User guide
Table Of Contents
- iPod touch User Guide
- Contents
- Chapter 1: iPod touch at a Glance
- Chapter 2: Getting Started
- Chapter 3: Basics
- Chapter 4: Syncing and File Sharing
- Chapter 5: Music and Videos
- Chapter 6: FaceTime
- Chapter 7: Camera
- Chapter 8: Photos
- Chapter 9: Game Center
- Chapter 10: Mail
- Chapter 11: Safari
- Chapter 12: Calendar
- Chapter 13: YouTube
- Chapter 14: Stocks
- Chapter 15: Maps
- Chapter 16: Weather
- Chapter 17: Notes
- Chapter 18: Clock
- Chapter 19: Calculator
- Chapter 20: Voice Memos
- Chapter 21: iTunes Store
- Chapter 22: App Store
- Chapter 23: Settings
- Chapter 24: Contacts
- Chapter 25: Nike + iPod
- Chapter 26: iBooks
- Chapter 27: Accessibility
- Appendix A: International Keyboards
- Appendix B: Support and Other Information
- Index

Viewing Attachments
iPod touch displays image attachments in many commonly used formats (JPEG, GIF,
and TIFF) inline with the text in email messages. iPod touch can play many types of
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) that are attached to messages you receive.
View an attached le: Tap the attachment to open it in Quick Look.
You may need to download the attachment rst by tapping (if it appears at the end
of the message in a dotted box with the document name).
Tapattachment
todownload
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
.pdf Preview, Adobe Acrobat
.ppt Microsoft PowerPoint
.pptx Microsoft PowerPoint (XML)
.rtf Rich Text Format
.txt text
.vcf contact information
.xls Microsoft Excel
.xlsx Microsoft Excel (XML)
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Chapter 10 Mail