Connect to the internet, Apple id, Set up other mail, contacts, and calendar accounts – Apple iPhone iOS 8.1 User Manual

Page 16: Icloud

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Chapter 2

Getting Started

16

Connect to the Internet

iPhone connects to the Internet whenever necessary, using a Wi-Fi connection (if available) or
your carrier’s cellular network. For information about connecting to a Wi-Fi network, see

Connect

to Wi-Fi

, above.

When an app needs to use the Internet, iPhone does the following, in order:

Connects over the most recently used available Wi-Fi network

Shows a list of Wi-Fi networks in range, and connects using the one you choose

Connects over the cellular data network, if available

Note: If a Wi-Fi connection to the Internet isn’t available, apps and services may transfer data
over your carrier’s cellular network, which may result in additional fees. Contact your carrier
for information about your cellular data plan rates. To manage cellular data usage, see

Cellular

settings

on page 179.

Apple ID

Your Apple ID is the account you use for just about everything you do with Apple, including
storing your content in iCloud, downloading apps from the App Store, and buying music, movies,
and TV shows from the iTunes Store.

to sign in to use an Apple service. If you don’t already have an Apple ID, you can create one
whenever you’re asked to sign in. You only need one Apple ID for everything you do with Apple.

For more information, see

appleid.apple.com

.

Set up other mail, contacts, and calendar accounts

iPhone works with Microsoft Exchange, and many of the most popular Internet-based mail,
contacts, and calendar service providers.

Set up an account. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Add Account.

You can add contacts using an LDAP or CardDAV account, if your company or organization
supports it. See

Add contacts

on page 140.

You can add calendars using a CalDAV calendar account, and you can subscribe to iCalendar (.ics)
calendars or import them from Mail. See

Use multiple calendars

on page 79.

iCloud

signing into iCloud with your Apple ID, then making sure that the features you want to use are
turned on.

Set up iCloud. Go to Settings > iCloud. Create an Apple ID if needed, or use your existing one.

iCloud stores your photos and videos, documents, music, calendars, contacts, and more. Content
stored in iCloud is pushed wirelessly to your other iOS devices and computers signed into iCloud
with the same Apple ID.

iCloud is available on devices with iOS 5 or later, on Mac computers with OS X Lion v10.7.5 or
later, and on PCs with iCloud for Windows 4.0 (Windows 7 or Windows 8 is required).

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