Apple Pencil 1 gen App Guide Description
Apple Pencil 1 gen App Guide - The Pencil is round, but fortunately, because it's weighted, it doesn't roll quite as easily as it looks like it should. That said, it rolls a lot more easily than we'd like. When we had a sixth-grader use the Pencil, she knocked it off the table and it rolled away into an awkward location under a desk. An avid capacitive stylus user, she also complained that the Pencil was too long for her small hand. In the box you get the Pencil itself, an adapter that lets you charge it from a standard Lightning cable (instead of directly through your iPad), and a replacement tip. Pairing is effortless: Just plug the Pencil briefly into your iPad's Lightning port, and it's paired. It has to be paired to work; it isn't a standard capacitive stylus. The Pencil itself has no battery-life indicators; you'll find that information on your iPad's screen. To charge the Pencil, you remove the back cap and stick it into the Lightning port on the bottom of your iPad. This creates a very awkward scene, with the Pencil sticking out of the iPad at a right angle. Fortunately, you can also use the included adapter to charge it with a standard Lightning cable. There is, however, nowhere to store the cap from the back of the Pencil while it's charging, which makes it too easy to lose. Apple says you can get 15 minutes of use with 30 seconds of charge, and 12 hours of use out of a full charge. In testing, a 5-minute charge took me to about 25 percent. I got to a full charge in about 25 minutes. As a bonafide Apple accessory, the Pencil's broad compatibility is one of its great strengths. Pretty much every major creative and note-taking app for the iPad works with the Pencil now, including Apple's suite of iWork apps. Unlike with third-party styli, you don't have to set up the apps or dig into settings menus, either: It just works. The matte tip has a little bit of drag over the iPad's screen, but not much. In an ideal world, you'd have different tips with different amounts of drag. I also wish the back end of the Pencil worked as an eraser, the way the FiftyThree Pencil does. The Pencil isn't just pressure sensitive, it's also tilt sensitive, so you can make broad strokes the way you would with an actual pencil. That worked very well in the sketch app Procreate. In Procreate, Evernote, and Sketches, the Apple Pencil proved to be more accurate than the FiftyThree Pencil, most notably in making more precise, detailed edits and changes. It also feels much better balanced and more comfortable to hold than the Microsoft Surface Pen. While the Pencil is a no-brainer for artists, it's also worth buying if you intend to take notes on your iPad. In both Evernote and OneNote, the Pencil let me take extremely small, detailed notes with perfect palm rejection (which is important on this large a surface), and its balance meant that my hand didn't get tired. In Apple Pencil 1st App Guide app : apple ipad pencil 1st generation apple pencil (1st gen how to use) apple pencil (1st generation compatibility) apple pencil 1st gen apple pencil 1st gen best buy apple pencil 1st gen case apple pencil 1st gen charger apple pencil 1st gen not charging apple pencil 1st gen not working apple pencil 1st gen price apple pencil 1st gen refurbished apple pencil 1st gen vs 2nd gen apple pencil 2 apple pencil 3 apple pencil compatibility apple pencil price apple pencil student discount buy apple pencil 1st gen difference between apple pencil 1st and 2nd generation how to charge apple pencil 1st gen how to check battery on apple pencil 1st gen how to connect apple pencil 1st gen to ipad sell apple pencil 1st gen etc.
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