iPad Pro Guidebook - Thomas Anthony

iPad Pro Guidebook

By Thomas Anthony

  • Release Date: 2015-11-12
  • Genre: Computers
Score: 3.5
3.5
From 46 Ratings

Description

Updated 2020.
With massive 12.9-inch and 11-inch displays, blazing performance and support for both Apple Pencil and the Smart Folio Keyboard, the iPad Pro enables millions of users to create and engage with content in entirely new ways.

iPad Pro Guidebook is here to help you discover everything you need to know about iPad Pro. It’s packed with knowledge, in-depth tutorials and tips that uncover its apps, user interface and settings. You’ll learn about the history of the iPad, how the Apple Pencil can be used to draw and write, how to stream music via Apple Music, edit photos, troubleshoot common problems and more.

With colorful screenshots, concise text and helpful tips, you’ll soon be a master of everything iPad Pro with this in-depth guidebook. Inside you'll discover:
* The history of the iPad
* Software & hardware features of the iPad Pro
* In-depth coverage of iOS 13
* Detailed app tutorials
* The secrets of mastering mobile photography
* How to edit photos
* Essential Settings and configurations
* Troubleshooting tips

Reviews

  • Not as good as it could be

    3
    By pedzsan
    This is a rather verbose book about the iPad Pro and includes the 2018 model but it isn’t a detailed users guide. For example, the section on text selection mentioned only one of the many different ways to select text on the iPad Pro. Specifically, the double tap and drag to select is not mentioned. The section on multi-tasking seems to be complete and that is about the only section that helped me. Last... and to me this is a small nit, the editing is rather bad with small typos and grammar errors rather often. There are also sections in the book that were taken from other books such as the iPhone XR book.
  • Great Book

    5
    By Traverler
    This is a great little book. Very helpful! Definitely worth reading if you are getting a new iPad Pro.
  • Upgrading from my Suddenly Dead iPad Air 2

    5
    By Shouldta robda bank
    An hour’s assist in the transition but more, a comfort. My Air went dark after 2-1\2 yrs, w\o warning or warranty. In a rush to replace, I purchased the only iPad available, which was not my first choice and my choices were unresearched for price or my best fit. However, I was reasonably satisfied w the vendor and w the return policy, so I survived the $1K fork-over for pad, pencil and brutish protector, and melted into the dark and stormy weekend night to catch up on my doings. I wish from your description, that I’d tested the screen of the 10” version. And without reading, I would have spent more time searching for qualities in the photo editing that don’t exist. A few basic built-ins that I never used I now have explored. Perhaps since you compare the iPads, a reprint of the chart contrasting them would be a helpful inclusion. I’m certain I will refer to this nicely readable guide even tho I’m not quite a newbie - we discover our ignorance even as we gain our knowledge - and that in itself is a compliment: it’s literary rather than ‘computer-ary”. Thank you for your devotion to the topic. M. S. Brown
  • iPad Pro Guidebook

    5
    By WBlakedog,Jr.
    A thorough look into the obvious and hidden aspects the iPad Pro. An intermediate level of depth and difficulty. Best of all, an ideal research tool. Dr. Kaye
  • Basic info for newbies

    3
    By Southpaw02108
    This author needs a good editor and proofreader. Typos and inconsistencies pervade and are distracting. But if you are new to iPad and iOS you may find the guide helpful regardless. However, when I pay for content I expect it to also be vetted and carefully prepared and this one reads like a draft that was raced into the market when another review pass or two would easily have caught and refined the reading experience.
  • not very helpful

    2
    By wanted to do beatlemania but it was taken
    mostly an iOS guide
  • Not as advertised

    2
    By Hungrymind50401
    Just got this book with high expectations. Shows 281 pages when actually 131 in iBooks. Stuff is pretty basic. Billed as more advanced. It could be but is not now. Essentially an iOS 9 guide with a few references to iPad Pro. Maybe it will get more robust with time.