When you do have Split View active, you’ll have two independent tab bars (including the links you open in new tabs). Second way: When you’re browsing and come across a link you want to open in Split View, all you have to do is a long press on the link and select “Open in Split View”. You’re now running two tabs side by side. Slide your finger to the black area and release your finger. Tap and hold on one of the tabs and you’ll see the current view move to the left, and a black bar appears on the right. Don’t go looking in the Slide Over section for another Safari icon.įirst way: Open both tabs you want to run side by side. There’re two ways to enable Safari Split View. If you’re running iOS 10 on your iPad that supports Split View (iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4, 9.7 inch iPad Pro, 12.9 inch iPad Pro), you can use two Safari windows side by side natively. And for you iOS 9 folks, there are workarounds. Thankfully, this isn’t so hard to do in iOS 10. Writing my article (like I am right now), in one window and researching in Safari in another is basically the only reason I’ve finally started integrating the iPad Pro into my writing workflow.īut when I’m just researching or doing plain old browsing, I sometimes feel the need to have two Safari tabs open side by side. For me, this finally makes iPad “productive”. One of the best things about the newer iPads running iOS 9 and above is Split View.
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