension : pdf MIME Type : application/pdf PDF Version : 1.6 Linearized : No Author : fsegal Create Date : 2017:03:07 15:50:27-08:00 Modify Date : 2017:03:07 15:51:41-08:00 Has XFA : No XMP Toolkit : Adobe XMP Core 5.4-c006 80.159825, 2016/09/16-03:31:08 Metadata Date : 2017:03:07 15:51:41-08:00 Creator Tool : Safari Format : application/pdf Title : iPad User Guide Creator : fsegal Document ID : uuid:609747e4-ab60-4d49-837f-8b342eea5fd6 Instance ID : uuid:528bb1cf-ee40-5a41-a13a-10d83a063f19 Producer : Mac OS X 10.12.1 Quartz PDFContext Page Count : 156EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools