If you're traveling, you probably will take photos, some with your phone, and others with a "real" camera. It's useful to transfer the photos to the iPad so you can take advantage of its larger screen for initial review, simple editing, and storage.
There are a number of ways to transfer photos from your iPhone to the iPad. You can use iTunes via a desktop computer. You can use iCloud. You can email photos to yourself. Or you could use an iOS app like Photo Transfer running on both iPhone and iPad, which transfers via WiFi or Bluetooth.
Here's another way: The iPad Camera Connection Kit.
-- plug in your Camera Connection kit with USB to the iPad
-- using your Apple charging cable, plug the 30 pin end into the iPhone, and the USB end into the iPad
-- launch the Photos app on the iPad
-- in 20 seconds or so, a new Tab will appear in the Photos app labeled Camera
-- Now the Photos app is treating the iPhone as if it were a camera.
-- Select the photos you want to transfer.
-- Keep an eye on the iPhone so it doesn't go to sleep and enter lock mode
-- When finished, exit the Photos app on the iPad, and disconnect the cable
Advantages of this approach
-- don't need a WiFi router or Internet access
-- transferring by cable is faster than wireless
-- you can transfer large numbers of photos in a single operation
The genuine Camera Connection Kit costs $29 from Apple. Similar devices from third parties cost as little as $3.
The Camera Connection Kit works with most digital cameras. Substitute a cable with mini or micro USB on one end (depending on which form your camera uses), and standard USB on the end that plugs into the iPad with Camera Connection Kit. Problems have been reported transferring very large photos from DSLR cameras. That won't be an issue with the iPhone's 5 or 8 megapixel photo sensor.
There are a number of ways to transfer photos from your iPhone to the iPad. You can use iTunes via a desktop computer. You can use iCloud. You can email photos to yourself. Or you could use an iOS app like Photo Transfer running on both iPhone and iPad, which transfers via WiFi or Bluetooth.
Here's another way: The iPad Camera Connection Kit.
-- plug in your Camera Connection kit with USB to the iPad
-- using your Apple charging cable, plug the 30 pin end into the iPhone, and the USB end into the iPad
-- launch the Photos app on the iPad
-- in 20 seconds or so, a new Tab will appear in the Photos app labeled Camera
-- Now the Photos app is treating the iPhone as if it were a camera.
-- Select the photos you want to transfer.
-- Keep an eye on the iPhone so it doesn't go to sleep and enter lock mode
-- When finished, exit the Photos app on the iPad, and disconnect the cable
Advantages of this approach
-- don't need a WiFi router or Internet access
-- transferring by cable is faster than wireless
-- you can transfer large numbers of photos in a single operation
The genuine Camera Connection Kit costs $29 from Apple. Similar devices from third parties cost as little as $3.
The Camera Connection Kit works with most digital cameras. Substitute a cable with mini or micro USB on one end (depending on which form your camera uses), and standard USB on the end that plugs into the iPad with Camera Connection Kit. Problems have been reported transferring very large photos from DSLR cameras. That won't be an issue with the iPhone's 5 or 8 megapixel photo sensor.