Exploring iPad Pro: iPadOS Edition - Kevin Wilson - E-Book

Exploring iPad Pro: iPadOS Edition E-Book

Kevin Wilson

0,0
8,49 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Exploring iPad Pro is the perfect companion for your new iPad Pro. Written by best-selling technology author, lecturer, and computer trainer Kevin Wilson, Exploring iPad Pro is packed with step-by-step instructions, full color photos, illustrations, helpful tips and video demos.


Updated to cover the iPadOS update, Exploring iPad Pro will help you :


Upgrade your iPad to iPadOS


The new features introduced in iPadOS


Find your way around the dock, menus, and icons


Navigate with touch gestures: tap, drag, pinch, spread and swipe


Multi-task with slide over, split view, and drag & drop


Use iPad as a second screen on your Mac with SideCar.


Use control centre, lock screen, notifications, and handoff


Connect external keyboards as well as the on-screen keyboard


Use Apple Pencil to draw, annotate, and take notes


Get to know Siri, voice dictation, and recording voice memos


Communicate with email, FaceTime, and iMessage


Use digital touch, and peer-to-peer payments


Browse the web with Safari web browser


Take, enhance, and share photos and video


Stream music with Apple Music, buy tracks & albums from iTunes Store


Stream TV programs & movies with the new Apple TV App


Use Files App, as well as Maps, News, Apple Books, and Notes


Get productive with Pages, Keynote, and Numbers


Setup and use Apple Pay, Calendar, and Contacts, and more...


In addition, you will learn how to make the most of the new features of iPadOS with clear explanations and video demos to help you along the way.


Finally, maintenance, system updates, backups, and general housekeeping tips complete this invaluable guide. You'll want to keep this edition handy as you explore the new iPadOS.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB

Seitenzahl: 151

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2020

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



ExploringiPad ProiPadOS EditionKevin Wilson

Exploring iPad Pro: iPadOS Edition

Copyright © 2019 Elluminet Press

This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from the Publisher. Permissions for use may be obtained through Rights Link at the Copyright Clearance Centre. Violations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law.

Trademarked names, logos, and images may appear in this book. Rather than use a trademark symbol with every occurrence of a trademarked name, logo, or image we use the names, logos, and images only in an editorial fashion and to the benefit of the trademark owner, with no intention of infringement of the trademark.

The use in this publication of trade names, trademarks, service marks, and similar terms, even if they are not identified as such, is not to be taken as an expression of opinion as to whether or not they are subject to proprietary rights.

While the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication, neither the authors nor the editors nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publisher makes no warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein.

Publisher: Elluminet Press

Director: Kevin Wilson

Lead Editor: Steven Ashmore

Technical Reviewer: Mike Taylor, Robert Ashcroft

Copy Editors: Joanne Taylor, James Marsh

Proof Reader: Mike Taylor

Indexer: James Marsh

Cover Designer: Kevin Wilson

About the Author

With over 15 years’ experience in the computer industry, Kevin Wilson has made a career out of technology and showing others how to use it. After earning a master’s degree in computer science, software engineering, and multimedia systems, Kevin has held various positions in the IT industry including graphic & web design, building & managing corporate networks, training, and IT support.

He currently serves as Elluminet Press LTD’s senior writer and director, he periodically teaches computer science at college in South Africa and serves as an IT trainer in England. His books have become a valuable resource among the students in England, South Africa and our partners in the United States.

Kevin’s motto is clear: “If you can’t explain something simply, then you haven’t understood it well enough.” To that end, he has created the Exploring Technology Series, in which he breaks down complex technological subjects into smaller, easy-to-follow steps that students and ordinary computer users can put into practice.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to all the staff at Luminescent Media & Elluminet Press for their passion, dedication and hard work in the preparation and production of this book.

To all my friends and family for their continued support and encouragement in all my writing projects.

To all my colleagues, students and testers who took the time to test procedures and offer feedback on the book

Finally thanks to you the reader for choosing this book. I hope it helps you to use your iPad Pro with greater understanding.

Have fun!

Table of Contents

iPads 10

What’s New? 10

Setting up Your iPad 14

Insert your SIM 14

Power Up & Power Down 17

Upgrading your iPad to iPadOS 18

Initial Setup 19

Auto Setup 19

Manual Setup 22

Charging your iPad’s Battery 31

Connecting your iPad to a Mac/PC 32

Using iTunes 33

Sync your iPad/iPhone with your Mac 34

Restore iPad 36

Connecting to the Internet 37

WiFi 37

Setting up Email Accounts 39

Add Social Media Accounts 42

Change your Wallpaper 43

Dark & Light Mode 46

Touch ID 47

Face ID 48

Sign in & Sign Out of iCloud 49

Pairing Bluetooth Devices 50

Find My 52

Setup 52

Locating & Taking Action 53

Sharing Locations 54

Getting Around Your iPad 56

Home Screen 56

Widgets 57

Shortcuts 58

The Dock 62

Status Bar 62

Control Centre 63

Customising Control Centre 64

Notifications & Lock Screen 65

Touch Gestures 67

Tap 67

Drag 68

Pinch & Spread 69

Swipe 70

Four Finger Swipe 71

Reveal Home Screen 72

Reveal App Switcher 73

New Touch Gestures 74

Cut, Copy & Paste 74

Text Selection 76

Multitasking 77

Open Multiple Apps at a Time 80

Using Slide Over 80

Multiple Apps in Slide Over 81

Swipe Between Slide Over Apps 82

Using Split View 83

Drag & Drop 84

Picture in Picture 87

Handoff 89

Sidecar 91

The On-screen Keyboard 95

Apple Smart Keyboard 97

Bluetooth Keyboards 98

Mouse Support 99

Spotlight Search 101

Arranging Icons 104

Removing Icons 106

Siri 107

Enable Siri 107

Using Siri 108

Siri Translate 109

Voice Dictation 111

Voice Control 112

Settings Search 113

Family Sharing 114

Add a Family Member 116

Invite in Person 117

Child Accounts 118

Managing your Family 121

Screen Time 122

Downtime 124

App Limits 125

Always Allowed 127

Content & Privacy Restrictions 127

Allowing and Blocking Content 128

Internet, Email, Communication 130

Using Safari 130

Bookmarking a Site 134

Revisiting a Bookmarked Site 135

Browsing History 136

Reader View 137

Page Zoom 138

Download Manager 139

Generate Automatic Strong Passwords 140

Autofill Passwords on Websites 141

Automatically add Password to Keychain 142

Using Email 144

Reply to a Message 144

New Message 145

Formatting Messages 146

Attachments 147

Flagging Messages 148

Block Sender 148

Contacts 149

View Contact Details 150

New Contact 151

New Contact from a Message 152

Delete a Contact 153

Calendar (iCal) 154

Adding an Appointment 155

Add a Recurring Appointment 156

Adding an Appointment from a Message 157

FaceTime 158

Making a Call 159

Adding Effects 163

Group FaceTime 165

Adding a Contact 167

iMessage 169

Sending Photos from Photos App 171

Sending Photos from Camera 172

Adding Effects 173

Digital Touch in iMessage 175

Sending Payments with iMessage 180

Emojis 181

Using Emojis 181

AirDrop 182

To Send a file to Someone using AirDrop 183

To Receive a File from Someone using AirDrop 185

Using Multimedia 186

Photos 186

Import Photos 187

Browsing Through your Photos 188

Editing Photos 190

Adjusting Images 191

Crop an Image 192

Rotate an Image 193

Creating Albums 194

Search for Photos 195

Sharing Photos 196

Camera App 199

Adjusting your Photo 202

Panoramic Photos 203

Recording Video 204

Enhancing Video 205

Music App 206

Apple Music 207

The Main Screen 209

Searching for Music 210

Add to Library 212

Creating Playlists 213

Importing CDs 214

Podcasts App 217

iTunes Store 219

Music 220

Films & TV 221

Apple TV App 223

Watch Now 223

Library 224

Airplay 225

Apple Pencil 227

Pair Apple Pencil 228

Charge your Pencil (2nd Gen) 228

Using Apple Pencil 229

Document Scanner 231

QR Code Scanner 235

Common Apps 236

App Store 236

Search for Apps 238

Browsing the Store 241

The Arcade 244

Taking Notes 246

Typing Notes 247

Inserting Photos 248

Handwritten Notes 249

Dictating Notes 250

Organising your Notes 251

Inviting other Users 252

Reminders 254

Create a Reminder 254

Create a New List 255

Schedule a Reminder 256

Reminder When Messaging Someone 257

Reminder at a Location 258

Maps 259

Driving Directions 261

3D Maps 265

News App 267

Apple Books App 270

Browse the Store 271

Search the Store 272

Files App 275

Create New Folders 276

Drag Files into Folders 277

Delete Files or Folders 277

Share a File 278

External Drive Support 278

Rename Files or Folders 279

File Servers 280

Apple Pay 281

Setup 281

Using Apple Pay 284

Voice Memos 285

Recording Memos 286

Renaming Memos 287

Trim a Memo 288

Measure App 289

Clock App 291

World Clock 291

Alarm 293

Bed Time 294

Stop Watch 296

Timer 296

Productivity Apps 298

Pages Word Processing 298

Formatting Text 300

Adding a Picture 303

Collaboration 304

Keynote Presentations 305

Editing a Slide 306

Adding Media 308

Animations 309

Formatting Text Boxes 311

Formatting Text Inside Textboxes 312

Numbers Spreadsheets 314

Entering Data 315

Simple Text Formatting 316

Resizing Rows and Columns 317

Inserting Rows & Columns 317

Formulas 318

Functions 318

Fonts 319

Downloading 320

Installing from File 321

Printing Documents 322

Air Print 322

Older Printers 323

Maintaining Your iPad 324

iPad Backups 324

System Updates 325

App Updates 328

Deleting Apps 329

iPad Storage Maintenance 330

iPad Recovery 332

Accessorise Your iPad 334

Smart Keyboards 334

Cases 335

USB Adapters 335

AV Adapters 336

Power Chargers 337

iPads

As iPads have continued to develop and evolve, they have received more and more features not available on iPhones. Because of this, iPads now have their own operating system called iPadOS.

So what’s an Operating System? An Operating System is a program that manages the device’s hardware resources such as memory, processor and storage. The Operating System also provides a platform for you to run apps such as web browsers, maps, email, photos, games and so on.

The iPadOS user interface is a touch screen, meaning you can directly manipulate sliders, switches, buttons and icons on screen using your finger.

iPadOS has a main screen called the home screen containing icons that represent apps. You can download countless apps from the App Store - you’ll find an app for almost anything you can think of.

Security has improved on these devices, you can unlock just with a finger print - no need to keep remembering a PIN.

Finally there’s Siri, the voice activated personal assistant that uses natural language AI to interpret voice commands you speak out loud. You can ask Siri to send messages, dial a number, as well as search the web, and answer certain questions.

What’s New?

The home screen has a few changes. The icons are now smaller, and in horizontal mode, down the left hand side you’ll see your clock with app widgets for weather, calendar, siri suggestions, maps, and screen time.

Also introduced in iPadOS is dark mode. This reduces the amount of white on the screen making it easier on the eyes.

iPadOS introduces a new feature called Sidecar that allows you to use your iPad as a second screen on a Mac running macOS Catalina. Useful for marking up documents, drawing and graphic design.

There are some new touch gestures you can use to copy & paste text or images, as well a gesture to undo edits. You can pick up the cursor and drag it precisely where you want it, or select a block of text by dragging your finger over it. You can also select a word with a double tap, a sentence with three taps, or a whole paragraph with four taps.

There is a floating on-screen keyboard you can position wherever you want, to make typing easier, as well as keyboard short-cuts should you want to add a physical keyboard.

Font management has been added to the iPad which allows you to install additional fonts from the App store should you need them for any work you are doing.

There are also improvements to multi-tasking features such as slide over and split view.

The photos app has had a few improvements including new tools to adjust and enhance photos, as well as a ‘curated view’ of your best shots. You can also apply effects and enhancements to video clips you have taken.

The files app on the iPad has been redesigned giving you a more detailed view of your files.

You can also connect to servers and plug in external drives such as flash drives and external hard disc drives.

Safari has a new download folder allowing you to view recent downloads and access them from the Files App.

Also introduced in iPadOS is Apple Arcade where you can play all sorts of new games.

Setting up Your iPad

If you’ve just bought your new iPad and taken it out the box, the process to set it up to use for the first time is very simple. You don’t even have to connect it to your computer.

At the time of writing, the new iPad Pros come in two sizes: 11” or 12.9” with liquid retina screen a silver or grey finish. There are four data storage sizes: 64GB, 256GB, 512GB & 1TB.

4 speaker audio and a 12 Mega pixel camera with 4K video recording

You can attach Apple smart keyboards and external bluetooth keyboards, useful if you use your iPad to do your work

Uses USB-C port for charging and external devices but has no 3.5mm headphone jack

Latest models only work with the second generation Apple Pencil.

In this section we’ll take a look at setting up your iPad. Take a look at the video resources

www.elluminetpress.com/using-ipad-pro

Insert your SIM

Make sure your device is off before doing this. If your iPad has a SIM card or you’re using an iPhone, you’ll need to insert your SIM card from your network provider.

Push the end of a paper clip into the release hole on the side of your device. Pull out the little tray and insert your SIM.

Slide the little tray back into your device, until it fits firmly into place against the side.

You’re now ready to power on your iPad. To do this, hold down the power button located on the top of your device, until you see the Apple logo on the screen.

Give your iPad a few seconds to start up.

Power Up & Power Down

Once your iPad battery is fully charged, press and hold the power button for a couple of seconds until you see the apple logo.

To completely shutdown your iPad, press and hold down on the top button and either the volume up button until a slider appears.

Slide your finger across the on-screen slider to confirm.

Upgrading your iPad to iPadOS

Make sure your iPad is plugged into a power outlet, and you are connected to your WiFi.

Once you have done that, go to the settings app, tap ‘General’, then select ‘Software Update’.

Tap ‘Download and Install’ on the available update.

To update now, tap ‘download and install’. Enter your passcode when prompted. Your iPad will restart and the update will install. This might take a while.

Initial Setup

To use iPad, you need an internet connection and your Apple ID. Apple has introduced an automated setup feature that allows you to transfer settings from another device, such as an iPhone. Both devices must be running iOS 11, iOS 12, or iPadOS/iOS 13. If you don’t have this, you can still set up your iPad manually. First lets take a look at the auto setup feature.

Auto Setup

Turn on your iPad. On the welcome screen, slide your finger across the screen, or press the home button to start.

Select your language and country/region.

When you land on this screen, place your old iPad or iPhone next to your new iPad.

Unlock your old iPad or iPhone. You’ll get a prompt on your old device, tap ‘continue’.

Now, you’ll see a strange looking pattern appear on your new iPad’s screen. Holding your old iPhone/iPad, position the pattern in the circle on your old device as shown below.

Keep your old iPad/iPhone next to your new one until the setup is complete.

Enter the passcode from your old iPad/iPhone, into your new iPad.

Set up Touch ID, sign in with your Apple ID when prompted.

Tap ‘continue’ on the ‘go home’ screen, ‘quick access to the dock’ screen, ‘switch between apps’ screen, and the ‘quickly access controls’ screen.

Manual Setup

Turn on your iPad, then from the welcome screen, swipe your finger across the bottom of the screen, or press the home button.

Select your language and country/region.

Select ‘set up manually’ on the bottom of the screen.

Select your WiFi network and enter your WiFi password when prompted.

Tap ‘continue’ on the data privacy screen.

Tap ‘continue’ to set up Touch ID.

Now you need to scan your finger print. Scan the finger you are most likely to use to press the home button with. In most cases this is your thumb, so it makes sense to scan this finger. Follow the instructions on the screen.

You’ll need to scan your finger a few times, so the system can account for different variations as you wont always put your thumb on the home button in exactly the same position every time. Do what it says on the screen. When you’re done, tap ‘next’ on the top right.

Check out the Touch ID demo in the ‘using iPad’ section of the video resources on how to scan your fingerprint. Go to the following website.

www.elluminetpress.com/using-iPad-pro

Enter a 6 digit passcode. This code is used to unlock your iPad if Touch ID isn’t available.

Tap ‘restore from iCloud backup’. This will ensure all your settings, messages, contacts, apps, photos, music, and email are restored.

If you are setting up from scratch or are a new user, tap ‘don’t transfer apps & data’.

Sign in with your Apple ID email address and password. Tap ‘next’ on the top right..

Choose a backup if prompted. Choose the latest one on the list.

Tap ‘enable location services’. This allows your iPad to work out your physical location so you can get local information, weather, and map directions.

Tap ‘continue’ to set up Apple Pay. Follow the prompts to add your credit/debit cards.

Tap ‘continue’ to set up Siri. Follow the prompts on screen.

Tap ‘don’t share’ on iPad Analytics.

Tap ‘continue’ on the ‘true tone display’ screen.

Select light or dark mode. Dark mode is much easier on the eyes and is good for low light and night time usage.

Tap ‘continue’ on the ‘restore completed’ screen if prompted.

Tap ‘continue’ on the ‘keep your iPad up to date’ screen

Tap ‘continue’ on the ‘go home’ screen, ‘quick access to the dock’ screen, ‘switch between apps’ screen, and the ‘quickly access controls’ screen.

Once you’re completed the initial setup, you’ll land on the home screen. See “Getting Around Your iPad”

Along the top of the home screen there is a status bar that displays current networks (cellular or WiFi), current time, services such as bluetooth and battery life.

In the centre of the screen are icons representing apps that are currently installed on iPad. Some are installed already but many can be downloaded from the app store.

Along the bottom of the screen is the Dock. The Dock is split into two sections. On the left hand side you’ll see commonly used apps: messages, web browsing, email, music, and files. You can drag and drop icons onto this part of the dock from your home screen. On the right hand side of the dock, you’ll see your most recently opened apps.

This diagram shows the rear. You can see