Open the dock and tap Document
Upload the file you're teaching from.
PDFs and slides, open right on the board.
Drop a PDF, deck or document onto the board and page through it in place — the worksheet and your timer, side by side, no app-juggling.
Also called: PDF viewer · PowerPoint viewer
The Water Cycle
No setup screen, no import wizard — Document lives on the same board as everything else and it's running before the class has sat down.
Upload the file you're teaching from.
Move through the pages in place — the widget remembers where you left off.
It's a widget like any other — worksheet in the middle, timer beside it, sticky note of answers just off to the side.
Three ways teachers actually run document — steal one for tomorrow morning.
The exact page they're holding, board-sized. 'Question 3' finally means the same thing to everyone in the room.
The novel open on the board, picking up on the right page every lesson — the widget remembers so you don't have to.
Keep the answers on a later page and flip to them section by section. Self-marking with a built-in reveal.
Homework as a QR code by the door and our daily links as big buttons — I haven't typed a URL in front of the class in months.
Every tool lives on the same board — these turn document into a whole routine.
…and the rest of the dock is one tap away:
PDFs plus the usual suspects — slides, docs and spreadsheets. If it's what you'd print, it probably opens.
Yes — reopen the board and the document is on the page you left.
Size it up like any widget — a worksheet at board scale beats thirty photocopies for a walkthrough.
No — no login, no install. Your board saves on this device; an account is only needed to keep boards across devices.
Open a board, tap the dock, and it's there. That's the whole setup.