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This video is a very quick introduction to using iBooks with Zoom on an iPad.
Zoom is the magnification facility that is built into the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad.
There's a number of ways you can turn it on. The way my iPad is set up, I can triple-click
the Home button, and this brings up a menu of accessibility options, and I can then touch
Zoom to introduce it.
When Zoom is turned on, everything on the screen is magnified. I can turn my magnification
higher by double tapping with three fingers, and after the second tap, dragging my fingers
up the screen.
And I can make it smaller by double tapping on the screen with three fingers and then
dragging my fingers down the screen.
I can also turn my Zoom on and off simply by double tapping with three fingers.
So, if I want to use iBooks with Zoom, the way that I'll do it first of all I have to
find my iBooks application. I happen to know this is on the second page of my iPad. I can
use three fingers to drag around the screen, and because I know iBooks is at the top left,
I can find it fairly easily, and then tap to open it.
The magnification goes off briefly when the screen changes, so that I have a chance to
find out which area of the screen I'm actually viewing magnified.
The next thing I need to do is find the book that I'm interested in. in this case, I'm
looking for one called "Great Expectations".
Once my book opens, there are some menus at the top. One of them is the two letter As
next to each other, and if I tap that, there are some options here to do with changing
brightness, which is at the top, changing the size of the font, which is the two As,
and in order to make my text bigger, I just tap the larger A. And you can probably see
that, behind the menu, the text is actually getting bigger each time I tap it.
I can also choose a font, if I have a particular preference for serif or sans-serif. I quite
like the font that I'm using at the moment, so I'm going to leave that on that one.
And there's also a number of themes. Within themes I can choose a night theme, which would
give me white text on black, or a sepia theme, which just makes the background a little bit
less glary, if I have a problem with glare.
At the moment you might have noticed before I came into this menu, my book was in two
columns. And the last thing I might want to do is change it so it's a single column.
Once I've finished making these changes, I go back to my book by tapping outside the
menu, and the last thing I'll want to do is turn Zoom off because otherwise it would be
very difficult to read by scrolling around the screen with three fingers all the time.
But now I can read my book in the usual manner, with the font large enough to see, and when
I want to finish reading the book, and go back to my library or to do something else
on my iPad, I can just reintroduce Zoom by double tapping with three fingers again. And
then everything is large enough for me to see what I need to be able to do, such as
going back to my library.
This has been a very short introduction to using iBooks with Zoom, but I hope you found
it useful. Thank you.
This video featured the iBooks iPad app version 3.1 (1523) running on an Apple iPad with iOS
version 6.1.3.