Ipad is more and more popular due to its powerful functions
and amazing appearance.It makes life easily and effectively.We can get
all
kinds of video?music?ebooks?games on it,and enjoy them everywhere.With it,we live a more convenient and interesting life.
Among other things, the iPad is a great way to save paper: It lets you
carry around all kinds of digital documents that you might otherwise
have had to print.
But from time to time you may still need to print data that's on your iPad--
business
documents that you created in Pages and Numbers, for example, or
driving directions to hand someone who's not packing silicon. Printing
from the iPad can be easy if your needs are modest, but even if you
require extensive printing control, there is, as they say, an app for
that.
(The following steps work for any iPad, including the iPad 2 and both Wi-Fi and 3G models.)
The basics
Even though you can add a
USB port to your iPad with
Apple's iPad Camera Connection Kit, it's no use plugging in a USB
printer, because iOS doesn't know how to talk to printers via USB. Some
printers have built-in Wi-Fi (a natural match for the iPad). But for the
rest, you'll need a computer or other proxy device to serve as a
conduit for iPad print jobs: your iPad connects wirelessly to your Mac
(or other device), and that in turn connects to the printer.
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But the communication channel is only part of the picture; you also need
software
that knows how to send data to the printer in the right format.
Starting with iOS 4.2, Apple built printing support into the iPad with a
technology called AirPrint. Any app that has been updated to take
advantage of AirPrint can print wirelessly to a compatible printer with a
couple of taps.
For reasons that only Apple knows, the initial implementation of
AirPrint works with just a handful of newer HP printers that support
something HP calls ePrint. If you happen to have such a printer (HP has a
list of them on its Website), and it's on the same local network as the
iPad, your iPad will be able to see it and print without any special
configuration. (ePrint also gives your printer a private e-mail address,
so you can also e-mail a document as an
attachment, and it'll print automatically.)
If you aren't
fortunate enough to have an HP
ePrint-compatible printer, however, you can still use AirPrint with the
vast majority of printers. All you need is a bit of extra software that
runs on your Mac.
Activating AirPrint
Two such applications are quite similar: Collobos Software's
FingerPrint
and Ecamm Network's Printopia. Install either of these utilities on a
Mac on your network, select the printer(s) you want your iOS devices to
be able to use, and you can then print to those printers from your iPad
just as if they were HP ePrint printers. Both of these tools let you
print from your iPad to any local or network printer; they also let you
use the Print command to send documents to your Dropbox or a folder on
your Mac in lieu of a printer.
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However, the two applications do have their differences. FingerPrint
requires OS X 10.6 or higher, and it has an option to "print" directly
to iPhoto on your Mac. But before a printer appears in FingerPrint, it
must be
shared using the Print & Fax pane of System
Preferences. Printopia supports OS X 10.5 or later, works with any
printer (shared or not), and can send files from your iPad to a PDF or
PNG file on your Mac (much like OS X's print-to-PDF capability). As of
version
2.0, it also lets you "print" not only to iPhoto but to any Mac
application, save files to any number of folders on your Mac, use any
PDF Workflow on your Mac (such as e-mailing PDFs--click the PDF pop-up
menu in any OS X Print dialog to see all your options), and configure
printer settings. For all of those reasons I greatly prefer Printopia.
Another option exists, too, and it's even free (donations requested):
Netputing's AirPrint Activator. But although it serves the same basic
purpose of enabling AirPrint to use any printer your Mac can see,
AirPrint Activator has a rather tedious setup process, and doesn't offer
a way to print to Dropbox or to a folder on your Mac.
Printing with AirPrint
Once you have either an ePrint-compatible printer or an AirPrint enabler set up, printing from your iPad is simple:
First, look for the Print command. Assuming an app has been updated for
AirPrint support, this command is in there somewhere, although the
location varies--sometimes it appears when you tap a button with the
word Print or a printer icon on it, other times it may be in a popover
that appears when you tap a Tools, Send, or Action icon. (When in doubt,
check the app's help.)
Next, if this is your first time using AirPrint, or if you want to switch printers, tap
Select Printer
and then tap a printer name. The printer you select becomes the new
default printer, meaning you can skip this step next time if you want to
use that printer again.
To change the number of copies, tap the plus (+) or minus (-) button. If
the document has more than one page, you can limit which pages print by
tapping Range and selecting the start and end page numbers. When you're done, tap on Print.
Your document will begin printing. While that is in progress, you can
double-tap the Home button and then tap the Print Center icon to view
and manage your print jobs; Print Center disappears when printing is
done.
So with the above steps,you can get papers from your ipad.Is it
amzing?Want to know more?Here i get other pieces to show you.It's about
some software about ipad.
how to convert dvd to ipad
rip dvd to ipad
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