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Video instructions and help with filling out and completing Dd 1750

Instructions and Help about Dd 1750

True. Hi, I'm Barbara and I'm Karen, and we are the Witnessing Sisters. This is our tech bit on the Mail app and adding attachments. A lot of people want to know how to add attachments in the Apple Mail program when using mobile devices. When it first came out, for a long time, you couldn't do an attachment. So, many people might not even realize that now you can do it. We're going to show you how. I'm going to go ahead and open my Apple Mail app. Then, I'll start a new mail. When I go down to the body and start typing with my cursor, I'm going to show you the two different ways to add attachments, depending on your device. We are using the glorious Apple iPad Pro. The keyboard is huge, and you'll see a paperclip symbol over here. We all know that the paperclip signifies an attachment. Check your keyboard for a similar symbol - on my sister's iPhone, it has editing tools but no paperclip. So, look for it first. If you see it, tap on it. However, no matter which device you're using, you can always add attachments the second way, which is by long-pressing on the blinking cursor. This will bring up a submenu, where you can select the option to add an attachment. I'll tap on it. What comes up here is your iCloud Drive. Let me explain how attachments work on mobile devices. Since you don't have a hard drive on your iPad or iPhone, it's not accessing your computer. Instead, it accesses any drives you have, such as cloud services. iCloud Drive is the first option because it's an Apple product, and we prefer it. However, you can tap on "Locations" to see other drives you have. As you can...