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iMessage on iPad and iPhone Explained and De-Mystified

Apple's much-anticipated iOS5 has a lot of cool features, one of which is the iMessage platform. What I've discovered is a lot of confusion among the masses on how this platform works. I, myself, have been confused on how to set this up so that I can maintain iMessage convos on both my iPad2 and iPhone. Last night, I set out to figure this all out and post my findings here. What I am about to outline has worked for me and I feel is the way Apple intended it to work. For good or bad, I don't plan to discuss the merits of how Apple has designed this platform. I am simply sharing what has worked for me.


In order for me to test my theories I used my iPad 2, iPhone 4S and my wife's iPad and iPhone 4. This allowed me to test the iMessage platform as if I were messaging one of my contacts who I know had installed iOS5 but theoretically doesn't live under my roof, so to speak. My example will center around my particular situation: someone who has both an iPad (or other non-iPhone device) and an iPhone 4S (or 4 or 3GS) AND wants to keep iMessage convos in sync across all my devices. After all, this is one of the main benefits of iMessage that Apple touts.


First and foremost, it is important to activate iMessage on all your iOS5 devices using the same Apple ID. This will "link" all your iOS5 devices in the Apple ecosystem and keep convos you initiate in sync across your iOS5 devices. Some of you may run into a situation like I did where our PRIMARY Apple ID is the one we use as a family to purchase music, apps, etc. In the case of iMessage, every family member should have their own unique Apple ID (a secondary ID to your primary ID) to use on their own iOS5 devices. This will keep all your iMessages separate and distinct from other family members' iMessage convos. The next important setting, and the one that causes a lot of confusion, is the "Receive At" setting. On your iPhone this is your cell phone number, by default. You will also want to add an e-mail address as another "Receive At" location. If you have an iPad or other non-iPhone iOS5 device, you will want to choose an e-mail address (on my devices my Apple ID is the same as my e-mail address I am using on the "Receive At" setting) as your "Receive At" setting. The important thing to note is that if you have both an iPhone and iPad (or any other non-iPhone device) you will want to use the same e-mail address on both devices. This will help keep your convos that others have initiated to you in sync across your iOS5 devices. Finally, the Caller ID is the next setting to consider. You have two options here: (1) your cell number, or (2) the e-mail address you entered in the step above. Your choice depends on how you want others to see your contact info and whether or not keeping convos in sync across your iOS5 devices is important. My example below will illustrate this.


EXAMPLE:

Keeping messages in sync across my devices is important so I have provided my Apple ID that I used above to all my contacts who use iOS5 devices and I have asked them to use this to iMessage me. This is the only way that an iMessage convo initiated by one of your contacts to you will stay in sync across all your iOS5 devices. If they use your cell number, then the iMessage convo will only show up on your iPhone. Even though the Apple ID you used to activate iMessage in the Apple ecosystem links your devices, a reply from your iPhone to an iMessage sent only to your cell phone will not "push" the reply to your non-iPhone device. Long story short, give all your iOS5 contacts the e-mail address you entered above in the "Receive At" setting and all your convos will stay in sync. This is very similar to the BlackBerry Messenger protocol and the PIN that BBM users need to provide other BBM users so they can message each other.

I commandeered my wife's iPad and iPhone and began sending iMessages back and forth between my and her devices. Step 1, I sent an iMessage from my iPad 2 to her cell number. Because I initiated the iMessage to my wife and my devices were both activated in the Apple ecosystem using my Apple ID, the convo appeared on both my iPad and iPhone but she received my iMessage on her iPhone but NOT her iPad. This is because her iPad is connected to the iMessage platform through her "Receive At" email address; there is no "link" between her iPhone cell number and her iPad. When she responded to my iMessage, the convo continued to appear only on her iPhone but appears on both my iPad 2 and iPhone. Step 2, I sent her an iMessage to her "Receive At" email address and she received the message on both her devices. As in the first scenario, the convo appears on both of my devices. At this point, because I used her "Receive At" email address, the convo is in sync on both of her devices. Here is an important tip: when you type in a contact name on the "To:" line of an iMessage, their available iMessage "Receive At" email addresses and cell phone number will appear with a little blue balloon next to them. The opposite of the above occurred when my wife initiated the iMessages to me as described in Step 1 and Step 2.


In summary:

First, make sure you activate iMessage on all your devices using your unique Apple ID. This links your devices in the Apple iMessage ecosystem. Second, choose a "Receive At" email address that you can provide to your contacts that use iOS5 so that convos that they initiate to you will be in sync across your iOS5 devices. Lastly, I recommend setting your Caller ID to your "Receive At" email address. This will prompt any users that don't have your "Receive At" email address to add it to their contacts. It may go without saying, but if your iOS5 contacts have multiple iOS5 devices and they are interested in keeping their convos in sync across their devices they will have to provide you their "Receive At" email address as their preferred iMessage contact.


Hope this helps.


iPad 2, iOS 5, iMessage on iPad 2 and iPhone 4S

Posted on Oct 15, 2011 6:26 PM

Reply
73 replies

Oct 16, 2011 8:52 AM in response to rbbcpa

Hi,

Thank you for this explanation. I am currently trying to figure out how to set this stuff up. My scenario is slightly different, though. I have an iPhone, and iPad2 and my wife is getting a new iPhone. I want to be able to send messages from my iPad2 to my iPhone, so somebody at home with the iPad 2 can send a message to my iPhone or my wife's iPhone. We all use the same AppleID so we have the same address book and calendars across all devices. So I'm thinking we should register all the devices with the AppleID's email address, then use our cell numbers on the iPhones as Receive At and the apple ID as the Receive at for the iPad. Does this sound appropriate? The other scenario is just to register the iPhones with their cell numbers. We don't need to have the same conversations on every device, just looking for easy inter-communicability.

Oct 16, 2011 11:41 AM in response to Derek Cunningham1

If your goal is to be able to see all the iMessages on all your devices, regardless of who initiates the iMessage or who "owns" which device then I think your solution above should work. If you activate iMessage on all your devices using the same Apple ID, then your convos will appear on all of your devices since the Apple ID will "link" then together. That also means if you've set the "Receive At" address to an email address on all your devices and a non-family member using an iOS5 device sends you an iMessage that, perhaps, is intended just for you then it will appear on all your devices and will be available for all to read. If you use the cell phone numbers on your iPhones as the "Receive At' address, then messages sent to specifically to your iPhone will appear only on that device, since iPads won't be able to receive iMessages that are sent to a cell number.

Oct 18, 2011 10:20 PM in response to mdwmd

When I migrated my MobileMe account to iCloud, my MobileMe email address became my secondary ID, by default. So now, when I go to settings, iCloud, I use my primary Apple ID for backup purposes only in the event I need to restore from a backup, etc. Under Mail and calendars, I use my secondary Apple ID (I.e. my former MobileMe email address) for mail, calendar, notes, Find My iPhone, etc.

Oct 18, 2011 10:46 PM in response to rbbcpa

The info sounds great. Now, when can you get to my place & set my iPad & iPhones up 

I would like to say (after the joking around) that how good of you it was to share this info with us all.

May I give you a new challenge  an app that you can actually make phone calls from your iPad.

It is really bugging me that so far I haven't found an app that can do this.

My mind keeps saying "there has to be one, why the heck would I have this mobile number".

If there isn't . Why not! Cause there should be.

Oct 30, 2011 7:23 AM in response to rbbcpa

THANK YOU SOOO MUCH! I am so computer illiterate and this was very clear. Apple should employ you! My only other question... or really just to be sure... this imessage function ONLY works betten apple products (iphone and ipads)?? If my sister messages me from her (lets say) blackberry or from a non-smart phone then it will only appear on my iphone, right?

Nov 9, 2011 8:39 PM in response to wrivera

I have a similar issue but from another perspective. I have an iPhone 4S and my girlfriend has an iPhone 3GS and iPad 2. All devices on iOS 5. When I send her a message via iMessage she receives it on both devices. My issue is she. She sends me a message I get two separate threads, one from her iPhone and one from her iPad. Is there a way to change my iPhone settings so all her messages are merged together regardless of which device she is using? Thanks.

Dec 28, 2011 7:33 PM in response to rbbcpa

Really great info rbbcpa - cleared up a lot for me on iMessage. Now... on to FaceTime. Have you tackled that one yet? I've got iMac, 2 iPhone 4's, an iPad2, AppleTV and now a MacBook Air that I have to get all in sync for iMessage, iCloud and FaceTime and we have the "Family ID" problem with all our music, videos and Apps being bought under my Apple ID for the last 5 years. Oh.... and throw in Exchange sever from my business for syncing my contacts, calendar notes and To-Do's. I think if I figure all this out it should be a case study for Apple.

Jan 14, 2012 1:35 AM in response to rbbcpa

I just wanted to bring something else up only because i am new to the support column on this website and do not know how to ask questions but to change the topic (soo sorry by the way) but i wanted to know if you can send imessages from an ipod touch to only other apple products. Summary: Can you send imessages from your ipod to un-apple products. Thank you sooo much ive been surfing the web all nite for this.🙂

iMessage on iPad and iPhone Explained and De-Mystified

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