Here's how to rotate the screen on your iPad, how to lock or unlock its orientation during use, and how to fix an iPad when ...
Usually, when you hold your iPhone, it’s in portrait mode. With the iPad, it is usually in landscape mode. But there will be times when you will want to rotate the screen the other way. Whether it’s ...
When rotating your iPad, such as from portrait view to landscape, the image on the screen rotates in order to remain right side up. This feature comes in handy when you must often change the display's ...
Rotating the screen on an iPhone is essential for viewing photos and videos in landscape mode, but sometimes it doesn't work. Here's how to fix it.
Tired of your iPad screen flipping every time you move? Locking its orientation takes just a few seconds and can make reading, gaming, or watching videos a lot more comfortable. Apple's iPads have ...
If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. Learn more. As we comb through the updated Apple website for more iPad-related clues, up pops this new picture detailing the ...
As a business owner, you will find yourself using your iPad to view a variety of documents, such as emails and graphs. Depending on the type of document, you may want to view it in either portrait or ...
That is all. I don't need a mute switch on my iPad. I don't like having to double tap and swipe and tap and double tap to lock and unlock the rotation. The hardware rotation lock switch was brilliant.
Pull down Control Center from the top right. Make sure your iPad is in the orientation you’d like it to be locked in. Underneath the system functions (Airplane Mode, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc)., tap on ...
Apple revealed a minor tweak to the iPad hardware when preorders began Friday morning, with a button previously designated for audio muting changed to a "screen rotation lock." As first noticed by Jim ...
When Apple first introduced the iPad in late January, we noted with much disappointment that the device had no way to lock the screen orientation. This is apparently no longer the case, ...