User guide
Table Of Contents
- User Guide
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Getting Started
- Chapter 2: Basics
- Chapter 3: Music and Video
- Chapter 4: Safari
- Chapter 5: App Store
- Chapter 6: Mail
- Chapter 7: Calendar
- Chapter 8: Photos
- Chapter 9: Contacts
- Chapter 10: YouTube
- Chapter 11: Stocks
- Chapter 12: Maps
- Chapter 13: Weather
- Chapter 14: Voice Memos
- Chapter 15: Notes
- Chapter 16: Clock
- Chapter 17: Calculator
- Chapter 18: Settings
- Chapter 19: iTunes Store
- Chapter 20: Nike + iPod
- Chapter 21: Accessibility
- Appendix A: Troubleshooting
- Appendix B: Other Resources
- Index

Follow a link Tap the link.
Text links are typically underlined and blue.
Many images are also links. A link can take you
to a webpage, open a map, or open a new
preaddressed email message.
Web and map links open Safari or Maps on
iPod touch. To return to your email, press the
Home button and tap Mail.
See a link’s destination address Touch and hold the link. The address is displayed,
and you can choose to open the link in Safari or
copy the link address to the clipboard.
iPod touch displays picture attachments in many commonly used formats (JPEG, GIF,
and TIFF) inline with the text in email messages. iPod touch can play many audio
attachments (such as MP3, AAC, WAV, and AIFF). You can download and view les
(such as PDF, webpage, text, Pages, Keynote, Numbers, and Microsoft Word, Excel,
and PowerPoint documents) attached to messages you receive.
Open an attached le: Tap the attachment. It downloads to iPod touch and then
opens.
Tap attachment
to download
You can view attachments in portrait or landscape orientation. If the format of an
attached le isn’t supported by iPod touch, you can see the name of the le but you
can’t open it. iPod touch supports the following document types:
.doc Microsoft Word
.docx Microsoft Word (XML)
.htm webpage
.html webpage
.key Keynote
.numbers Numbers
.pages Pages
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Chapter 6 Mail