Hi Carl,
I don't have any problem organizing my PDFs in iBooks. I just use different categories. I'm not sure I understand Dropbox or Google Docs for this kind of thing. Would I just send my PDFs, and then download them to iBooks? Are either of them free?
Thanks,
Julie
--- In iPad@yahoogroups.com, Carl Brooks <carl@...> wrote:
>
> Or you can use an app service like Dropbox so you can organize the
> PDFs. The trouble with email is that it is harder to organize and
> quickly access the attachments as more and more email fill the box.
> Use a service/app like Dropbox or google docs to save them.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Carl W. Brooks
> iAmThereforeiPad, Founder and Chief Editor
>
> iPad News, Reviews and How-To-Dos.
> We help make your iPad experience Magical through information!
> http://www.iamthereforeipad.com
> IPad podcast: http://goo.gl/dpiyI
>
> Thanks,
>
> Carl W. Brooks
> iAmThereforeiPad, Founder and Chief Editor
>
> iPad News, Reviews and How-To-Dos.
> We help make your iPad experience Magical through information!
> http://www.iamthereforeipad.com
> IPad podcast: http://goo.gl/dpiyI
>
> On Jul 3, 2011, at 11:37 AM, "Julie" <juliespcs@...> wrote:
>
> > I am using Outlook on my laptop to send quilting pattern pdf files to my iPad 2. I attach pdf files to my email and then send it.
> > When I open this email on my laptop it shows the pdf as an attached pdf. When I open them on my iPad the pdf is shown as part of the email and I can't open it in iBooks because it is just part of the email.
> > Does anybody know why this happens?
> > I love having my quilting patterns on my iPad. My iPad and me are joined at the hip, so to speak, and if I happen to go to a quilt shop and find a fabric that I really love, I just pull out my iPad, look at the patterns, decide which one I want to do, and I know exactly how much fabric I need to do it. It's awesome!
> > Now, if I could just get all my pattern pdf's into my iPad . . . . .
>
[iPad] Re: Sending PDFs via email to my iPad
__._,_.___
.
__,_._,___