
Tap there and it'll create a new e-mail message without ever leaving the Photos App.

So you can tap one or the other or both to a particular image. And then there's also the Home Screen, and that's actually what's behind all the icons that you can see. The first is the Lock Screen and that's what you see at the beginning and it says 'Slide to unlock'. Now, there's actually two different types of wallpapers on the iPad. And one of the things you can do here is you can make this your wallpaper. We can also, of course slide it, the entire thing over to see each photo like that. When we tap in the middle, we get these controls here again. So looking at a photo here, we could zoom in on it and pan around, zoom back out. Now if I do this with the saved photos, I can actually have one more option and that is to delete them. And, you can select 3 here, and in this case, I can e-mail all 3 or copy all 3 to the clipboard and then paste them in something else. Now when you're looking at any grouping of photos, you can press this button here instead of getting a choice right away of what to do with these. If they're GPS, your iPad will put them together so you could jump to, say, a pin and actually view what's in there as an album just based on it being in the same place. But this will work on your iPad even with pictures taken on Windows. And Places, that's something that you might see on iPhoto. Also Faces, which is something you create in iPhoto. Basically it's, you know, you take a bunch of pictures and then sync them to your Mac, you get an event created. So Events, that's the way that iPhoto sorts things by default. Now, we have also Events, Faces and Places. And we can tap on another one to go to it. So I go back to the album here and one of the cool things you're probably seeing is the ability to do this and put it back in the album. And copying it, you can paste it, say, into pages or you can paste it into an e-mail. You can also, for this individual photo, e-mail it, assign it to a contact, use as wallpaper or copy it. You could view it, you can scroll through the photos at the bottom like that. You could jump to one of these albums here and you can then jump to a photo. So any App that can create a photo or anyway that you can take a screen shot will be put into the Saved Photos album and this will sync it back to your computer when you sync your iPad. Some Apps will actually create various different graphics that you can draw, or from some other things. But what it does have is the ability to take screen shots like these. These are photos that were somehow created in some way on the iPad.

These are the albums that I've set up in iPhoto with the exception of this one, which is the Saved Photos. So, we can go to the Albums view to basically go and sort them by albums. This is just one long list of all the photos that you've been able to sync from your computer and also that have been saved individually to the iPad. And here you've got several different albums comes up. So, I wanna show you the Photos App on the iPad. It's a very stripped-down photo viewer, not at all like iPhoto. But Photos on your iPad is a little different. For instance, Mail goes to Mail, calendar goes to iCal, iPod goes to iTunes. So, most of the Apps on the iPad have an equivalent on the Mac. On today's episode, let's take a look at the Photos App on the iPad. Video Transcript: Hi, this is Gary with MacMost Now.

Check out MacMost Now 387: Viewing Photos On Your iPad at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.
