iPad and iPad Pro For Dummies. Bob LeVitus

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feature shortly.

      And we love the iPad’s plethora of built-in sensors. It has an accelerometer that detects when you rotate the device from portrait to landscape mode — and instantly adjusts what’s on the display.

      A light sensor adjusts the display’s brightness in response to the current ambient lighting conditions. Then there’s a three-axis gyro that works with the accelerometer and built-in compass. And most models — since the iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4, 9.7-inch iPad, and all iPad Pro models — also include Apple’s Touch ID sensor or Face ID. These features let you unlock your iPad with your fingerprint (Touch ID) or just by looking at it (Face ID)! We talk about both in detail later.

      Last, but definitely not least, all iPads since the third generation include Siri, a voice-controlled personal assistant happy to do almost anything you ask (as long as your iPad is running iOS 6 or later).

      In the following sections, we’re not just marveling about the wonderful screen and sensors. Now it’s time to take a brief look at the rest of the iPad’s features, broken down by product category.

      The iPad as a media player

      We agree with the late Steve Jobs on this one: The iPad is magical — and without a doubt the best iPod (that is, media player) Apple has ever produced. You can enjoy all your existing media — music, audiobooks, audio and video podcasts, iTunes U courses, music videos, television shows, and movies, all on the gorgeous Retina display.

      

If you can get a media file — be it video, audio, or whatever — on your iPad, you can watch or listen to it on your iPad. And, of course, you can always buy or rent content on your iPad in the iTunes Store. You can also watch streaming content from Netflix, Hulu, Apple’s own Apple TV+ streaming service, and a host of others through apps.

      The iPad as an Internet communications device

      But wait — there’s more! Not only is the iPad a stellar media player, it’s also a full-featured Internet communications device with — we’re about to drop some industry jargon on you — an email client that’s compatible with most POP and IMAP mail services, plus it has support for Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync. (For more on this topic, see Chapter 5.) Also onboard is Safari, a world-class web browser that makes web surfing fun and easy on the eyes. Chapter 4 explains how to surf the web using Safari.

      Another cool Internet feature is Maps, a killer mapping app that’s improved in iPadOS. By using GPS or triangulation (Wi-Fi–only models), the iPad can determine your location, let you view maps and satellite imagery, and obtain driving directions and traffic information regardless of where you happen to be. You can also find businesses (such as gas stations, pizza restaurants, hospitals, and Apple Stores) with just a few taps.

      

Maps is useful over Wi-Fi but more useful and more accurate on cellular iPads.

      We dare say that the Internet experience on an iPad is far superior to the Internet experience on any other handheld device.

      The iPad as an e-book reader

      The iPad as a multimedia powerhouse

      The Retina display on all iPads since the third generation makes the experience even more extraordinary. You can use AirPlay to send your video out to Apple TV, too, and your iPad turns into a superb device for watching video on a TV, with support for output resolutions up to 4K.

      And iPads include a pair of cameras and the FaceTime video-chatting app, taking the iPad’s multimedia acumen to new heights. Chapter 8 gets you started with FaceTime.

      The iPad as a platform for third-party apps

      At the time of this writing, there were more than 4 million apps in the App Store, with hundreds of billions of downloads to date in categories such as games, business, education, entertainment, healthcare and fitness, music, photography, productivity, travel, and sports. The cool thing is that most of them, even ones designed for the iPhone, also run flawlessly on the iPad. And more than a million are designed specifically for the iPad’s larger screen.

      Chapter 10 helps you fill your iPad with all the cool apps your heart desires. We share our favorite free and for-pay apps in Chapters 18 and 19, respectively.

      The iPad as a multitasking content production device

      Apple has made the iPad more and more of a device for creating content as opposed to only consuming it. Writing, taking and editing pictures, recording and editing music or videos, and even putting together full-scale presentations — all of these tasks are even easier with iPadOS, especially on the iPad Pro. Split-screen views, support for the Files app, and the fastest processors in mobile computers have made the iPad a beast of a machine. We talk more about multitasking in Chapter 13.

      What do you need to use an iPad?

      To use your iPad, only a few simple things are required. Here’s a list of everything you need:

       An iPad

       An Apple ID (assuming that you want to acquire content such as apps, TV shows and movies, music, books, and podcasts, which you almost certainly do)

       Internet access — broadband wireless Internet access is recommended

      Several years ago, we said you needed a computer with iTunes to sync your iPad. That’s no longer true; these days you can activate, set up, update, back up, and restore an iPad wirelessly without ever introducing it to a computer.

      If you do decide to introduce your iPad to your computer (and we think you should), you need one of the following for syncing (which we discuss at length in Chapter

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