- Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Yahoo
- Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Contacts
- Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Yahoo Mail
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 Smith [email protected] ” and Cardhop add a new contact card Sarah. Just enter the name of the contact along with their details and then observe the smile on your face. Act: The old way of interacting with your contacts takes multiple steps to accomplish the actions you want. This all changes with Cardhop. After you try Cardhop, you’ll wonder how you ever did it the old way.
Photo from the National Museum of American History
Few Apple apps are as user-hostile as Contacts on the Mac, which was why I was happy to see Flexibits release Cardhop for the Mac as an alternative interface to the Mac’s system-level contact database (see “Cardhop Puts Contacts Front and Center,” 18 October 2017). Cardhop’s innovation is the way it lets you interact with your contacts using a natural language parser. Want to create a new contact with a company name, email address, Twitter handle, and phone number? Just type “Tim Cook Apple [email protected] @tim_cook 408-555-1212.” From then on, you can contact Tim with commands like “email Tim Cook.” (So, Tim, about those butterfly keyboards…)
I’ve enjoyed using Cardhop, particularly once when I needed to enter a lot of names and postal addresses for runners to whom I had to send awards for a race, and again when I went through the envelopes for our Christmas cards to verify and update addresses. In both cases, Cardhop’s natural language parser made it super easy to enter and update contact information, and it even fixed a lot of capitalization and punctuation errors in addresses that I pasted in from email.
However, in that article, I wrote:
Cardhop is a fine app, and a compelling rethinking of how you can interact with contact information, but it still faces an uphill battle for acceptance. The problem is that we’ve all built up habits that will be hard to break. For instance, if I’m going to send someone email, I’ll switch to Mailplane, start a new message, and enter their name. If I want to call someone, I’ll pull out my iPhone, tap the Phone app, tap Favorites or Contacts, and tap the appropriate item in the list. I’m not saying that these techniques are efficient, but they’re what I’ve done for years.
That is a methods to sync iCloud contacts with Outlook. Moreover, after setting your Exchange account on your iPhone and contact synchronization. You can open your iPhone contacts, tap the Groups option on the upper left corner, then you can see the Exchange account list there, tick it to see the contacts of the Exchange account. 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 Smith [email protected] ” and Cardhop add a new contact card Sarah.
In practice, apart from these few isolated examples, Cardhop didn’t change how I generally interact with contacts. I still think of the app associated with the action I want to take—email, phone, etc.—as the first step, rather than starting from Cardhop. Exacerbating this problem is the fact that many communications channels revolve around conversations, so if I want to text Tonya, I’ll select our ongoing conversation in Messages rather than starting from Cardhop (which would, to be fair, reuse that conversation when it connected to Messages).
Flexibits has now brought Cardhop to iOS, where it’s possible that contact usage follows a different pattern. It’s too early to tell if that will be true for me since I’m still explicitly trying to use Cardhop while testing. Regardless, Cardhop for iOS looks and works very much like its Mac sibling (so go read “Cardhop Puts Contacts Front and Center” for more details; I’ll wait).
If you’ve been frustrated by Apple’s Contacts app on your iPhone or iPad, Cardhop will give you all that app can do and much more, all while working with the same system-level contact database.
Using Cardhop in iOS
Whereas Cardhop on the Mac is a menu bar app that focuses on favorite and recently used contacts, Cardhop for iOS provides four different contact views and a Settings screen, accessed by tapping toolbar icons at the bottom of its main list on the iPhone or the bottom of the left-hand sidebar on the iPad. The contact views are:
- Favorites: You get to populate this screen with the contact cards for those people you interact with the most. You can add and remove people, and tap Edit to rearrange them in the list. These sync across all copies of Cardhop on all your devices.
- Recents: I’m a big fan of this screen since I communicate with a relatively small number of people, and this will make it easy to call someone repeatedly because they’re doing work on the house for a few weeks. At least that’s the theory; I haven’t been using Cardhop long enough for it to reflect my behavior.
- Contacts: This is the main screen that lists all your contacts; a strip of letters down the right side lets you navigate quickly through the list. You can also tap All Contacts at the top to filter the list to show only contacts in one or more of your groups.
- Birthdays: If you are, or would like to be, one of those people who is always aware of people’s birthdays, this screen can help. It lists everyone whose contact card contains a birthdate, in chronological order. Even better, you can swipe left on any contact in the list to remove the birthdate information if you don’t know the person well enough to care.
Tapping a contact in any of these screens brings up its contact card (more on that shortly), but you can also tap a quick action button to repeat the last action you took with that contact, or swipe right on a contact to reveal four other quick action buttons, as I’ve done on Tonya’s contact at the top of the Recents list below. My talking tom 3.
At the bottom of each of these screens is a search field that lets you use Cardhop’s natural language parser for interacting with your contacts. This being iOS, it contains a microphone button you can tap to dictate into the field, making it trivial to say “Tim Cook” to search for a contact or “Email Tim Cook” to invoke an action. (So, Tim, about that whole AirPower debacle…)
When you’re viewing a contact card, note the four quick action buttons at the top; you can choose which appear there in Cardhop > Settings > Quick Actions. Also welcome is a big yellow notes field at the bottom that’s always ready to take text, complete with a single-tap option to add a timestamp. If you do need to make changes, tapping Edit brings up a standard edit view (below right).
Cardhop for iOS supports all the actions in Cardhop for Mac (call, copy, email, facetime, message, skype, tweet, web, map, and show—see “Cardhop Puts Contacts Front and Center”) along with a few new ones (facebook messenger, facetime audio, favorite, telegram, viber, and whatsapp). It’s easy to bring up a full list of all actions and their synonyms at any time by typing a question mark (below left). You can also add buttons for each of these actions to the top of the iOS onscreen keyboard; tap the More button to configure which ones appear and what order (below right).
Notice how my contact card appears at the top of the Contacts list? On an iPhone, wherever you are in Cardhop, rotating the phone to landscape orientation displays your contact information—you pick the fields you want to share in Cardhop > Settings > Business Card—complete with a QR code to the information and a prominent Share button. It’s one of the easiest ways to share a digital business card with someone in person that I’ve seen.
Beyond being able to dictate into the natural language parser, Cardhop boasts an impressive level of integration with Siri Shortcuts. Whenever you’re viewing contact info, either within a contact card or within a result that the parser has revealed, you can press and hold any piece of information to bring up a popover with Copy, Share, and Add to Siri commands. Tap Add to Siri and you can create a Siri Shortcut that calls or texts the number, creates email, copies the address (perhaps you send it to vendors regularly), or whatever.
Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Yahoo
In Cardhop > Settings > Siri Shortcuts, Cardhop suggests some more general shortcuts you can create. Particularly useful is “Show my business card,” which lets you use Siri to bring up that screen with your contact info. I also like the “Type to Cardhop” Siri Shortcut that brings up the Cardhop search field immediately.
Cardhop Settings and Limitations
Interesting settings abound in Cardhop’s Settings screen. You can choose whether you want to sort lists by first name or last name, display names in various formats, and choose country-specific address formats. A particular nicety is the option to set which Web browser, email app, mapping app, and Twitter app Cardhop should use—since I use Gmail, I appreciate not being dumped into the Mail app like so many other apps do. Also, Cardhop can optionally detect clipboard content when you open the app; it essentially pastes that clipboard into the search field automatically.
For those who prefer a darker look than the screenshots I’ve shown here, Cardhop offers three themes—the Light look I use, a Dark version that reverses all the type out of a black background, and the default version that uses a dark look for lists and a light look for contact cards. Since the human visual system is much more capable of processing dark-on-light, I always avoid dark modes (see “Better than the Printed Page: Reading on an iPad,” 15 March 2018).
Like the recently updated Cardhop for Mac (see “Cardhop 1.2.1,” 30 March 2019), Cardhop for iOS can search for contacts in a variety of online directories, including Google Contacts, G Suite, Microsoft Exchange, and Office 365. I have no sense of how well this works since I don’t use any directory services.
One limitation I have run into is that Cardhop doesn’t interact with Google Hangouts, which I use to communicate with several Android-using friends—it would seem sufficiently popular to include alongside WhatsApp and Viber. Flexibits says they’re looking at adding support for it. The other complaint I’ve seen is that Cardhop makes it easy to call the same number for a contact, but doesn’t make it easy if you regularly have to call a person at different numbers. The workaround is to make separate Siri Shortcuts for each number, but at that point, it’s probably easier to use Siri to dial the number as you would without Cardhop.
Regardless of these minor nits, Cardhop 1.0 for iOS is a worthwhile alternative to Apple’s Contacts app in iOS, and doubly so if you already like using Cardhop on the Mac.
Cardhop for iOS works on both the iPhone and iPad with iOS 12.0 or later. It’s regularly priced at $4.99, although there’s a launch special that drops the price to $3.99 for a limited time.
- 카테고리:Productivity
- 출시일: 2019-08-14
- 현재 버전: 1.3.2
- 파일 크기: 10.35 MB
- 개발자:Flexibits Inc.
- 호환성: iOS 필요 or Android KitKat 4.4, Lollipop 5.0, Marshmallow 6.0, Nougat 7.0, Oreo 8.0, Android P 9.0또는 나중에
호환 APK 다운로드
다운로드 | 개발자 | 평점 | 점수 | 현재 버전 | 호환성 | 성인 랭킹 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SyncGene Contact Calendar Sync 다운로드 Android Playstore 다운로드 | 4Team Corporation | 78 | 3.2 | 1.2.2 | 4.1 | 4+ |
Contacts+ Pro 다운로드 Android Playstore 다운로드 | Contacts Plus team | 2,486 | 3.1 | 20.03.2 | 5.0 | 4+ |
보너스 ***: 더 많은 APK 다운로드 소스
다운로드 Android →
다른 한편에서는 원활한 경험을하려면 파일을 장치에 다운로드 한 후 파일을 사용하는 방법을 알아야합니다. APK 파일은 Android 앱의 원시 파일이며 Android 패키지 키트를 의미합니다. 모바일 앱 배포 및 설치를 위해 Android 운영 체제에서 사용하는 패키지 파일 형식입니다.
네 가지 간단한 단계에서 사용 방법을 알려 드리겠습니다. Cardhop 귀하의 전화 번호.
네 가지 간단한 단계에서 사용 방법을 알려 드리겠습니다. Cardhop 귀하의 전화 번호.
1 단계 : 다운로드 Cardhop 귀하의 기기에서
아래의 다운로드 미러를 사용하여 지금 당장이 작업을 수행 할 수 있습니다. 그것의 99 % 보장 . 컴퓨터에서 파일을 다운로드하는 경우, 그것을 안드로이드 장치로 옮기십시오.
2 단계 : 기기에 타사 앱 허용
설치하려면 Cardhop 타사 응용 프로그램이 현재 설치 소스로 활성화되어 있는지 확인해야합니다. 메뉴 > 설정 > 보안>으로 이동하여 알 수없는 소스 를 선택하여 휴대 전화가 Google Play 스토어 이외의 소스에서 앱을 설치하도록 허용하십시오.
3 단계 : 파일 관리자로 이동
Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Contacts
이제 위치를 찾으십시오 Cardhop 방금 다운로드 한 파일입니다.
일단 당신이 Cardhop 파일을 클릭하면 일반 설치 프로세스가 시작됩니다. 메시지가 나타나면 '예' 를 누르십시오. 그러나 화면의 모든 메시지를 읽으십시오.
일단 당신이 Cardhop 파일을 클릭하면 일반 설치 프로세스가 시작됩니다. 메시지가 나타나면 '예' 를 누르십시오. 그러나 화면의 모든 메시지를 읽으십시오.
Cardhop 1 0 4 – Manage Your Contacts Details Yahoo Mail
4 단계 : 즐기십시오
Cardhop 이 (가) 귀하의 기기에 설치되었습니다. 즐겨!
다운로드
개발자 설명
Until now, managing and interacting with your contacts has been a real frustration. Cardhop's magical parsing engine is incredibly intuitive, letting you search, add, edit, and interact with your contacts using a simple sentence!Just type in 'John G' and John's card will instantly appear. Or enter 'Sarah Smith [email protected]' and Cardhop will add a new contact to Sarah's card. Or type in 'call Michael S' and Cardhop will instantly start 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• Open Cardhop with a single click or keystroke• Type in the details for your contact and press return• That's it!FEATURES• A beautiful and simple menu bar app, designed exclusively for macOS• Instantly works with your existing macOS contacts, nothing to configure• Groups: quickly toggle contact groups with a click• Smart groups: Create dynamic smart groups that automatically update based on specific search criteria• Notes: a convenient and powerful way to add notes to your contacts, helping you to strengthen your relationships• Recents: quickly interact with your recent contacts• Birthdays: instantly see upcoming birthdays and easily send a wish on their special day• Printing: Print customized envelopes, labels, and lists of contacts• iPhone and Bluetooth dialing• macOS Action Extension• Dark and light themes• And much, much more!POWERFUL ACTIONS• Quickly interact with your contacts with the following actions: Call, Copy, Directions, Email, FaceTime, FaceTime Audio, Large Type, Message, Skype, Telegram, Twitter, URL, and VoIP• Simply enter an action or abbreviation (which you'll find in the Help Book by entering '?' or 'help') followed by your contact's name and Cardhop will handle 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 the email including the subject will instantly appear, ready to go!• Customizable quick actions are also available per contact, allowing for single-click actionsCardhop — the contacts app you'll actually want to use.
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