EPC 3: ASSIGNMENT 1 "IPAD and its operation"
EPC 3: Assignment 1
IPAD and its operation
An iPad is a spectacularly intuitive and user-friendly computing device. But even the iPad has its moments of head-scratching bafflement, and we all have to start learning somewhere.
1. How to turn it on
An iPad has very few buttons:
• There’s the Home button on the front, below the screen;
• The power button, at the top right;
• Volume buttons, on the right hand edge; and
• Possibly (depending on the model) a mute switch, next to the volume buttons.
If the iPad is only in sleep mode, you can wake it up by pressing the Home button or the power button. But if it's been fully powered down then you'll need to hold down the power button until an Apple logo appears. How to turn it off You can press the power button to enter sleep mode (which will be disturbed if any notifications come through - new iMessages and so on). To power off completely, hold down the power button for about five seconds, until you see 'slide to power off' at top of the screen. Swipe your finger across this to power off.
2. Set up your iPad
If you've got a brand-new iPad then you'll need to set it up. This includes connecting to a Wi-Fi network, entering or creating an Apple ID, choosing a passcode, setting up Touch ID and selecting various options.
3. Passcodes & Touch ID
You will have been encouraged to set a passcode as part of the setup process, and you may have entered your fingerprint for Touch ID, too When you wake the iPad from sleep, by default you will have to enter the passcode or appropriate fingerprint to unlock it. (You can turn this off by opening the Settings app, tapping Touch ID & Passcode, entering your passcode, and tapping Turn Passcode Off). If you get the passcode wrong more than five times iOS will start to add time delays (because it will start to suspect that you are not the real owner). Each time you get it wrong from then on, the longer the delay. If you get the passcode wrong 10 times in a row, you will be locked out of your iPad and will have to wipe it.
4. The Home button
At any time you can press the Home button (the one below the screen) to go back to the Home screen. This has a series of icons laid out in a grid. These are your apps: Mail, Calendar, Contacts and so on. Tap one to open it. • The Home page can have multiple screens, if you end up with more apps than can fit on one. Swipe left and right to see more pages of icons. • The Home button has a few other functions. You can press and hold it to activate Siri, iOS's voice-control feature. • You can double-press the Home button to see thumbnails of recently opened apps: swipe across to see more, and tap one to open that app. You'll also some small buttons and sliders on the right, which we call the Control Centre, but we'll come back to that later.
5. The Settings app
Setting is an app, and you'll see its icon on the Home page: it's a grey cog. Tap this to open it, and you'll see the main sections: Sounds, Battery, Display & Brightness and so on. Fortunately most of these are pretty self-explanatory, and there's a search bar above your name at the top (you'll need to swipe down to see it) so you can quickly look for settings relating to specific topics.
6. How to install an app
To get access to the apps, you need to open the App Store app - the icon is blue with a white A made of pencils and paintbrushes. In the App Store you can search for apps by name, or use the Today, Games and Apps sections to browse charts and curated collections. How to delete an app If you tap and hold an app icon on the Home screen for a few seconds, you will enter edit mode, where all the icons jiggle around and have X icons next to them. In this mode you can drag the icons around to rearrange them (hold one against the edge of the screen to move it to another page) or tap the X to delete the app.
7. Control Centre
When you double-press the Home button, or swipe up from the bottom of the screen, you see the Control Centre: that's the set of buttons and sliders on the righthand side. (If the iPad is unlocked you'll also see the four most recently opened apps on the left.) Control Centre is brilliantly handy for accessing frequently used controls and toggles without having to dig down through layers of the Settings app, or having to go into other apps. You can change the screen brightness or audio volume or turn on Airplane mode, for example. But you can also customise the controls that appear in Control Centre. Open the Settings app and tap Control Centre in the lefthand bar, then Customise Controls. The controls currently included are listed at the top; you can change the order by pressing and dragging the triple-line icons on the right, or tap the red minus icons to remove them altogether. The controls below are currently not featured, and can be added by tapping the green plus icon.
8. How to update iOS
The operating system that runs on your iPad is called iOS. From time to time Apple updates iOS and releases a new version; the major full version releases (iOS 10, iOS 11 and so on) will come with a large number of entirely new features, but the point updates (iOS 11.1, iOS 11.2) are important too because they will have fixes and patches for recently discovered bugs and problems. Your iPad will generally nag you if there's a new version of iOS and guide you through the installation process: it's far easier to administer a use base that is mostly on the same software, so it's in Apple's interests to get people to update in a timely fashion. But you may have missed one. To check for iOS updates, open the Settings app and go to General > Software Update. iOS will take a moment and then either tell you you're up to date, or offer to install the latest version.
9. How to wipe an iPad
If you're selling on your iPad, or just want to wipe it and start again (which can occasionally fix persistent problems), open the Settings app and go to General > Reset > Erase All Content and Settings. There will be a number of warnings before the iPad is actually wiped.
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