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You have a decision to make on HOW you will go about getting your data transferred from your old iPad to the new one.
Soon you will fill out a form expressing your preference. For now, below are your options.
More details will be coming soon via homeroom, email, and the Freshman Focus teachers.
OPTION ONE – the Orientation route
On your current iPad, you make sure Notability notes and your Photos are backed up.
You hand in your iPad.
Mr. Rule hands you a new one, and you go through the exact same setup you did back at Orientation. [Click that link if you would like a reminder of what you did back at Orientation.]
OPTION TWO – Backup/Restore
On your current iPad, you make sure Notability notes and your Photos are backed up.
You hand in your iPad to Mr. Rule – and pick up a loaner [if needed].
Mr. Rule pulls a backup of your iPad, which takes about 20 minutes, then transfers the data to the new iPad.
You pick up your old iPad, and keep using it while your new iPad is being prepared.
Once Mr. Rule emails you that your iPad is ready, you turn in the loaner iPad [if you used one] AND your old iPad.
On your new iPad, you sign in to your AppleID, and go about your day.
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPad_(10th_generation):
The design of the tenth-generation iPad more closely resembles the higher-end iPad Air and Pro models, with flatter edges and no home button. As with the iPad Air and Mini, the Touch ID sensor is located in the power button. It is available in silver, blue, pink, and yellow color finishes.[7]
Like the iPad Air, it has a 10.9-inch 2360×1640 Liquid Retina display; an increase from the previous 10.2-inch model, but it is not laminated.[7] The tenth-generation iPad uses an A14 Bionic processor, previously seen in the fourth-generation iPad Air and the iPhone 12 in 2020. The chip has a 6-core CPU, a 4-core GPU, and a 16-core Neural Engine.[7]
The tenth-generation iPad has Bluetooth 5.2 and Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) wireless capabilities, as well as sub-6 GHz 5G on cellular models. It is the first base model iPad to use USB-C instead of the Lightning connector; connectivity is limited to USB 2.0 transfer speeds, with support for external displays at 1080p resolution at a refresh rate of 60 Hz, or 2160p at 30 Hz.[7] The tenth-generation iPad does not include a headphone connector, requiring wireless headphones or a USB-C adapter sold separately.[7]
The tenth-generation iPad features a 12-megapixel rear-facing wide-angle camera with an ƒ/1.8 aperture and 4K video recording support.[8] In a first for any iPad, the front-facing camera is now located on the long edge of the display, so that it is horizontally centered when the tablet is in a landscape orientation.[9][7]
WHY ALL THESE STEPS?
Here is how to complete your iPad setup, in case things went awry during Orientation:
Join your home wifi network.
Settings app –> WiFi.
Sign in to Google Drive.
Use your MDS email address and password.
Click on the Apple Mail icon.
Choose the GOOGLE option, and sign in
[it might not ask you to].
Make all the sliders green, then Save.
Start up Notability.
After the “ad” screens, click on the gear icon, bottom left corner.
Click ICLOUD BACKUP –> Turn it OFF.
Click on AUTOBACKUP, then select GOOGLE DRIVE.
Click FORMAT, and select PDF+RECORDING.
Find GOOGLE PHOTOS [not “Photos”].
If it asks you to backup as “you” –> YES.
YOUR decision on Original Quality vs Space Saver.
If it does NOT ask you to backup:
Sign into your AppleID [Settings –> Top left column]
If the AppleID info you were given at Orientation is not working, OR you have no idea what your password / AppleID email is –> send Mr. Rule an email asking for a reset AppleID password..
You will receive an email from Apple with your new temporary password. Remember that what it calls “Current Password” is your TEMPORARY password.