How to reuse an iPad as a remote On Air light

By William Gallagher

We're all on video calls more now, and few of us are in places where we can escape interruptions. But an iPad can be turned into an On Air light -- and positioned anywhere you want.

Maybe it's not that you're about to go live on PBS. Maybe it's just that you've got a podcast to record in your den and know that the kids in the kitchen are going to make a lot of noise.

They still are. An "On Air" light is no guarantee that anyone will pay any attention, but at least if they can see it's on, they know enough to feel guilty.

And to not come slamming open the doors in your office, not just yet.

Not an actual On Air light

Real studios can have actual On Air lights, lights that, well, light up. They turn red, with either "On Air" or "Recording" in white or yellow.

They also can cost a lot of money. It is possible to jury-rig a cheap one with a low-cost light, extended USB cable, and a HomeKit automation.

But if you have an unused iPad lying around, it's better. That whole, large iPad screen can turn red and display the words "On Air" or whatever else you want it to much clearer.

Plus, an iPad is portable. You can choose to put up an actual On Air light anywhere, but it has to be somewhere with power. It has to be somewhere it will be seen.

Whereas an iPad, while it still needs power at least for a while each day, it can be left in the kitchen now and the hallway later. If you work in a garden shed, an iPad On Air light can still be in the house near you, or far away in your work office.

The hardware you need

Something has to trigger that On Air light to turn on, and it's going to be a Mac, an iPhone, an iPad, or an Apple Watch. Don't buy a device just to do this, but you're "on air" because you're working, and what you're working with is likely to be one of these devices.

For preference, a Mac is the easiest option because it gives you three possible ways to remotely set up an "On Air" light.

The "On Air" light itself can be any Apple device other than the Apple Watch, or the Apple TV 4K.

This time, the best option is an iPad that you're not using. It's the right combination of portability and screen size.

You do have to think about power, but if it's being charged up every night anyway, you don't have to think about it much. If it isn't, you need a Lightning cable that's long enough to reach to the nearest wall socket.

That iPad also has to:

  1. Make a large On Air poster
  2. On the iPad, go to Shortcuts
  3. Make a Shortcut with a Find Photos action, and a Set Lock Screen one
  4. Specify the name of the poster in that Find Photos section
  5. Tap Done
  6. Choose Automation from the sidebar, tap the plus sign
  7. Choose Create Personal Automation
  8. Scroll down the New Automation list until you reach the Focus section
  9. Choose a Focus and tap on it
  10. From the options that appear, tap to select When Turning On
  11. Tap Next
  12. Under Add Action, choose Run Shortcut and specify the one you just created

If you do this, then when you're on that iPad and you choose a particular Focus mode, the iPad's wallpaper changes to your red "On Air" poster.

That's not perfect. If your iPad is always running a Dashboard app, for instance, the wallpaper will change but nobody will ever know.

It's also a little ugly, with the poster sitting behind all of your app icons. But if the desktop is showing, the poster is large and clear.

Set up the Shortcut to change the wallpaper

The trick of this, though, is that it doesn't only work when you choose that Focus Mode on the iPad. You can choose it on any of your devices and it automatically starts on the rest of them.

So turning on a Focus Mode on your Mac will also turn it on for the iPad. Apple is so careful about potential misuse of its OS tools that it won't allow a Shortcut to be run remotely, even by you.

But it will allow Focus Mode to be changed.

Shortcuts is a great feature, but it's still flaky

It's possible that this just won't work. Sometimes during testing, AppleInsider would find that Shortcuts on the Mac stopped allowing us to edit anything, to the extent that we had to throw the Shortcut away and start over.

Shortcuts also gets very confused if you don't name your photos correctly. When it's just, say, IMG_3792, then it can end up that you have two of the same name.

They'll have other metadata differences, neither macOS nor iPadOS will get them mixed up, but Shortcuts will. So take the time to name them "On Air Off," for instance.

Have a Shortcuts automation run whenever you turn on a given Focus Mode

For some reason, and who knows why, more general failures in Shortcuts seemed to affect the When Turning Off option more than When Turning On.

At least, though, that means your On Air light is on for longer than you need, rather than turning off too soon.

Tidying up

Whether you drag the "On Air" poster from your Mac to the iPad screen via Sidecar or Universal Control, or whether you use Focus Modes, there is something left to do.

You need to switch all of this off again when you're done.

With Sidecar and Universal Control, that means dragging the image back -- or quitting the image app. With the Focus Mode trick, you have to create a new automation.

This is set up the same way as the Focus Mode automation above, except for where you tap the When Turning On option. You've already guessed that you need to instead choose When Turning Off.

But doing that actually gets both on and off selected. So remember to tap to deselect When Turning On.