no not right. maybe later. bluetooth you can
The iPad's memory is sized in Gigabytes, and uses it to store all songs, photos, videos, books and apps. The exception for this is are the photos in the Photostream, and music stored in iTunes in the Cloud.
The new iPad (iPad 3) does not have a micro sd card or sd card slot - any memory comes with the iPad 16, 32 and 64gb - you can however buy a converter which allows you to put photos on your iPad from a normal camera SD card.
Yes, it can be downloaded on Ipad, go to app store, and search Google Earth and then click download.
It is possible, for example with iPad 3.
You cannot take out the memory or hard drive of an iPad.
To an iPad, yes.
No. Neither the iPad or iPad 2 have expandable memory. They both have SSD drives, with no option to upgrade.
Always think that the bigger the memory, the faster your iPad will be. The bigger storage memory, the more applications and medium you can install and store in your iPad.
The 16 in the description would be how much memory it has. If it says "IPad 16" then it is most likely an IPad with 16 GB of memory. A person uses memory for everything on an IPad from pictures to apps.
Into the Videos app.
The iPad doesn't need any anti-virus.. The operating system automatically segments the memory, so downloaded programs cannot invade other memory spaces or programs. The worst it can do is crash itself.
To transfer photos from an iPhone 7 Plus to an older iPad without using AirDrop, you can use iCloud. Ensure both devices are signed into the same iCloud account and have iCloud Photos enabled in the Settings under Photos. Once synced, your photos will automatically appear on the iPad. Alternatively, you can connect your iPhone to a computer, transfer the photos to the computer, and then sync them to the iPad using iTunes or Finder.