Imagine your grandparents coming across the iPad lying on your desk. They might not guess it was a computer (let alone a music player/Web browser/alarm clock/stopwatch/voice recorder/musical instrument/compass/camera).
Itâs all there, though, hidden inside this sleek, thin slab.
For the rest of this book, and for the rest of your life with the iPad, youâll be expected to know whatâs meant by, for example, âthe Home buttonâ and âthe Sleep switch.â A guided tour, therefore, is in order.
You could argue that knowing how to turn on your tablet might be a useful skill. For that, you need the Sleep switch. Itâs a metal button shaped like a dash on the top-right edge.
It has several functions:
Sleep/Wake. Tapping it once puts the iPad to sleepâinto Standby mode, ready for receiving Internet data but consuming very little power. Tapping it again turns on the screen so itâs ready for action.
On/Off. The same switch can also turn the iPad off completely so it consumes no power at all. You might turn the iPad off whenever youâre not going to use it for a few days.
To turn the iPad off, press the Sleep switch for 3 seconds. The screen changes to say slide to power off.
Confirm your decision by placing a fingertip on the and sliding to the right. The device shuts off completely.
Tip
If you change your mind about turning the iPad off, tap the Cancel button or do nothing; after a moment, the iPad backs out of the slide to power off screen automatically.
To turn the iPad back on, press the switch again for 1 second. The Apple logo appears as the tablet boots up. (The Apple logo is black if your iPad is white and white if your iPad is black. Nice touch.)
Force restart. The Sleep switch has one more function. If your iPad is frozen, and no buttons work, and you canât even turn the thing off, this button is also involved in force-restarting the whole machine. Steps for this last-ditch procedure are on Seven Ways to Reset the iPad.
When you donât touch the screen for 1 minute (or another interval you choose), or when you put the iPad to sleep, the tablet locks itself. When itâs locked, the screen is dark and doesnât respond to touch. If music is playing, it keeps going; if youâre recording audio, the recording proceeds.
But when the tablet is locked, you donât have to worry about accidental button pushes. You wouldnât want to discover that your iPad has been taking photos from the depths of your bag.
To wake the iPad when itâs locked, press either the Sleep switch or the Home button.
That gesture alone doesnât fire up the full iPad world, though. Instead, it presents the Lock screen.
From here, slide your finger rightward across the screen (anywhereâyou donât have to aim for the slide to unlock area!) to unlock the tablet with your password or fingerprint. (See Miscellaneous Weirdness or Fingerprint Security (Touch ID).)
Note
You can adjust how quickly the tablet locks itself, or make it stop locking itself altogether; see General.
These days, though, the Lock screen is more than just a big Do Not Disturb sign. Itâs a lively bulletin board for up-to-date information about your lifeâinformation you can scan or work with right at the Lock screen.
For starters, you can use the iPad as a watchâlots of people do. Just tap the Sleep switch to consult the Lock screenâs time and date display, and put the tablet right down again. The iPad goes back to sleep after a few seconds.
Better yet, the Lock screen is a handy status screen. Here you see a record of everything that happened while you werenât paying attention. Itâs a list of messages received, notifications from your apps, and other essential information.
Now, each of these notices has come from a different app (software program). To see a Facebook post, for example, youâd want to open the Facebook app; to reply to a message, youâd want the Messages app, and so on.
So hereâs a handy shortcut: You can dive directly into the relevant app by swiping your finger across the notification itself, like this:
That shortcut saves you the trouble of unlocking the iPad and trying to find the corresponding app.
Tip
If youâd rather not have all these details show up on the Lock screen, you can turn them off. (Privacy is the main reason you might want to do soâthe bad guys donât need a password to view your Lock screen. They just have to tap the Sleep switch or the Home button.)
You can hide these items from your Lock screen on an app-by-app basis. For example, you might want missed calls to show up here but not missed text messages. To set this up, choose SettingsâNotifications. Tap the app in question; turn off Show on Lock Screen.
More ways to accomplish things on the Lock screen:
Swipe down from the top of the screen to view your Notification Centerâa detailed one-stop screen that shows your missed calls, texts, and emails; upcoming appointments; stock and weather alerts; and so on. (See The Notification Center.)
Swipe up from the bottom edge to open the Control Center, with all the important settings (volume, brightness, play/pause music, Airplane mode, and more) in one place. See Control Center.
Swipe up on the camera () icon to open the Camera app (The Camera App).
Swipe up on the app icon at lower left, if you see one. This feature, new in iOS 8, is supposed to let you know when thereâs an app you might find useful based on your location right now.
If youâre entering a Starbucks, the Starbucks app icon might appear there, so that you can pay wirelessly. If youâre at a train station, your tablet might use this opportunity to let you know about a schedule app for that train line. You may also see this little icon as you enter a bank, store, hospital, college, and so on (assuming your iPad can get online at the time).
In each case, the suggested app opens when you swipe up on this icon. Or, if you donât have the app already, the App Store opens to the right page, so that you can download the app.
Now, remember: You can enjoy any of the activities described above even before youâve entered your password or used your fingerprint.
In other words, some stranger picking up your iPad can do all of these things, too. If that bothers you, donât worry; you can turn all of those features off on the corresponding Settings screens. For example, to block Lock-screen access to your Control Center, open SettingsâControl Center. Turn off Access on Lock Screen. To turn off individual appsâ presence on the Lock screen, open SettingsâControl Center; tap the appâs name, and then turn off Show on Lock Screen.
Here it is: the one and only button on the front of this tablet. Push it to summon the Home screen, which is your gateway to everything the iPad can do. (You can read more about the Home screen at the end of this chapter.)
The Home button is a wonderful thing. It means you can never get lost. No matter how deeply you burrow into the iPadâs software, no matter how far off track you find yourself, one push of the Home button takes you back to the beginning.
On the iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 3 models, of course, the Home button is also a fingerprint scannerâone that actually works.
But, as time goes on, Apple keeps saddling the Home button with more and more functions. Itâs become Appleâs only way to provide shortcuts for common features; thatâs what you get when you design a tablet that has only one button. In iPad Land, you can press the Home button one, two, or three times for different functionsâor even hold it down. Hereâs the rundown.
Pressing the Home button once wakes the tablet if itâs in locked mode. Thatâs sometimes easier than finding the Sleep switch on the edge. It gives you a quick glance at your notifications and missed textsâor the time and date.
If youâve taught the iPad Air 2 or iPad mini 3 to recognize your fingerprint, then just resting your finger on the Home button is enough to unlock the tablet, bypassing the password screen. In other words, you should get into the habit of pressing the Home button (to wake the tablet) and then leaving your finger on it for about a half-second to unlock it. Miscellaneous Weirdness has more on fingerprints.
If you hold down the Home button for about 3 seconds, you wake up Siri, your virtual voice-controlled assistant. Details are in Chapter 3.
If, once the tablet is awake, you press the Home button twice quickly, the current image fades awayâto reveal the app switcher screen, the key to the iPadâs multitasking feature.
What you see here are icons and currently open screens of the programs youâve used most recently (older ones are to the right), as shown below. Swipe horizontally to bring more apps into view; the Home screen is always at the far left.
With a single tap (on either the icon or the screen miniature), you can jump right back into a program you had open, without waiting for it to start up, show its welcome screen, and so onâand without having to scroll through 11 Home screens trying to find the icon of a favorite app.
In short, the app switcher gives you a way to jump directly to another app, without a layover at the Home screen first.
Tip
On this screen, you can also quit a program by flicking it upward. In fact, you can quit several programs at once, using two or three fingers. Fun for the whole family!
This app switcher is the only visible element of the iPadâs multitasking feature. Once you get used to it, that double-press of the Home button will become second natureâand your first choice for jumping among apps.
In iOS 8, the app switcher screen offers another new feature that you may eventually rank as one of iOS 8âs finest: the VIP list.
Thatâs not what Apple calls it, but thatâs what it is: a row of headshots, at the top of the screen, that represent the people youâve contacted most recently and most often. See Your Favorite People for details on this extraordinarily handy feature.
In SettingsâGeneralâAccessibility, you can set up a triple-press of the Home button to turn one of several accessibility features on or off: VoiceOver (the tablet speaks whatever you touch), Invert Colors (white-on-black type, which is sometimes easier to see), Grayscale (a new mode that makes the whole iPad black-and-white); Zoom (magnifies the screen), Switch Control (accommodates external gadgets like sip-and-puff straws), and AssistiveTouch (help for people who have trouble with physical switches).
All of these features are described beginning on VoiceOver.
Tip
The Home button is also part of the force quit sequenceâa good troubleshooting technique when a particular program seems to be acting up. See Seven Ways to Reset the iPad.
The mute switch is a tiny flipper on the right edge at the top.
Note
Thereâs a mute switch on every model until the iPad Air 2, which doesnât have one. The Air 2 has a mute switch on the screenâin the Control Center, described on Control Center.
On a phone, the mute switch means that no ringer will humiliate you in a meeting, at a movie, or in church. Since you canât receive traditional phone calls with the iPad, though, this switch isnât quite as essential. Which is probably why Apple lets you change it into a Lock Rotation switch instead (Control Center). And why Apple killed it off in the Air 2.
Note
Even when silenced, the iPad still makes noise in certain circumstances: when an alarm goes off; when youâre playing music; when youâre using Find My iPad (Control Center); when youâre using VoiceOver; or, sometimes, when a game is playing.
On the same right edge, youâll find the volume controls. They work in various ways:
When youâre listening to music, they adjust the playback volumeâeven when the tablet is locked and dark.
When youâre taking a picture, either one serves as a shutter button or a camcorder start/stop button.
At all other times, they adjust the volume of sound effects like the ringer, alarms, and Siri.
When a FaceTime call comes in, they silence the ringing or vibrating.
In each case, if the screen is on, a corresponding volume graphic appears on the screen to show you where you are on the volume scale.
The touchscreen is your mouse, keyboard, and notepad. You might expect it to get fingerprinty and streaky.
But the iPad has an oleophobic screen. That may sound like an irrational fear of yodeling, but it actually refers to a coating that repels grease. A wipe on your clothes restores the screen to its right-out-of-the-box crystal sheen.
You can also use the screen as a mirror when the iPad is off.
The iPad models with Retina screens have crazy high resolution (the number of tiny pixels per inch). Itâs really, really sharp, as youâll discover when reading text or making out the details of a map or a photo. The Retina models manage 2048 x 1536 pixels (more dots than a high-definition TV); earlier models have 1024 x 768.
The front of the iPad is made of Gorilla Glass, a special formulation made by Corning. Itâs unbelievably resistant to scratching. (You can still shatter it if you drop it just the wrong way.)
Note
This is how Corningâs Web site says this glass is made: âThe glass is placed in a hot bath of molten salt at a temperature of approximately 400°C. Smaller sodium ions leave the glass, and larger potassium ions from the salt bath replace them. These larger ions take up more room and are pressed together when the glass cools, producing a layer of compressive stress on the surface of the glass. This layer of compression creates a surface that is more resistant to damage from everyday use.â
But you probably guessed as much.
If youâre nervous about protecting your iPad, you can always get a case for it. But if youâre worried about scratching the glass, youâre probably worrying too much. Itâs really hard to scratch.
Radio signals canât pass through metal. Thatâs why thereâs a plastic strip on the top back.
Hereâs a roundup of the icons you may see in the status bar at the top of the iPad screen, from left to right:
Cell signal. As on a phone, the number of barsâor dots, in iOS 8âs caseâindicates the strength of your cell signal (if you have a cellular iPad), and thus the quality of your Internet connection when youâre beyond a WiFi hotspot. If there are no dots, then the dreaded words âNo serviceâ appear here.
Network name and type. These days, different parts of the countryâand even your streetâare blanketed by cellular Internet signals of different speeds, types, and ages. Your status bar always shows you the kind of signal it has right now. From slowest to fastest:
or means your cellular iPad is connected to your carrierâs slowest, oldest Internet system. You might be able to check email, but youâll lose your mind waiting for a Web page to load.
If you see the logo, youâre in a city where your cell company has installed a 3G networkâmeaning fairly decent Internet speed. A logo is better yet; you have speed in between 3G and LTE.
And if you see up thereâwell, then, get psyched. You have a fairly recent iPad (3rd Generation or later), and youâre in a city with a 4G LTE cellular network. And that means very fast Internet (maybe even faster than you have at home), fast Web browsing, fast app downloadingâjust fast.
Airplane Mode. If you see the airplane instead of signal and WiFi bars, then the iPad is in Airplane mode (Airplane Mode and WiFi Off Mode).
Do Not Disturb. When the tablet is in Do Not Disturb mode, nothing can make it ring, buzz, or light up except communications from the most important people. Details on Do Not Disturb.
WiFi signal. When youâre connected to a wireless Internet hotspot, this indicator appears. The more âsound waves,â the stronger the signal.
9:50 AM. When the iPad is unlocked, a digital clock appears on the status bar.
Alarm. Youâve got an alarm set. This reminder, too, can be valuable, especially when you intend to sleep late and donât want an alarm to go off.
Bluetooth. The iPad is connected wirelessly to a Bluetooth earpiece, speaker, or car system. (If this symbol is gray, then it means Bluetooth is turned on but not connected to any other gearâand not sucking down battery power.)
VPN. You corporate stud, you! Youâve managed to connect to your corporate network over a secure Internet connection, probably with the assistance of a systems administratorâor by consulting Virtual Private Networking (VPN).
Syncing. The iPad is currently syncing with some Internet serviceâiCloud, for example (Chapter 15).
Battery meter. When the iPad is charging, the lightning bolt appears. Otherwise, the battery logo âempties outâ from right to left to indicate how much charge remains. (You can even add a â% fullâ indicator to this gauge; see Control Center.)
Navigation active. Youâre running a GPS navigation program in the background (yay, multitasking!). Why is a special icon necessary? Because those GPS apps slurp down battery power like a thirsty golden retriever. Apple wants to make sure you donât forget youâre running it.
Lock Rotation. This icon reminds you that youâve deliberately turned off the screen-rotation feature, where the screen image turns 90 degrees when you rotate the tablet. Why would you want to? And how do you turn the rotation lock on or off? See Control Center.
At the top of the iPad, the tiny pinhole is the front-facing camera. Its primary purpose is to let you conduct video chats using the FaceTime feature, but itâs also handy for taking self-portraits or just checking to see if you have spinach in your teeth.
Itâs not as good a camera as the one on the back, though. Itâs not as good in low light, and takes much lower-resolution shots (1.2 megapixels).
The camera on the back of the iPad, meanwhile, takes very good photos indeedâ8 megapixels on the iPad Air 2, 5 megapixels on the other iOS 8 models.
The tiny pinhole next to the lens (recent models only) is a microphone. Itâs used for recording clearer sound with video, for better noise cancellation on FaceTime calls, and for better directional sound pickup.
Thereâs more on the iPadâs cameras in Chapter 8.
Behind the glass, front center, is a very tiny sensor. Itâs hard to see.
Itâs an ambient-light sensor that brightens the display when youâre in sunlight and dims it in darker places.
Many people prefer to adjust the screen brightness themselves. Fortunately, itâs easy to turn off this automatic brightness-setting feature; see Display & Brightness.
There are two kinds of iPad: the WiFi-only models and the more expensive cellular + WiFi models, which can also get online anywhere thereâs cellular coverage. You donât have to sign up for two years of cellular service, as you usually do with a cellphone; on the iPad, you can sign up for a month of data at a time, only when you need it. (Signing Up for Service has the details.)
On the right edge of the cellular models, thereâs a pinhole next to what looks like a very thin slot cover. If you push an unfolded paper clip straight into the hole, the SIM card tray pops out.
Every cellphone and cellular tablet stores your account infoâthings like your carrier account detailsâon a tiny memory card known as a SIM (subscriber identity module) card. These days, every iPad is identical; only the SIM card inside makes it a T-Mobile iPad, a Verizon iPad, or whatever.
So if you travel, you can rent a temporary SIM card when you get to the destination country. Thatâs a lot less expensive than paying your U.S. carrierâs insane roaming fees.
With the iPad Air 2, Apple executed a mind-blowing feat of engineering and negotiation: It created a single SIM card that works with AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint (and other carriers around the world). Itâs the same tablet and the same SIM card, no matter which of those three companies you buy it from.
In theory, Appleâs universal SIM card should mean that you can use the same iPad on anyoneâs network. You can hop around, shop around, using T-Mobile when its signal is best, Sprint when its signal is best, and so on.
In reality, things work that way only if you plan to hop between Sprint and T-Mobile. If you ever choose an AT&T plan, the SIM becomes locked to AT&T forever. (And if you choose another carrier, you lose the option to choose AT&T in the future.)
Note, furthermore, that you get an Apple SIM only if you buy the iPad from Apple. If you buy it from one of the carriers, you usually get a card locked to the carrier. (T-Mobile is the exception.)
And Verizon, of course, refuses to play ball with Apple at all; a Verizon iPad has a Verizon SIM card, period.
On the top-left edge of the iPad, thereâs a miniplug. Thatâs where you can plug in earbuds (not included).
Itâs more than an ordinary 3.5-millimeter audio jack, however. It contains a secret fourth pin that conducts sound into the tablet from the microphone, if your earbuds have one on the cord. On a FaceTime audio call, for example, you hear the other person through your earbuds, and the mike on the cord picks up your voice.
Directly below the Home button, on the bottom edge of the tablet, youâll find the connector that charges and syncs the iPad with your computer.
For nearly 10 years, the charge/sync connector was identical on every iPad, iPod, and iPhoneâthe famous 30-pin connector. But on the iPad Air and later models, Apple replaced that inch-wide connector with a new, far smaller one it calls Lightning.
The Lightning connector is a great design: It clicks nicely into place (you can even dangle the iPad from it), yet you can yank it right out. You can insert the Lightning into the tablet either wayâthereâs no âright-side upâ anymore. Itâs much sturdier than the old connector. And itâs tiny, which was Appleâs primary goalâonly 0.3 inches wide (the old one was almost 0.9 inches wide).
Unfortunately, as a result, the latest iPads donât fit a lot of existing charging cables, docks, chargers, car adapters, hotel-room alarm clocks, speakers, or accessories.
The makers of those accessories will happily sell you new models that have Lightning connectors. Or you can buy an adapter from Apple:
Additional USB charging cables, like the one that came with your iPad, cost $20.
A white adapter plug costs $30. It connects the modern iPad to any accessory that was built for the old 30-pin connector.
If the iPad doesnât quite fit the older accessory, sometimes the solution is the $40 adapter plug with an 8-inch cable âtail.â
In time, as the Lightning connectors come on all new iPads, iPods, and iPhones, a new ecosystem of accessories will arise. Weâll arrive at a new era of standardizationâuntil Apple changes jacks again in another 10 years.
Inside the minimalist box, you get the iPad and these items:
The USB charging/syncing cable. When you connect your iPad to your computer using this white USB cable, it simultaneously syncs and charges. See Chapter 14.
The AC adapter. When youâre traveling without a computer, you can plug the USB cable into the included two-prong outlet adapter, so you can charge the iPad directly from a wall socket.
Decals and info card. iPad essentials.
You donât need a copy of the iTunes software, or even a computer, to use the iPadâbut it makes loading up the tablet a lot easier, as described in Chapter 14.
If you donât have iTunes on your computer, then you can download it from www.apple.com/itunes
The iPad isnât quite like any machine that came before it. You do everything on the touchscreen instead of with physical buttons, like this:
The iPadâs onscreen buttons are nice and big, giving your fleshy fingertip a fat target.
You canât use a fingernail or a pen tip; only skin contact works. (You can also buy an iPad stylus. But a fingertip is cheaper and much harder to misplace.)
In some situations, youâll be asked to confirm an action by swiping your finger across the screen. Thatâs how you unlock the tablet, for example.
You also have to swipe to confirm that you want to turn off the iPad, or to shut off an alarm. Swiping like this is also a great shortcut for deleting an email or a text message.
When youâre zoomed into a map, Web page, email, or photo, you can scroll around just by sliding your finger across the glass in any directionâlike a flick (described later), but slower and more controlled. Itâs a huge improvement over scroll bars, especially when you want to scroll diagonally.
A flick is a faster, less-controlled slide. You flick vertically to scroll lists on the iPad. The faster you flick, the faster the list spins downward or upward. But lists have a real-world sort of momentum; they slow down after a second or two, so you can see where you wound up.
At any point during the scrolling of a list, you can flick again (if you didnât go far enough) or tap to stop the scrolling (if you see the item you want to choose).
In apps like Photos, Mail, Safari, and Maps, you can zoom in on a photo, message, Web page, or map by spreading.
Thatâs when you place two fingers (usually thumb and forefinger) on the glass and spread them. The image magically grows, as though itâs printed on a sheet of rubber.
Note
The English language has failed Apple here. Moving your thumb and forefinger closer together has a perfect verb: pinching. But thereâs no word to describe moving them in the opposite direction.
Apple uses the oxymoronic expression pinch out to describe that move (along with the redundant-sounding pinch in). In this book, the opposite of âpinchingâ is âspreading.â
Once youâve zoomed in like this, you can zoom out again by putting two fingers on the glass and pinching them together.
Double-tapping is pretty rare on the iPad, at least among the programs supplied by Apple. Itâs generally reserved for two functions:
In the Safari Web browser, Photos, and Maps apps, double-tapping zooms in on whatever you tap, magnifying it. (At that point, double-tapping means âRestore to original size.â) Double-tapping also zooms into formatted email messages, PDF files, Microsoft Office files, and others.
When youâre watching a video (or recording one), double-tapping switches the aspect ratio (video screen shape).
Swiping your finger inward from outside the screen has a few variations:
From the top edge. Opens the Notification Center, which lists all your missed FaceTime calls and texts, appointments, and so on.
From the bottom edge. Opens the Control Center, a unified miniature control panel for brightness, volume, WiFi, and so on.
From the left edge. In many apps, this means âGo back to the previous screen.â It works in Mail, Settings, Notes, Messages, Safari, Facebook, and some other apps.
It sometimes makes a big difference whether you begin your swipe within the screen or outside it. At the Home screen, for example, starting your downward swipe within the screen area doesnât open the Notification Centerâit opens Spotlight, the iPadâs search function.
The iPad has a built-in, rechargeable battery that fills up most of its interior. How long a charge lasts depends on what youâre doingâmusic playback saps the battery the least, 3-D games sap it the most. But one thing is for sure: Youâll have to recharge the iPad regularly. For most people, itâs every couple of days.
Note
The iPadâs battery isnât user-replaceable. Itâs rechargeable, but after 400 or 500 charges, it starts to hold less juice. Eventually, youâll have to pay Apple to install a new battery. (Apple says the added bulk of a protective plastic battery compartment, a removable door and latch, and battery-retaining springs would have meant a much smaller batteryâor a much thicker iPad.)
You recharge the iPad by connecting the white USB cable that came with it. You can plug the far end into either of two places to supply power:
Your computerâs USB jack. In general, the iPad charges even if your computer is asleep. (If itâs a laptop that itself is not plugged in, though, then the tablet charges only if the laptop is awake. Otherwise, youâd come home to a depleted laptop.)
The AC adapter. The little white two-prong cube that came with the iPad connects to the end of the cradleâs USB cableâand then plugs into the wall.
You can usually use the iPad while itâs charging. Usually. It depends on how youâre charging it and how youâre using it.
A low-powered USB jack, like the one on a Windows computer or a USB hub, doesnât supply enough juice to charge the tablet while youâre using it; you may even see a âNot chargingâ indication while youâre using the tablet.
The USB jack on a recent Mac should be able to charge your iPad slowly, even if youâre using the thing.
The wall plug is the best of all.
What youâre doing also affects charging speed. Video games with full screen brightness may use up more energy than your charger is supplying; simple activities, like typing or answering email, donât consume nearly as much power.
If you really want your iPad to charge quickly, then put it to sleep and plug it into the wall.
The battery life of the iPad is either terrific or terrible, depending on your point of view.
If you were an optimist, youâd point out that the iPad gets longer battery life than most rival tablets. If you were a pessimist, youâd observe that you sometimes canât even make it through a single day without needing a recharge.
So knowing how to scale back your iPadâs power appetite could come in extremely handy.
The biggest wolfers of electricity are the screen and the wireless features. Therefore, these ideas will help you squeeze more life out of each charge:
Dim the screen. Turning down your screen saves a lot of power. The quickest way is to swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open the Control Center (Control Center), and then drag the brightness slider.
On a new iPad, Auto Brightness is turned on, too. In bright light, the screen brightens automatically; in dim light, it darkens. Thatâs because when you unlock the tablet after waking it, it samples the ambient light and adjusts the brightness. (You can turn this auto-brightness feature off altogether in SettingsâDisplay & Brightness.)
Turn off WiFi. If youâre not in a wireless hotspot, you may as well stop the thing from using its radio. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open the Control Center, and tap the icon to turn it off.
Or at the very least tell the iPad to stop searching for WiFi networks it can connect to. Sequence of Connections has the details.
Turn off âpushâ data. This is a big one. Your iPad can keep itself wirelessly up to date with your latest email, calendar, and address book information. Unfortunately, all that continual sniffing of the airwaves, looking for updates, costs you battery power. If you can do without the immediacy, then visit SettingsâMail, Contacts, CalendarsâFetch New Data. If you turn off the Push feature and set it to Manually instead, then your iPad checks for email and new appointments only when you actually open the Mail or Calendar apps. Your battery goes a lot further.
Turn off background updating. Non-Apple apps check for frequent updates, too: Facebook, Twitter, stock-reporting apps, and so on. Not all of them need to be busily toiling in the background. Your best bet on battery life, then, involves visiting SettingsâGeneralâBackground App Refresh and turning the switch Off for each app whose background activity isnât strictly necessary.
Turn off automatic app updates. App companies update their wares far more often than PC or Mac apps, sometimes many times a year.
The iPad comes set to download them automatically when they become available. But that constant checking and downloading costs you battery life.
To shut that feature down, open SettingsâiTunes & App Store. Scroll down to the Automatic Downloads section. Turn off Updates. (The other switchesâMusic, Apps, Booksâare responsible for auto-downloading things that you or your brood have downloaded on other iOS gadgets. You might want to make sure theyâre off, too, if battery life is a concern.)
Consider Airplane mode. In Airplane mode, you shut off all the iPadâs power-hungry radios. Even a nearly dead iPad can hobble on for a few hours in Airplane modeâsomething to remember when youâre desperate. To enter Airplane mode, swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open the Control Center, and tap the icon.
Turn off Cellular Data. This option on cellular iPads (in SettingsâCellular) turns off the cellular Internet features. You can still get online in a WiFi hotspot.
This feature is designed for people who have a capped data planâa limited amount of Internet use per monthâwhich is almost everybody. If you discover that youâve used up almost all your data allotment for the month, and you donât want to go over your limit (and thereby trigger an overage charge), you can use this option to shut off all data. Now your iPad uses less power, too.
Turn off GPS checks. In SettingsâPrivacyâLocation Services, thereâs a list of all the apps on your tablet that are using its location feature to know where you are. (Itâs a combination of GPS, cell tower triangulation, and WiFi hotspot triangulation.) All that checking uses battery power, too.
Some apps, like Maps, Find My Friends, and Yelp, donât do you much good unless they know your location. But plenty of apps donât really need to know where you are. Facebook and Twitter, for example, want that information only so that they can location-stamp your posts. In any case, the point is to turn off Location Services for each app that doesnât really need to know where you are.
Turn off Bluetooth. If youâre not using a Bluetooth speaker or the Macâs Handoff feature (iPad as Speakerphone), then shut down that Bluetooth radio. Open the Control Center and tap the icon to turn it off.
Turn off the screen. You can actually turn off the screen, rendering it totally black and saving incredible amounts of battery power. Music playback and Maps navigation continue to work just fine.
By the way, beware of 3-D games and other graphically intensive apps, which can be serious power hogs. And turn off EQ when playing your music (see AirPlay).
If your battery still seems to be draining faster than it should, a new iOS 8 feature awaits you. Itâs this amazing table, which shows you exactly which apps are using the most power:
To see it, open SettingsâGeneralâUsageâBattery Usage. You can switch between battery readouts for the past 24 hours or for the past 4 days. Keep special watch for labels like these:
Low signal. A cellular iPad uses the most power of all when itâs hunting for a cellular signal, because the tablet amplifies its radios in hopes of finding one. If your battery seems to be running down faster than usual, the âLow Signalâ notation is a great clueâand a suggestion that maybe you should use Airplane mode when youâre on the fringes of cellular coverage.
Background activity. As hinted on the previous pages, background Internet connections are especially insidious. These apps do online work invisibly, without your awarenessâand drain the battery. Now, for the first time, you can clearly see which apps are doing it.
Once you know the culprit app, itâs easy to shut its background work down. Open SettingsâGeneralâBackground App Refresh and switch Off each app whose background activity isnât strictly necessary.
The Home screen is the launching pad for every iPad activity. Itâs what appears when you press the Home button. Itâs the immortal grid of colorful icons.
Itâs such an essential landmark, in fact, that a quick tour might be helpful.
Icons. Each icon represents one of your iPad apps (programs)âMail, Maps, Camera, and so onâor a folder that youâve made to contain some apps. Tap one to open that program or folder.
The iPad comes with about 25 apps preinstalled by Apple; you canât remove them. The real fun, of course, comes when you download more apps from the App Store (Chapter 9).
Badges. Every now and then, youâll see a tiny, red number âbadgeâ (like ) on one of your app icons. Itâs telling you that something new awaits: new email, new text messages, new chat entries, new updates for the apps on your iPad. Itâs saying, âHey, you! Tap me!â
Home page dots. The standard Home screen canât hold more than 20 or 24 icons. As you install more and more programs on your iPad, youâll need more and more room for their icons. Fortunately, the iPad creates additional Home screens automatically. You can spread your new programsâ icons across 11 such launch screens.
The little white dots are your map. Each represents one Home screen. If the third one is âlit up,â then youâre on the third Home screen.
To move among the screens, swipe horizontallyâor tap to the right or left of the little dots to change screens.
And if you ever scroll too far away from the first Home screen, hereâs a handy shortcut: Press the Home button (yes, even though youâre technically already home). That takes you back to the first Home screen.
Tip
Note to upgraders: The very first âpage,â at the far left, used to be the Spotlight (search) screen. But in iOS 7 and iOS 8, you open Spotlight by dragging down anywhere on any Home screen; thereâs nothing to the left of the Home screens anymore. You can tug down on any âpageâ of the Home screensâyou donât have to scroll all the way to the left of them anymore.
The Dock. At the bottom of the Home screen, four exalted icons sit in a row on a tinted panel. This is the Dockâa place to park the most important icons on your iPad. These, presumably, are the ones you use most often. Apple starts you off with Messages, Mail, Safari, Music, and App Store.
Whatâs so special about this row? As you flip among Home screens, the Dock never changes. You can never lose one of your five most cherished icons by straying from the first page; theyâre always handy.
The background. You can replace the background image (behind your app icons) with a photo. A complicated, busy picture wonât do you any favorsâit will just make the icon names harder to readâso Apple provides a selection of handsome, relatively subdued wallpaper photos. But you can also choose one of your own photos.
For instructions on changing the wallpaper, see Assign to Contact.
Itâs easy (and fun!) to rearrange the icons on your Home screens. Put the most frequently used icons on the first page, put similar apps into folders, and reorganize your Dock. Full details are on Rearranging/Deleting Apps Right on the iPad.
Tip
In iOS 8, you can set up a completely empty first Home screen by moving all of its app icons onto other Home âpages.â (In previous versions of iOS, the tablet automatically deleted the first Home screen if it was empty.) Thatâs a weird little arrangement for anyone who wants to show off a really great wallpaper photo.
For such a tiny device, there are an awful lot of settings you can changeâhundreds of them. Trouble is, some of them need changing (volume, brightness) a lot more often than others (language preference, cookie settings).
Thatâs why Apple invented the Control Center: a panel that offers quick access to the controls you need the most.
To open the Control Center, no matter what app youâre using, swipe upward from beneath the screen.
Tip
You can even open the Control Center from the Lock screen, unless youâve turned off that feature (Locking Down the Lock Screen).
The Control Center is a translucent gray panel filled with one-touch icons for the settings youâll probably change most often.
Tip
Truth be told, the Control Center is easier to use when itâs not translucent. Visit SettingsâGeneralâAccessibility and turn on Increase Contrast. Now the Control Centerâs background is solid gray instead of see-through gray.
Now, many of these settings are even faster to change using Siri, the voice-command feature described in Chapter 3. When itâs not socially awkward to speak to your tablet (like at the symphony or during a golf game), you can use spoken commandsâlisted below under each button descriptionâto adjust settings without even touching the screen.
Hereâs whatâs in the Control Center:
Airplane mode (). Tap to turn the icon white. Now youâre in Airplane mode; the tabletâs wireless features are all turned off. Youâre saving the battery and obeying flight attendant instructions. Tap again to turn off Airplane mode.
Sample Siri command: âTurn Airplane mode on.â (Siri warns you that if you turn Airplane mode on, Siri herself will stop working. Say âOK.â)
WiFi (). Tap to turn your tabletâs WiFi off (black) or on (white).
Sample Siri commands: âTurn off WiFi.â âTurn WiFi back on.â
Bluetooth (). Tap to turn your Bluetooth transmitter off (black) or on (white). That feature alone is a godsend to anyone who uses the iPad with a carâs Bluetooth audio system. Bluetooth isnât the battery drain it once was, but itâs still nice to be able to flick it on so easily when you get into the car.
Sample Siri commands: âTurn Bluetooth on.â âTurn off Bluetooth.â
Do Not Disturb (). Do Not Disturb mode, described in Chapter 4, means that the tablet wonât ring or buzz at allâexcept when a few handpicked people are trying to reach you. Perfect for sleeping hours; in fact, you can set up an automated schedule for Do Not Disturb (say, midnight to 7 a.m.).
But what if you wake up early or want to stay up late? Now you can tap to turn Do Not Disturb on (white) or off (black).
Sample Siri commands: âTurn on Do Not Disturb.â âTurn Do Not Disturb off.â
Mute (), Lock Rotation (). Mute () means your iPad wonât ring, chime, or beepânothing to embarrass you in a meeting or at a funeral service.
When Lock Rotation () is turned on (white), the screen no longer rotates when you turn the tablet. Sometimes, like when youâre reading on your side in bed, you donât want the screen picture to turn; you want it to stay upright relative to your eyes. (The icon appears at the top of the screen to remind you why the screen isnât turning.)
Note
You probably have only one of these two buttons on your Control Centerâand you decide which.
Most iPad models have a physical switch on the right edge. It can be either Mute or Lock Rotation; you make your choice in Settings (see Control Center).
Whichever function you donât assign to the side switch appears in the Control Center, for your convenience. If youâve set your side switch to mean Mute, then the button appears in the Control Center, and vice versa.
The iPad Air 2 doesnât have a physical switch on the right edge. So on this mode, both buttonsâ and âappear in the Control Center.
Brightness. Hallelujah! Hereâs a screen-brightness slider. Drag the little white ball to change the screen brightness.
Sample Siri commands: âMake the screen brighter.â âDecrease the brightness.â âDim the screen.â âBrighten up!â
Playback controls ( , , ). These controls govern playback in whatever app is playing music or podcasts in the background: the Music app, Pandora, Spotify, whatever it is. You can skip a horrible song quickly and efficiently without having to interrupt what youâre doing, or pause the music to chat with a colleague. (Tap the song name to open whatever app is playing.)
You also get a scrubber bar that shows where you are in the song, the name of the song and the performer, and the album name. And, of course, thereâs a volume slider. It lets you make big volume jumps faster than you would by pressing the volume buttons on the side of the tablet.
Sample Siri commands: âPause the music.â âSkip to the next song.â âPlay some Billy Joel.â
AirDrop (). AirDrop gives you a quick, effortless way to shoot photos, maps, Web pages, and other stuff to nearby iPads, iPhones, iPod Touches, and even Macs. (See Battery Life Is Terrible for details.)
On the Control Center, the AirDrop button isnât an on/off switch like most of the other icons here. Instead it produces a pop-up menu of options that control whose i-gadgets can âseeâ your iPad: Contacts Only (people in your address book), Everyone, or Off (nobody).
AirPlay (). The AirPlay button lets you send your iPadâs video and audio to a wireless speaker system or TVâif you have an AirPlay receiver, of which the most famous is the Apple TV. Details are on AirPlay.
Timer (). Tap to open the Clock appâspecifically, the Timer mode, which counts down to zero. Apple figures you might appreciate having direct access to it when youâre cooking, for example, or waiting for your hair color to set.
Sample Siri commands: âOpen the Timer.â Or, better yet, bypass the Clock and Timer apps altogether: âStart the timer for three minutes.â âCount down from six minutes.â (Siri counts down right there on the Siri screen.)
Camera (). Tap to jump directly into the Camera app. Because photo ops donât wait around.
Sample Siri commands: âTake a picture.â âOpen the camera.â
The Control Center closes when any of these things happen:
Note
In some apps, swiping up doesnât open the Control Center on the first try, much to your probable bafflement. Instead, swiping up just makes a tiny tab appear at the edge of the screen. (Youâll see this behavior whenever the status barâthe strip at the top that shows the time and battery gaugeâis hidden, as can happen in the full-screen modes of iBooks, Maps, Videos, and so on. It also happens in the Camera.)
In those situations, Apple is trying to protect you from opening the Control Center accidentallyâfor example, when what you really wanted to do was scroll the image up. No big deal; once the appears, swipe up a second time to open the Control Center panel.
If you find yourself opening the Control Center accidentallyâwhen playing games, for exampleâyou can turn it off. Open SettingsâControl Center. Turn off Access Within Apps. Now swiping up opens the Control Center only at the Home screen. (You can also turn off Access on Lock Screen here, to make sure the Control Center never appears when the tablet is asleep.)
A notification is an important status message. You get one every time a message comes in, an alarm goes off, a calendar appointment is imminent, or your battery is running low.
These days, thereâs a lot more you can do with a notification than just read it and nod OK. Apple has gone to a lot of effort to ensure that notifications disrupt your important tablet activities as rarely as possible. So:
Flick it away. When a notification appears at the top of the screen, itâs sometimes covering up whatever you were doing. If you wait a couple of seconds, the message goes away by itself. But you donât have to wait. You can just flick it upward with your finger to make it disappear.
Answer it. Often, a notification displays an incoming text message, email, or calendar invitation. In iOS 8, you can swipe down on it to reveal buttons that let you take action: Reply, for example, or Decline and Accept (for an invitation). And you never have to leave the app you were using, which is deliciously efficient.
Open it. Finally, the obvious one: You can tap a notification to open the app it came from. Tap an email notification to open the message in Mail; tap a message notification to open it in Messages; and so on. Thatâs handy when you want to dig in and see the full context of the notification.
No matter what kind of notification pops up, you still see only one alert at a time. And once itâs gone, you canât get it back. Or can you?
Meet the Notification Center screen. It lists every notification youâve recently received, in a tidy, scrolling list.
You can check it out right now: Swipe down from above the iPadâs screen. The Notification Center pulls down like a classy window shade, printed in white with every recent item of interest.
Here youâll find all your appsâ notifications, as well as your recent messages, reminders, and upcoming calendar appointments.
You can inspect two different lists here (a redesign in iOS 8):
Today. The Today screen presents an executive summary of everything you need to know today, in plain English: your upcoming appointments (ââSalary meetingâ is next up on your calendar, at 2 PMâ); reminders coming due; weather and stock information; and a preview of your schedule tomorrow. If youâre away from your home or office, youâll even see an estimated commuting time, based on current traffic conditions. Pretty slick.
In iOS 8, the Today screen has become a much bigger deal. Apple now allows apps to add their own sections to the Today list.
For example, Dropbox can show a list of files that have been added to your Dropbox folder; Evernote can add buttons for creating new notes or reminders; The New York Times, Yahoo Digest, and Huffington Post apps can add headlines; Yahoo Weather can add weather information, including a photo of current conditions; the Kindle app offers links to the books youâre reading right now; and so on.
To manage all of this, scroll down to the bottom of the Today list and tap Edit. In the resulting list, you can tap to remove a module from the Today list, drag the up or down to move it higher or lower in the list, or tap to add a module. Then tap Done.
Notifications. On this tab, you see every notification youâve received, sorted by app: all the FaceTime calls, texts, and other notifications that came in while your tablet was asleep or turned off. (They disappear after a day.) It can be a very long list.
Tap a line in the Notification Center to open the relevant app for more detailsâfor example, to see more information about that appointment, or to read the whole message in context.
Tap the next to an appâs name, and then tap Clear to remove that appâs current listings from the Notification Centerâfor now. That appâs heading will reappear the next time it has anything to tell you.
And if you see an email message or a text message, drag left across it to reveal handy instant buttons: Reply, Mark as Read, Archive, or Delete, for example (as shown in the illustration on The Notification Center).
Tip
To switch between the Today and Notification views, you can tap the tabs or just swipe across the screen.
To close the Notification Center, press the Home button or drag the bottom handle () upward. (Actually, you donât have to aim for the handle. You can just swipe upward from beneath the screen, quickly and sloppily.)
You can (and should) specify which apps are allowed to junk up your Notification Center. Open SettingsâNotifications to see the master list (shown on What Notifications Look Like), with one entry for every app that might ever want your attention. (Or just tell Siri, âOpen notification settings.â)
Under Notifications View, you can specify the order of the various appsâ notifications in the center. If you tap Sort By Time, then the apps with the newest alerts appear at the top. But if you tap Sort Manually and then Edit, you can drag the handles up or down to specify the order of your appsâ notifications on the Notification Center screen.
The most important work you can do in Notifications settings, though, is to control the behavior of each individual app. Youâll quickly discover that every app thinks itâs important; every app wants its notifications to blast into your face when youâre working.
You, however, may disagree. You may not consider it essential to know when your kidâs Plants vs. Zombies game score has changed, for example.
So: Tap an appâs name to open its individual Notifications screen (at right on the next pageâthe Messages app, in this example). Here youâll find settings that vary by app, but they generally run along these lines:
Allow Notifications. If you donât want this app to make any notifications pop up at all, then turn this off.
Show in Notification Center. How many recent notifications from this app are allowed to appear in your Notification Center? You can choose anything from No Recent Items (the app can still get your attention with banners or alert bubblesâbut it wonât appear in the Notification Center) to 10 Recent Items (for really important things like emails).
Sounds. Some apps try to get your attention with a sound effect when a notification appears. Turn this off if you think your tablet makes too many beeps and burbles as it is.
Notification Sound. Some apps offer this control. It lets you choose which sound effect plays to get your attention. You can change the sound or choose None.
Badge App Icon. A badge is a little red circled number (, for example). It appears right on an appâs icon to indicate how many updates are waiting for you. Turn it off if you really donât need that reminder.
Show on Lock Screen. The Lock screen (Locked Mode) is another place to see whatâs been trying to get your attention while the tablet was in your bag: new messages and email, Facebook updates, and so on.
The Lock screen may seem just like the Notification Centerâbut there are differences. For example, each time you wake the tablet, whatever notifications are on the Lock screen are wiped clear. They donât stay put, as they do on the Notification Center.
You might want a different set of apps to list their nags on the Lock screen. Maybe you want the Lock screen to show only new text messages and new mailâbut youâd like the Notification Center to be fully stocked with Twitter and Facebook updates, for example. Or maybe youâd rather not permit passing evildoers to pick up your tablet and see your notifications without even having to unlock it.
Thatâs why you have this switch. It governs your ability to see this appâs updates on the Lock screen (and the Notification Center when you open it while at the Lock screen).
Notifications can appear in any of three stylesâand you get to choose which you prefer, for each app.
On the same screen described above (open SettingsâNotifications and tap the appâs name), you can choose one of these three styles:
None. If a certain app bugs you with news you really donât care about, you can shut it up forever. Tap None.
Banners are incoming notifications that appear quietly and briefly at the top of the screen (below, top). The message holds still long enough for you to read it, but it doesnât interrupt your work and goes away after a few seconds. Banners are a good option for things like Facebook and Twitter updates and incoming email messages.
Alerts. A white alert box appears, center screen, to get your attention (above, bottom). You might use this option for apps whose messages are too important to miss, like alarms, flight updates, and messages.
Tip
You can also use the Include setting to specify how much of the Notification Center this app is allowed to use upâthat is, how many lines of information. Maybe you need only the most recent alert about your upcoming flight (1 Item), but you want to see a lot more of your upcoming appointments (10 Items).
About half of iPad owners donât bother setting up a password to protect the tablet. Maybe they never set the thing down in public, so they donât worry about thieves. Or maybe thereâs just not that much personal information on the tabletâand, meanwhile, having to enter a password every single time you wake the tablet gets to be a hassle.
Tip
Besidesâif you ever do lose your tablet, you can put a password on it by remote control; see Find My iPad.
The other half of people reason that the inconvenience of entering a password many times a day is a small price to pay for the knowledge that nobody can get into your stuff if you lose it.
If you think your tablet is worth protecting, hereâs how to set up a passwordâand, if you have an iPad Air 2 or iPad mini 3, how to use the fingerprint reader instead.
If you didnât already create a tablet password the first time you turned your iPad on, hereâs how to do it. (And just because youâre an Air 2 or mini 3 owner, donât be smug; you have to create a password even if you plan to use the fingerprint reader. As a backup.)
Open SettingsâTouch ID & Passcode. (On pre-2014 models, itâs just called Passcode Lock.)
You can set up either a four-digit numberâconvenient, but not so impossible to guessâor a full-blown alphanumeric password of any length. You decide, using the Simple Passcode on/off switch.
Now tap Turn Passcode On. Youâre asked to type the password you want, either on the number keypad (for Simple Passcodes) or the alphabet keyboard. Youâre asked to do it again to make sure you didnât make a typo.
Note
Donât kid around with this passcode. If you forget the iPad code, youâll have to restore your iPad (Seven Ways to Reset the iPad), which wipes out everything on it. Youâve still got most of the data on your computer, of course (music, video, contacts, calendar), but you may lose text messages, mail, and so on.
Once you confirm your password, you return to the Passcode Lock screen. Here you have a few more options.
For example, the Require Passcode option lets you specify how quickly the password is requested before locking somebody out: immediately after the iPad wakes or 1, 15, 30, 60, or 240 minutes later. (Those options are a convenience to you, so you can quickly check your calendar or missed messages without having to enter the passcodeâwhile still protecting your data from, for example, evildoers who pick up your iPad while youâre out getting coffee.)
Certain features are accessible on the Lock screen even before youâve entered your password: the Today and Notifications tabs of the Notification Center, and Siri. These are huge conveniences, but also, technically, a security risk. Somebody who finds your tablet on your desk could, for example, look up your schedule or use Siri to send a text. If you turn these switches off, then nobody can use these features without entering the password (or using your fingerprint).
Finally, here is Erase Dataâan option thatâs scary and reassuring at the same time. When this option is on, then if someone makes 10 incorrect guesses at your passcode, your iPad erases itself. Itâs assuming that some lowlife burglar is trying to crack into it to have a look at all your personal data.
This option, a pertinent one for professional people, presents potent protection from patient password prospectors.
And that is all. From now on, each time you wake your iPad (if itâs not within the window of repeat visits you established), youâre asked for your password.
If you have an iPad Air 2 or mini 3âyou lucky thingâyou have the option of using a more secure and much more convenient kind of âpasswordâ: your fingertip.
The lens built right into the Home button (clever!) actually worksâevery time. Itâs not fussy, itâs not balky. It reads your finger at any angle. It canât be faked out by a plastic finger or even a chopped-off finger. You can teach it to recognize up to five fingerprints; they can all be yours, or some can belong to other people you trust.
Before you can use your fingertip as a password, though, you have to teach the tablet to recognize it. Hereâs how that goes:
Create a passcode. Thatâs right: You canât use a fingerprint instead of a password; you can only use a fingerprint in addition to one. Youâll still need a password from time to time to keep the tabletâs security tight. For example, you need to enter your password if you canât make your fingerprint work (maybe it got encased in acrylic in a hideous crafts accident), or if you restart the tablet, or if you havenât used the tablet in 48 hours or more.
So open SettingsâTouch ID & Passcode and create a password, as described on the previous pages.
Teach a fingerprint. At the top of the Touch ID & Passcode screen, you see the on/off switches for the three things your fingerprint can do: It can unlock the tablet (iPad Unlock), buy things online from within shopping apps (Apple Pay), and serve as your password when you buy books, music, apps, and videos from Appleâs online stores (iTunes & App Store).
But what you really want to tap here, of course, is Add a fingerprint.
Now comes the cool part. Place the finger you want to train onto the Home buttonâyour thumb or index finger are the most logical candidates. Touch it to the Home button over and over, maybe six times. Each time, the gray lines of the onscreen fingerprint darken a little more.
Once youâve filled in the fingerprint, you see the Adjust Your Grip screen. Tap Continue. Now the iPad wants you to touch the Home button another few times, this time tipping the finger a little each time so the sensor gets a better view of your fingerâs edges.
Once thatâs done, the screen says âSuccess!â
You are now ready to start using your fingerprint. Try it: Put the tablet to sleep. Then wake it (press the Sleep switch or press the Home button), and then leave your finger on the Home button for about a second. The tablet reads your fingerprint and instantly unlocks itself.
And now, a few notes about using your fingerprint as a password:
Yes, you can touch your finger to the Home button at the Lock screen. But you can also touch it at any Enter Passcode screen.
Suppose, for example, that your Lock screen shows that you missed a text message. And you want to reply. Well, you can swipe across that notification to open it in its native habitatâthe Messages appâbut first youâre shown the Enter Passcode screen. Ignore that. Just touch the Home button with the finger whose print you recorded.
Apple says the image of your fingerprint is encrypted and stored in the iPadâs processor chip. Itâs never transmitted anywhere, it never goes online, and itâs never collected by Apple.
If you return to the Touch ID & Passcode screens, you can tap Add a Fingerprint again to teach your tablet to recognize a second finger. And a third, fourth, and fifth.
The five âregisteredâ fingerprints donât all have to belong to you. If you share the tablet with a spouse or a child, for example, that special somebody can use up some of the fingerprint slots.
To rename a fingerprint, tap its current name (âFinger 1â or whatever). To delete one, tap its name and then tap Delete Fingerprint. (You can figure out which finger label is which by touching the Home button; the corresponding label blinks. Sweet!)
You can register your toes instead of fingers, if thatâs helpful. Or even patches of your wrist or arm, if youâre patient (and weird).
The Touch ID scanner may have trouble recognizing your finger if it (your finger) is wet, greasy, or scarred.
The iPadâs finger reader isnât just a camera; it doesnât just look for the image of your fingerprint. Itâs actually measuring the tiny differences in electrical conductivity between the raised parts of your fingerprint (which arenât conductive) and the skin just beneath the surface (which is). Thatâs why a plastic finger wonât workâand even your own finger wonât work if itâs been chopped off (or if youâve passed away).
So if your fingerprint is such a great solution to password overload, how come it works only to unlock the tablet and to buy stuff from Appleâs online stores? Wouldnât it be great if your fingerprint could also log you into secure Web sites? Or serve as your ID when you buy stuff online?
In iOS 8, that dream has become a reality. Software companies can now use your Touch ID fingerprint to log into their apps. Mint (for checking your personal finances), Evernote (for storing notes, pictures, and to-do lists), Amazon (for buying stuff), and other apps now permit you to substitute a fingerprint touch for typing a password.
Whatâs really wild is that password-storing apps like 1Password and LastPass have been updated, too. Those apps are designed to memorize your passwords for all sites on the Web, of every typeâand now you can use your fingerprint to unlock them.
Moreover, your fingerprint is now the key to the magical door of Apple Pay, the buy-with-your-fingerprint technology described on Apple Pay (iPad Air 2, Mini 3).
All of this is great news. Most of us would be happy if we never, ever had to type in another password.
Get iPad: The Missing Manual, 7th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.