![]() The app’s notes field is a great start, but a way to enter structured data about phone calls and emails to form a paper trail of communication would make it a real winner in my book. Personally, I would love to see the addition of more CRM-focused information that could sync to my iOS devices. If you do a lot with contacts at your Mac, it is well worth the cost of admission, which is reduced to $14.99 for launch. Slack and Skype are already islands all their own. You can also refer to Google's help pages for more info. Cardhop is similar to what FullContact has tried to be, and has some features you’ll find in Interact Contacts for iOS, but as it stands on the Mac right now, this is the most elegant contact management solution I’ve seen. Select Cardhop for Mac and click the three-dot icon on the right and choose Trust. To do this, open your G Suite admin panel and select Security > API Permissions > Contacts. Its normal price is 4.99, but for a limited time it’s available for 3.99. Mail pulls from my contacts database as well as their own internal history, and Messages works in a similar fashion. You need to choose to trust Cardhop as a whitelisted app in your G Suite admin panel. Cardhop is available on the App Store as a universal app for iPhone and iPad (where it supports Split View and all iPad Pro sizes). While I do keep a fairly robust contacts database, I almost always start a new conversation with someone within the app I’m going to use for that interaction. It builds upon natural language input in a new way that I find clever. The input field can turn “email Jason Snell” into a draft to the man with a spider in his iMac. Cardhops magical parsing engine is incredibly intuitive and lets you search, add, edit, and interact with your contacts with one simple sentence. The app can also serve as a launchpad for contacting someone. ![]() ![]() The natural language input field at the top of the menu bar app can handle search, creating contacts, editing record information and more. To celebrate the launch, Cardhop will be on sale for a limited-time for 15 a piece. The app requires macOS El Capitan 10.11 or later. It boasts the same easy-to-use, text-driven intelligence that its calendar-based sibling does. Cardhop is Mac-only and available for 20 from Mac App Store or directly from the Flexibits Store. Flexibits, the makers of Fantastical, have a new Mac app out for dealing with contacts. Facing that challenge today is a new app from Flexibits, Cardhop for iOS, which serves as the iPhone and iPad companion to the contacts app launched for Mac in late 2017. ![]()
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