The Samsung Contacts app gives you all the tools you need to stay in touch with the important people in your life. Your contacts are more than just names and numbers and you can show that by adding a range of additional information including a photo, your relationship and their address.
- The beautiful Cardhop app is the best way to fix and manage contacts on your iPhone, iPad and Mac devices. Today, developer Flexibits announced free updates for iOS and macOS editions of the software that bring even more goodies to the only contacts app you'll ever need. Cardhop 1.1 for iOS.
- This is something Cardhop aims to rectify. Flexibits, the people behind Cardhop, have form in this area, having long nudged you to replace Calendar with the superior Fantastical. With Cardhop, you get a similar reimagining of how a contacts app should function, with the integration of natural-language smarts.
So far, manage and interact with your contacts has been a real frustration. The analysis engine magical Cardhop is incredibly intuitive Whatever allows you to search, add, edit and interact with your contacts using a simple prayer!
Simply type 'John G' card and John appear instantly. Or enter 'Sarah Smithsarah@cardhopapp.com ' and Cardhop add a new contact card Sarah. Or enter 'call Michael S' and Cardhop instantly initiate a phone call with Michael on your Mac , or even directly on your iPhone.
Search, add, edit and interact with your contacts LIKE NEVER BEFORE
Cardhop 1 0 7 – Manage Your Contacts Onto Itunes
• Cardhop Open with a single click or keystroke.
• Enter your contact details and press return
• That ‘s it!
CHARACTERISTICS
• An application bar beautiful and simple menu, designed exclusively for MacOS
• It works instantly with macOS existing contacts, nothing to configure
• Groups: Quickly switch contact groups with a click
• Notes: a convenient and powerful way to add notes to your contacts, helping to strengthen your relationships.
• Recent: interacts quickly with your recent contacts.
• Birthday instantly see upcoming birthdays and easily send a desire on their special day
• Dial iPhone and Bluetooth
• Extension of action macOS
• dark and light themes.
• And a lot lot more!
POWERFUL ACTION
• Interact with your contacts quickly with the following: Call, Copy, Address, Email, FaceTime, FaceTime Audio, large type, message, Skype, Telegram, Twitter, URL and VoIP.
• Simply enter an action or abbreviation (found in the Book of Help by entering '?' Or 'help') followed by the name of your contact and Cardhop will do the rest
• Even better, some actions are flexible. For example, you can add a subject to an email by entering 'email Kent Lunch tomorrow?' and email that includes the subject appear instantly to run presto!
• Customizable quick actions are also available by contact, allowing one – click actions.
Music tag pro 3 1 3. Cardhop: the contacts application you really want to use.
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We shouldn't ignore the obvious: managing your contacts are boring. Chances are, if you dip into whatever app/service(s) you use to corral your contacts now, it's an unruly mess or duplicates and misinformation. Somehow, contacts never quite made it past a pretty static SQL database, on the backend or via an app. A new offering hopes to change that. From the same team that improved the calendar comes Cardhop for Mac, and it has big ambitions.
Cardhop lives in your Mac's menu bar. There's no overblown ‘contacts' app replacement, mostly because the team at Flexibits doesn't see the need for it. To access it, simply click on it, or choose a customizable hotkey command.
Once you do, the real intrigue begins. What looks like a benign contacts app is really more management than a list of who you know. You can add info, or simply launch straight into a video or text chat with someone.
An example: typing 'email Nate' into the solo input field first surfaces contacts named Nate, and emails associated with them. You can distill that further by adding a last name, or designating which email address you want to send to. Once you've chosen the right person and email, it launches straight into your system's chosen email provider so you can type an email and send it along.
The aim is simplicity. Rather than Click on email, wait for it to launch (yeah, Cardhop works if the email client is dormant), type in an email address, hack out an email and hit ‘send,' Cardhop avoids those steps via a single Menu Bar icon and text entry field.
It also works for Messages, Skype texts or calls, Twitter @-mentions, and FaceTime video or voice calls. It supports Apple's continuity and Wi-Fi calling as well. Fantastical premium.
Should you try to find someone you haven't yet added to your contacts, Cardhop just jumps right into adding them. You can even type ‘email' followed by – well, their email address – after their name and Cardhop knows what you're referencing. It lets you choose which account you want to add the person to, and is organized and skinned much like Apple's own contacts app, replete with a ‘notes' field. It can also appreciate when you're trying to add a new email, phone number or bit of info for an existing contact. As you can see in the video above, it also supports copy/paste, directions, and emailing groups.
Cardhop 1 0 7 – Manage Your Contacts Onto Icloud
It's not perfect. Cardhop doesn't let you do things like merge contacts, and entering multiple fields in the text entry box (like two email addresses) for a new contact can cause it to crash. But it's far and away the best thing to hit ‘contacts' in a long time. Forklift 3 3 8 x 8.
Cardhop is also a passion project. It's been on the back-burner since 2011, after Flexibits found success with Fantastical. In focusing on their work there, the team didn't have much time for Cardhop, but never forgot about it.
They tell me it's meant as a Mac-only offering, which is understandable. If there's any place a powerful client like Cardhop makes sense, it's the desktop. It's also a bit more useful there; a simple click or keyboard command gets you right into a multitude of apps, and lets you quickly get hold of people via your preferred method. Your boss may prefer Skype, while your spouse is on iMessage. Fiddling with multiple apps and discussions is always going to be with us, but Cardhop knocks down the barrier to entry, which might be its ultimate strength.
Cardhop is out today via the Mac App Store. On launch, it'll cost $14.99, and will eventually settle at $19.99. If you're wondering why you should consider paying for Cardhop, I'd ask you to consider how many people you contact in a day and how clumsy your existing contacts list is. If you're like me, the answer to both those considerations is well worth $14.99.