pare n t s’ gu i d e
all you n eed to know
Ages 3 - 7 How to use the iPad for learning and play! Give your kids a head start with great iPad apps Discover the best experiences for ages 3 - 7
Prevent accidental purchases on your iPad
Stay safe with the iPad’s parental controls
Teach your kids how to play music for free
Keep the kids entertained with great movies!
ABZ35 2013
PRINTED IN THE UK
£9.99
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Contents
Whether your child is learning to write or wanting to watch a movie, your iPad makes it fun! Why iPad? The intuitive touch interface of Apple’s tablet is perfect for kids ..........06 Highlights A preview of some stand-out apps to whet your appetite for more ......08 The best for kids Top apps and kit for children getting to grips with the iPad ...12
FEATURES Phonics apps Picking a way for kids to learn letters is as easy as ABC, see? ........ 36 iPad and music The perfect introduction to music, melody and rhythm..................... 36 Summer fun iPad options for family outings, activity and creativity! ..................72 Parental controls Protect your kids with the iPad’s easy-to-use Restrictions ........ 78 Books See your children’s faces light up as their favourite books come to life....... 82 Learning Why schools are making the rapid transition to tablet technology ...... 88 Movies Take a break from the learning with some popcorn and a film .................... 94 In-App Purchases Prevent those hidden extras costing you big money ................. 108 If you loved Tetris Fans of the block puzzler will love these alternatives ......126 If you loved Breakout You’ll love bouncing around with these apps .........128
REVIEWS 123D Creature 32 A book before bedtime 82 Animate It 43 Bugs and Numbers 35 Cars 2 AppMATes 58 ChoreMonster 35 Cinderella by Nosy Crow 60 Clara Button and the Magical Hat Day 46 Crayola ColorStudio HD 31 Crayola DigiTools 31 Crayola DigiTools Ultra Pack 47 Crayola Trace and Draw 58 DoInk 62 Don’t get stung by IAPs 108 Dragonster: The Meeting HD 55 Draw Something 31 DRAWNIMAL 30 Eager Beaver 64 Easy Studio 30 Endless Alphabet 30 Fairy Magic 44 Funimal Phonics 55 Glitchamaphone 34 iCade round-up 54 iLearn: iOS in education 88 iPad parental controls 78 It’s the Great Pumpkin 35 Juicy Math 45 Keys Kids Play HD 45 Kids, music and iPads 48 Ladybird Classic Me Books 66 LEGO Life of George 61 Leo’s Pad 28 Little Digits 44 Little Fox Music Box 56 Maily: Your Kids’ First Email 44 Monster Music Pro 68 My Story World 46 NHM Evolution 45 Numberlys 59 Original Tale of Peter Rabbit 67 Pajanimals: Light in the Sky 42 Postman Pat SDS 64 Sago Mini Forest Flyer 68 ScreenChomp 31 SketchParty TV 40 Smart Baby Monitor 57 Summer fun for kids 72 The Heart and the Bottle 69 The Land of Me: Story Time 56 The Little Market 34 The Man Who Stared at the Sky 46 The Monsters Family 44 The Moogies 65 The top six iPad phonics apps 36 The ultimate guide to movies 94 The Wind in the Willows 46 Times Tables: Squeebles 55 Timmy’s Number Tracing 47 Toca Band 42 Toca Builders 70 Toca Hair Salon 2 60 Toca Hair Salon 60 Toca Store 64 Toca Tailor 35 Vixes HD 47 Wendy’s Giant List 65 YodelOh Math Mountain 69
GAMES Amazing Charlie 144 Amazing Shape Shifters HD 138 Angry Birds Space HD 140 Angry Birds Star Wars HD 132 Bad Piggies HD 134 Bear Physics 138 Bejeweled HD 140 Candy Crush Saga 145 Fancy Pants Adventures 139 Fetch 116 Food Run HD 119 Frisbee Forever 2 137 Identikat 119 If you loved Breakout… you’ll love these 128 Cyto’s Puzzle Adventure 130 If you loved Tetris… you’ll love these 126 Kinectimals 142 Let’s Create! Pottery HD 124 Lume HD 141 Monster Pet Shop 144 Munch Time HD 139 NightSky 118 Penumbear 120 Rails 122 Rain, Sand, Stars 142 Rayman Jungle Run 136 Roar Rampage 123 Sonic Dash 122 Sphoxie 123 Sticky Sheep 139 Swing Shot 138 Tap the Frog HD 139 The Last Rocket 144 Tiny Wings HD 137 Tongue Tied! 142 Unmechanical 118 Webbies 138 Where’s My Water? 143 Wimp: Who Stole My Pants? HD 136
ALL YOU N E E D…
The ultimate iPad guide fo stimulating r your kids
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REVIEWS
REVIEWS 28 30 30 30 31 31 31 31 32 34 34 35 35 35 35 36 40 42 42 43 44 44 44 44 45 45 45 46 46 46 46 47 47 47
Leo’s Pad Easy Studio DRAWNIMAL Endless Alphabet Draw Something ScreenChomp Crayola ColorStudio HD Crayola DigiTools 123D Creature Glitchamaphone The Little Market Bugs and Numbers Toca Tailor It’s the Great Pumpkin ChoreMonster The top six iPad phonics apps SketchParty TV Toca Band Pajanimals: Light in the Sky Animate It The Monsters Family Maily: Your Kids’ First Email Fairy Magic Little Digits NHM Evolution Juicy Math Keys Kids Play HD Clara Button and the Magical Hat Day The Man Who Stared at the Sky The Wind in the Willows My Story World Crayola DigiTools Ultra Pack Vixes HD Timmy’s Number Tracing
48 Kids, music and iPads 54 iCade round-up 55 Dragonster. The Meeting HD 55 Funimal Phonics 55 Times Tables: Squeebles 56 Little Fox Music Box 56 The Land of Me: Story Time 57 Smart Baby Monitor 58 Crayola Trace and Draw 58 Cars 2 AppMATes 59 Numberlys 60 Toca Hair Salon 2 60 Cinderella by Nosy Crow 60 Toca Hair Salon 61 LEGO Life of George 62 DoInk 64 Eager Beaver 64 Toca Store 64 Postman Pat SDS 65 The Moogies 65 Wendy’s Giant List 66 Ladybird Classic Me Books 67 Original Tale of Peter Rabbit 68 Monster Music Pro 68 Sago Mini Forest Flyer 69 YodelOh Math Mountain 69 The Heart and the Bottle 70 Toca Builders 72 Feature: summer fun for kids 78 Feature: iPad parental controls 82 Feature: A book before bedtime 88 Feature: the iPad for education 94 The ultimate guide to movies 108 Don’t get stung by In-App Purchases
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REVIEWS
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REVIEWS
Little Fox Music Box A delightful sing-along app with some beautiful illustrations KEY INFO Price: £1.99 Works with: iPad, iPhone Version: 2.5 App size: 232MB Developer: Shape Minds and Moving Images GmbH
Little Fox Music Box is a collaboration between designer/illustrator Heidi Wittlinger and Shape Minds Berlin – and quite simply, it looks absolutely beautiful when running. After choosing a song from the intro screen, you’re transported into a one-screen scene, so there’s no panning required. Here, a small child (or someone doing a good job of impersonating a small child) sings along to the song in either English or German. To any soundminded adults, this may grate after a while, but kids will adore it; this reviewer’s child certainly did. A recent update has added the ability for your child to sing along too and record their performance for later playback – a nice touch. Within the scene, there are also things to interact with – for
instance, in the Old MacDonald song you can touch the dancing chicks to make them do acrobatics, hit the bathing pig (!) to give her a shower, and prod Old MacD himself to wake him from his slumber. You
can also change the seasons. You’d need a heart of stone not to like this app; but if we have one criticism, it’s that there are only three songs, and even a child might tire of them sooner or later. ●
The Land of Me: Story Time A fantastic story-telling app that inspires kids’ creativity KEY INFO Price: £1.99 / $2.99 Works with: iPad Version: 0.0.4 App size: 176MB Developer: Made in Me
The Land of Me follows the adventures of three animal friends – Eric, Buddy Boo and Willow – and started off as a website and PC/ Mac app designed by Ladybird in collaboration with child development experts, to help children develop their creativity through storytelling. This app is no different, offering the same fun. In Story Time, the three friends are settling down for a story with old Granny Olive, a turtle of indeterminable age. Your child can choose which character the story is about, give it a basic plot, and decide what sort of ending it has. In each case, it’s a choice between three options; the tale can even be altered as it’s being told, by tapping on key words. The adventure itself is animated in the
style of a series of effective chalkboard sketches, with little tip boxes for adults popping up throughout, suggesting some
interesting questions to ask the child as they’re playing with it. The animation, voice-overs and general feel are wonderful. ●
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REVIEWS
Smart Baby Monitor Turn your iOS device into a fully equipped video baby monitor KEY INFO Price: £239 Works with: iPad, iPhone, iPod Manufacturer: Withings Website: withings.com Requires: iOS 4 or later Dimensions: 92×92×63mm Weight: 293g
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here are other wireless baby monitors that can link to iDevices, but this one is especially easy to use – and looks good. The camera unit looks like a little Mac mini, decked out head-totoe in Apple white, and has a soft glowing light that can be adjusted in the accompanying app. It folds down for carrying around and also comes with a night stand and a carrying bag, which make it very portable and easy to position. The big advantage of the Withings is that you can watch your little one from anywhere in the world on your iOS device, over Wi-Fi or 3G, making it perfect for parents who are far from home – or for anyone who just wants to keep an eye on their property. There are lots of other features and possible applications worth a
mention, too. For example, using the app you can talk to baby, play him or her some lullaby music or take a picture. You get feedback on the temperature and humidity in the room, helping you to gauge the infant’s comfort level and possibly understand exactly why they won’t stop crying.
Anxious parents It can also use this data to set alerts (which can be further customised in iOS’s Notification Center) for motion detection, temperature, humidity or noise reaching a certain threshold. You get a slider for setting the noise threshold, so a bit of trial and error is needed to find the right balance. The app even shows you any peaks and troughs in noise or movement over the last 15 minutes.
The video quality isn’t as sharp as that for FaceTime, and the colours look washed out, but it’s good enough for monitoring a child. There’s a half-second delay to everything as well, but that isn’t a problem considering its sort of intended application. Most importantly, the camera has an infra-red view, so you can see clearly what’s going on in the dark. There are some rudimentary pan, tilt and zoom effects too (though digital zoom, not optical), which can be accessed by tapping and nudging the screen around or using the pinch gesture. What’s nice about the Withings Smart Baby Monitor is that once you’ve done the initial setting up there’s no need to mess about with complicated settings or log-ins – you just launch the app and you’re connected and viewing the video feed in seconds. You ou can watch the feed on more than one iOS device at once by installing the app and logging in with your email address and password, although it isn’t possible to view it on a PC or Mac using a web browser. So should you buy the Smart Baby Monitor? It depends on how you plan to use it. If you put the monitor app on and don’t do anything else on your iOS device, it will work fine. But note that you can interrupt the audio stream by using some apps on your device (and let’s be honest, you will start doing that, because that’s what iPads are designed for), or on an iPhone by taking a phone call, so we’d suggest that the best way to use the device in the evening is in addition to a standard monitor. It’s t’s madly expensive, but perfect for anxious parents who just want to check on baby sleeping now and again, monitor temperature and noise or the rest, with the option of alerts – or even for anybody who wants to keep an eye on the house while they’re off on holiday. ●
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FEATURE
Sync movies
You’ve ripped, converted or downloaded your movies, and now it’s time to get them onto your iOS device. Here are the four ways you can make it happen
Syncing everything The “kitchen sync” if you will, limited only by the capacity of your iPad. For when you know you’ll want everything
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t first glance, this seems like the obvious choice – especially if you’re going to be on the road a lot. In practice, it’s best avoided unless you either have a tiny movie collection or almost always have an empty iPad. After all, it’s not just for movies, and you’ll want to leave some space for your kids’ apps, photos and the other things your device can do. If this is what you want, though, it’s easily done. Plug your iPad into your PC or Mac (with movies, it’s best to do this rather than use Wi-Fi syncing, purely for speed reasons), click its name under Devices at the right, and choose the Movies tab. Click the button next to Sync Movies, and underneath that, tick Automatically include. If the box after those words doesn’t say “all”, click on that next and make it do so. Finally, click Apply.
As long as you have space on your iPad to hold it all, iTunes will now push over everything you’ve got every time you sync. There’s really nothing more to it than that. One important caveat here is that while this will sync everything in iTunes’ Movie library, that isn’t necessarily the same as syncing everything you might want on the iPad. There’s no way to have iTunes automatically copy anything you play in a third-party tool such as AVPlayer HD, for example. You also have to manually transfer any rentals using an option that appears on the Movies page. Do make a point of keeping an eye on the Capacity bar at the bottom of the sync screen. Video is represented by the colour purple, and it doesn’t take many movies to
HAVE IT ALL Nothing beats having a huge collection of movies when travelling. Just remember to leave a bit of space for apps and games!
completely fill the free space of even a 64GB iPad. Use this full sync if you simply can’t be bothered with space concerns, but be ready to shift to one of the other options here in due course. Using iTunes playlists, for example, is little more effort but gives you far more control as your library swells beyond your iPad’s capabilities.
Leave it to iTunes Set up a few rules, sit back, and let iTunes check to see what’s new every time your iPad connects to it
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here are two ways to tell iTunes what kind of movies you want on your iPad. The simplest is to plug it into your Mac or PC, click its name under Devices, and click on the Movies tab. At the top of this screen, make sure that Sync Movies is ticked (otherwise iTunes won’t copy anything), along with Automatically include. Click the box in the middle of the line and you get several options – the very simple “all movies”, the more precise “all unwatched movies”, and up to 10 recent or unwatched movies. Click Apply, and iTunes will sync the current contenders and remember what you want every time it’s synced. Set it to “unwatched”, and it’ll sync new movies and remove anything you’ve seen since you last connected it. With a small collection, this might be enough.
Playlists offer far more control, and there are two kinds available. A normal playlist is a list of movies, nothing more, nothing less. Click the + button at the bottom-left of the window to create one, give it a name, and drag-and-drop any movies you want onto it. Rename it to something like iPad Movies. Now go back to the Sync screen and untick Automatically include. Scroll to the box labelled “Include Movies from Playlists” and click the box next to your new playlist. Click Apply, and now anything in it will be synced across. Smart Playlists are capable of filling themselves by looking at your whole library and adding anything that meets the criteria you set. Click File ➜ New Smart Playlist to create one. For the first rule, click the
IN WITH THE NEW With a Smart Playlist, you can make it easy to ensure you’ve got a constant flow of new videos to keep your kids busy on long trips.
boxes to make it say Media Kind is Movies. Make sure that Live Updating is ticked, and that Limit to isn’t, for now. As it stands, this will include every movie in your collection. Click the + button by the first rule, though, and you can add additional rules (as many as you like) and filter by criteria such as Rating, Genre and Year.
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MOVIES
THIRD-PARTY APPS Adding movies to other apps Sometimes you might have existing video files in AVI, WMV and MKV formats. The default iPad video player can’t deal with these formats, but there are plenty of other apps which can, such as AVPlayerHD. Because iTunes won’t even sync files in these formats using the default method, making the video available to that player once you’ve got it is slightly fiddly, though simple enough. First, open iTunes and connect your iPad. Instead of going to the Movies tab, though, click Apps. Scroll down the page to a box labelled “File Sharing”, and click the name of your movie player – such as AVPlayerHD, for example. Drag-and-drop the movie files from your desktop into the big box labelled “[App name] Documents” and wait while they sync. When this has finished, open the app itself on your iPad and they’ll be available to play. They won’t appear in the dedicated Videos folder, though, and other player apps you install won’t be able to see them. Individual apps may offer other ways of importing files. In the case of OPlayer HD, for
example, there’s a builtin web browser that you can use to find and download them, and the option to open a specific URL – which can be used to connect to FTP servers and SAMBA networks, such a home network storage device. Check your app’s home page on the web for full instructions and, most importantly, troubleshooting. Using these players is useful, but there’s one big catch to them. The default iPad app’s own playback benefits from hardware acceleration, while third-party ones have to do everything in software. This means they can’t offer HD playback on the original iPad, though the iPad 2 and later models are powerful enough to give it a try. You’re also likely to see reduced battery life, and even
CLOSED OFF It would be handy to be able to drop files onto your iPad and play them with anything… but you can’t!
some glitches, such as out-of-sync audio. Don’t let this put you off trying them – 90% of the time they work fine – but also don’t be surprised if you experience issues from time to time or with some files.
Hand-pick your collection The time-consuming, but far more powerful way to bring your kids’ favourite movies to the iPad
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our final option when it comes to syncing is to pick and choose everything that goes onto your iPad. As with the other methods we’ve covered, the first step is to go to the Sync Movies screen, accessed by plugging your device into either your PC or Mac, clicking its name, and then clicking the Movies tab. Make sure Sync Movies is ticked but Automatically include remains unticked. All the movies on your PC or Mac will be listed in the main box. To add them to the sync list, simply tick the box by their name. Whichever movies you’ve ticked the box for will be added to your iPad as soon as you click Apply. This is a tedious way to handle lots of movies, though, especially since you can’t group-select movies or filter the view. A far easier way is to set up a new Playlist. Click the + symbol in the bottom-left corner of the screen and type in an appropriate name. Return to the Movies section of iTunes and you can either drag-and-drop your films into it directly, or select them (hold down the
mouse button and drag a box around them, or click on one item and then ç-click on the others to select them), right-click, and choose Add To Playlist from the menu that pops up, followed by the name of the playlist you’ve just created. You aren’t restricted to one single playlist here. Return to the Movies section of the Sync screen and you’ll see that you can create as many as you like. Playlists don’t even have to contain only movies. In most cases, it makes sense to stick with one media type, such as music or videos, to avoid your evening’s soundtrack suddenly being interrupted by a movie, for example. Here, iTunes is smart enough to know what files are what. A single “iPad” playlist can hold everything you want to take on the road.
AGONISING CHOICES It’s possible to get too fussy about your playlists; in most cases, a Smart Playlist will do the same job with much less effort.
Alternatively, there’s nothing to stop you breaking your library down to the nth degree and having a full set of separate, specific playlists synced over instead – which might be particularly handy when judging what mood your kids are in!
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GAMES
Penumbear This inventive platform-puzzler proves that not everything that goes bump in the night has to be a terror – some of them can be cuddly, too KEY INFO Price: £1.49 / $1.99 Works with: iPad, iPhone, iPod Version: 1.2 App size: 266MB Developer: Bulkypix
Despite their simplicity, there was a certain beguiling purity to oldschool platformers and their focus on running, jumping, and clockwork precision and timing. Penumbear takes this classic focus on tightlycontrolled momentum and unlikely combinations of gymnastics, and adds in a neat light/shadow puzzling mechanic to largely bewitching effect. It casts you as a rather-moreactive-than-normal koala bear (hey, stranger things have
In Penumbear’s world, the line where light meets dark forms a solid edge
BEARING UP Navigating the caverns starts off hard, gets difficult, and becomes tricky.
happened in gaming) trapped in a dingy, sinister castle, and – in classic style – your goal for each level is simply to reach the exit. What’s more, you’re entirely defenceless: there’s no bopping enemies on the head to dispel them going on, here. What you do have, though, is a nameless
A WAY OF LIGHT Use the power of darkness for your own ends! And, er, light too.
magenta firefly buddy who you can order to turn various light bulbs on and off. In Penumbear’s world, you see, the line where light meets dark forms a solid edge. If there’s a beam of light in your path, you can’t cross it. If there’s one
beneath you, you can walk along it. This means each level needs to be approached tactically and manipulated to your advantage as a series of barriers, bridges and ramps. Many of the exit doors are locked too, which is where your glowing purple pals – who need to be collected and serve as keys – come into play.
Surprising heights You navigate the frequently perilous labyrinth of ledges and platforms with the directional buttons in the bottom-left of your screen, and the jump button in the bottom-right. Movement is nippy, but jumping is pleasingly floaty (making you feel a bit like Sackboy from PlayStation platformer LittleBigPlanet). You can also double-jump to surprising heights, as well as run off edges and then jump from midair – a joyful, usefully physics-defying manoeuvre if you need to, say, traverse a gap underneath a ledge. Light sources and fireflies aside, this is a greyscale, watercolouresque world – and it’s lovely to look at. There’s the occasional slight judder of the frame rate when you
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GAMES
GETTING THE POINT It wouldn’t be a platform game without spikes in the most awkward of places, now would it? DOOR TO NOWHERE Well done, you’ve made it to the exit! Well, one exit, anyway – there are plenty more where that came from. Or went to. Whatever.
pull off a particularly large jump, but otherwise it’s smooth. The other niggle is that the controls occasionally cause you to trip over yourself, especially when you need to move your hand to tap on a light in the middle of a double-jump or when the jump button annoyingly overlaps with an item you’re trying to interact with. Despite yourself, you do occasionally find your hands itching for a physical controller that would offer the requisite precision with a touch more fluidity and ease – although you never really come up against insurmountable obstacles. Dotted around each level are one or more “bonus bears”. Their locations aren’t signposted and, unless you’re especially thorough, it’s actually possible to complete multiple levels in a row without even bumping into a single one of the little fellas. They bolster the already-generous length of the game for completists, as well as offering an even sterner challenge. You see, in contrast to its cutesy looks and charming premise, Penumbear doesn’t offer an easy ride in terms of difficulty. You die frequently on tricky sections and – thanks to the fairly sparse checkpoints – tend to get sent back to the start of the level when you do. It’s a case of repeated iteration
rather than fluking your way through a level on the first attempt. But somehow it always feels fair though, and in typical platformer fashion you can usually identify what it is you’re trying to do a few goes before you manage to actually nail it. As such, we found ourselves physically gesturing in frustration (at ourselves) at many points, but never actually wanting to quit the game – and it’s that latter part that proves the most telling. One for older children only, though. ●
PIT STOP A brief respite from adventuring: sit back and smell the roses.
DARK MATTERS The graphics are simplistic, with a watercolour style.
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