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19.10.AddressBook
Address Book is Mac OS X's little-black-book program—an electronic Rolodex where
you can stash the names, job titles, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and
Internet chat screen names of all the people in your life (Figure 19-23
). AddressBook can
also hold related information, like birthdays, anniversaries, and any other tidbits of
personal data you'd like to keep at your fingertips.
Once you make AddressBook the central repository of all your personal contact
information, you can call up this information in a number of convenient ways:
• You can launch AddressBook and search for a contact by typing just a few letters
in the Search box.
GEM IN THE ROUGH
To Dos and Notes: The Big Sync
Whether you edit your To Do list and Notes in your email program (Mail) or
your calendar program (iCal), they're always just one sync away from a Palm
organizer, a cellphone, or an iPod.
You do the iPod syncing in iTunes, of all places. Just connect the iPod to the
Mac, select its icon in the source list, and click the Contacts tab. Scroll to the
Calendars area and turn on the calendars you want to copy to the iPod. Finally,
click the Apply button in the corner of the iTunes window. Once you've
synchronized iPod with Mac, you can find your calendars and To Do items on
the iPod at iPod Extras Calendars To Dos.
And what about the iPhone? If you have that glorious comination of a .Mac
account and an iPhone, your To Do items sync right over from your Mac to the
iPhone. Find them on the phone in Mail Accounts .Mac Apple Mail
To Do.
Note: To Dos and Notes from .Mac mail accounts sit in their own little area of
the Reminders list in Mail. Control-click the .Mac ones; in the shortcut menu,
you'll see options for syncing and editing with your shared calendar. If you
check your .Mac mail in a Web browser when you're away from home, you can
see (but not edit) the Notes you've created on your Mac.
(Your To Do list, however, doesn't show up in the Web-based version of .Mac
mail. Yet, anyway. Perhaps that's on Apple's own To Do list.)
•
• Regardless of what program you're in, you can use a single keystroke (F12 is the
factory setting, or F4 on aluminum keyboards) to summon the AddressBook
Dashboard widget (Section 5.13.3.2
). There, you can search for any contact you
want, and hide the widget with the same quick keystroke when you're done.
• When you're composing messages in Mail, AddressBook automatically fills in
email addresses for you when you type the first few letters.
Tip: If you choose Window Address Panel (Option- -A) from within Mail,
you can browse all of your addresses without even launching the AddressBook
program. Once you've selected the people you want to contact, just click the "To:"
button to address an email to them—or, if you already have a new email message
open, to add them to the recipients.
Figure 19-23. The big question: Why isn't this program named iContact?
With its threepaned view, soft rounded corners, and gradient-gray
background, it looks like a close cousin of iPhoto, iCal, and iTunes.
• When you use iChat to exchange instant messages with people in your Address
Book, the pictures you've stored of them automatically appear in chat windows.
• If you've bought a subscription to the .Mac service (Section 18.6), you can
synchronize your contacts to the Web, so you can see them while you're away
from your Mac (Section 6.6
). You can also share Address Books with fellow .Mac
members: Choose AddressBook Preferences Sharing,click the box for
"Share your address book," and then click the + button to add the .Mac pals you
want to share with. You can even send them an invitation to come share your
contact list. If you get an invitation yourself, open your own AddressBook
program and choose Edit Subscribe to Address Book.
• AddressBook can send its information to an iPod or an iPhone, giving you a "little
black book" that fits in your shirt pocket, can be operated one-handed, and comes
with built-in musical accompaniment. (To set this up, open iTunes while your iPod
or iPhone is connected. Click the iPod/iPhone's icon; on the Contacts or Info tab,
turn on "Synchronize AddressBook Contacts.")
You can find AddressBook in your Applications folder or (in a fresh installation of Mac
OS X) in the Dock.
19.10.1. Creating Address Cards
Each entry in AddressBook is called a card—like a paper Rolodex card, with predefined
spaces to hold all the standard contact information.
To add a new person, choose File New Card, press -N, or click the + button
beneath the Name column. Then type in the contact information, pressing the Tab key to
move from field to field, as shown in Figure 19-24
.
Tip: If you find yourself constantly adding the same fields to new cards, check out the
Template pane of Address Book's Preferences (Address Book Preferences). There,
you can customize exactly which fields appear for new cards.
Figure 19-24. If one of your contacts happens to have three office phone extensions,
a pager number, two home phone lines, a cellphone, and a couple of fax machines,
no problem—you can add as many fields as you need. Click the little green +
buttons when editing a card to add more phone, email, chat name, and address
fields. (The buttons appear only when the existing fields are filled.) Click a field's
name to change its label; you can select one of the standard labels from the pop-up
menu (Home, Work, and so on) or make up your own labels by choosing Custom, as
seen in the lower portion of this figure.
Each card also contains a free-form Notes field at the bottom, where you can type any
other random crumbs of information you'd like to store about the person (pet's name,
embarrassing nicknames, favorite Chinese restaurant, and so on).
19.10.1.1. Editing an address
When you create a new address card, you're automatically in Edit mode, which means
you can add and remove fields and change the information on the card. To switch into
Browse Mode (where you can view and copy contact information but not change it), click
the Edit button or choose Edit Edit Card ( -L). You can also switch out of Browse
Mode in the same ways.
Tip: Regardless of which mode you're in—Edit or Browse—you can always type, drag,
or paste text into the Notes field of an address card.
19.10.1.2. Adding addresses from Mail
You can also make new contacts in the AddressBook right in Mail, saving you the
trouble of having to type names and email addresses manually. Select a message in Mail,
then choose Message Add Sender to AddressBook (or press -Y).Presto:Mac OS
X adds a new card to the Address Book, with the name and email address fields already
filled in. Later, you can edit the card in AddressBook to add phone numbers, street
addresses, and so on.
19.10.2. Importing Addresses
The easiest way to add people to AddressBook is to import them from another program
like Entourage, Outlook Express, or Palm Desktop.
Address Book isn't smart enough to read an Entourage or Outlook Express database—it
can only import files in vCard format, the less common LDIF format, or tab-separated
database files (described next).
Figure 19-25. This example shows three other kinds of fields that you can plug into
your address cards. The phonetic first/last name fields (shown at top) let you store
phonetic spellings of hard to-pronounce names. The other fields store screen names
for instant messaging networks such as Jabber and Yahoo. To add fields like these,
choose from the Card Add Field menu.
Still, Mac OS X comes with handy AppleScripts that import addresses automatically
from Entourage, Eudora, and tab-separated text files; another Apple Script imports them
semi-automatically from Palm Desktop, Outlook Express, Claris Emailer, and Netscape.
Choose AddressBook Scripts Import Addresses from the Script menu at the top of
the screen (Section 7.5.1
), and follow the prompts. A minute or two later, you'll have all
your old contacts safely transferred into Address Book.
Tip: If you've got contacts in the online Yahoo Address Book, you can sync them up with
your Mac OS X Address Book—a new feature in Leopard. Choose Address Book
Preferences General; turn on Yahoo Address Book. Next, click Configure and type
your user name and password. Since Yahoo AddressBook lives online, you need to be
connected to the Internet to link and sync with it.
19.10.2.1. About vCards
Address Book exchanges contact information with other programs primarily through
vCards. vCard is short for virtual business card. More and more email programs send and
receive these electronic business cards, which you can identify by their .vcf filename
extensions (if, that is, you've set your Mac to display these extensions).
If you ever receive an email to which a vCard file is attached, drag the .vcf file into your
Address Book window to create an instant entry with a complete set of information. You
can create vCards of your own, too. Just drag a name out of your AddressBook and onto
the desktop (or into a piece of outgoing mail).
Tip: In addition to letting you create vCards of individual entries, AddressBook makes it
easy to create vCards that contain several entries. To do so, -click the entries in the
Name column that you want included, and drag them to the desktop. There, they'll appear
all together as a single vCard. You can even drag an item from the Group column to the
desktop to make a vCard that contains all the group's entries.Keep this trick in mind if
you ever want to copy all your contacts from an old PC to a new Mac. By creating a
single vCard containing all your contacts, you've made it trivial to import them into the
copy of AddressBook running on your new Mac.
19.10.3. Groups
A group is a collection of related address cards, saved under a single descriptive name (as
shown in Figure 19-23
).
POWER USERS' CLINIC
The Windows-to-Address-Book Journey
Getting names and addresses out of one Mac program and into another is one
thing. But what if your contacts are stored on a Windows PC running Microsoft
Outlook, the most-used contact manager in the world?
Easy: Use Outlook's Export command to create a tab-delimited text file
containing all your contacts. Then copy the text file to your Mac.
In Address Book, choose File Import Text File (or use the Address
Book Import AppleScript described on the facing page), locate the file you
exported from Outlook, and click Open. After a short delay, your new contacts
appear, ready to go in Address Book.
Organizing your contacts into groups can make them much easier to find and use—
especially when your database of addresses climbs into the hundreds. For example, if you
regularly send out a family newsletter to 35 relatives, you might gather the address cards
of all your assorted siblings, cousins, nieces, nephews, uncles, and aunts into a single
group called Family. When addressing an outgoing message using Mail, you can type this
group name to reach all of your kin at once. A person can be a member of as many
different groups as you want.
Tip: When you send an email message to a group en masse, how does Mail know which
email address to use for each person?Because you've told it. Choose Edit Edit
Distribution List. A special dialog box appears, listing everyone in each group, along
with each person's complete list of email addresses. (Use the tiny pop-up menu above the
list to choose Phone or Address; that way, you can also indicate the preferred phone
number and mailing address.)
To create a group, click the + button at the bottom of the Group column in the Address
Book window, or choose File New Group (Shift- -N.) Type a name for the newly
spawned group icon in the Group column, and then populate it with address cards by
dragging entries from the Name list into the group. Clicking a group name automatically
locates and displays (in the Names column) all the names that are a part of that group—
and hides any that aren't.
GEM IN THE ROUGH
Cool Group Tricks
Dragging cards into and out of groups can be a great way to spend an afternoon,
but groups can actually be powerful timesavers. For example, if a card is
selected in the Name column, you can quickly highlight all the groups it belongs
to by pressing the Option key.
If you've created a lot of groups, it can be very difficult to find a specific one—
especially because Address Book's Search box looks only for individual cards.
To get around this limitation, click in the Group list and then type the first few
letters of a group's name. AddressBook jumps right to the first matching group.
You can even add groups to other groups. You might find it useful to keep a
Nieces group and a Nephews group, for example, but to keep both groups inside
a master Family group. To do this, you'd -click Nieces and Nephews in the
Group list, and then Option-drag them onto the Family group. Now, whenever
you select Family, you'll see both groups listed among the rest of the cards;
double-click either group to see its members.
Also, don't miss the Smart Groups feature of the Address Book. Smart address
groups, like smart folders in the Finder, automatically populate themselves with
items that match criteria you specify. For example, you might create a smart
group called Apple Employees that lists all your contacts with "apple.com" in
their email addresses.
To create a smart group, choose File New Smart Group (Option- -N).
Then use the resulting dialog box (which looks a lot like Mail's smart mailbox
dialog box) to specify how you'd like the smart group to fill itself.
Once you're done, you can use your new smart group much like you'd use a
regular group. You can't add contacts to a smart group yourself, of course, but
you can still send an email to all the members of a smart group, for example, or
drag one to the Finder to create a composite vCard.
Tip: To turn a set of address cards into a group very quickly, select multiple entries from
the Names column—by either Shift-clicking the names (to make contiguous selections)
or -clicking (for non-contiguous selections)—and then choose File New Group
From Selection. You end up with a new group containing all the selected names.
19.10.3.1. Removing someone from a group
To take someone out of a group, first click the group name, and then click the person's
name in the Name column and press the Delete key. If you want to remove the person
from AddressBook itself, click Delete in the resulting dialog box. Otherwise, just click
"Remove from Group" or press Return. AddressBook keeps the card, but removes it
from the currently selected group.
Note: If you selected All in the Group column, rather than a specific group, you don't get
a "Remove from Group" option. Instead, the Mac just asks you to confirm that you do, in
fact, want to permanently remove the card.
19.10.4. Adding Pictures
You can dress up each AddressBook entry with a photo. Whenever you're editing
somebody's addressbook card, drag a digital photo—preferably 64 pixels square, or a
multiple of it—onto the empty headshot square; the image shows up as shown in Figure
19-26. Or double-click the picture well; now you can either browse to a picture on your
hard drive by clicking Choose, or, if this person is with you, take a new photo by clicking
the camera icon. (Don't miss the swirly button next to it, which lets you apply nutty Photo
Boothish effects.) At that point, you can enlarge, reposition, and crop the new photo.)
You don't necessarily have to use a photo, of course. You could add any graphic that you
want to represent someone, even if it's a Bart Simpson face or a skull and crossbones.
You can use any standard image file in an address card—a JPEG, GIF, PNG, TIFF, or
even a PDF.
From now on, if you receive an email from that person, the photo shows up right in the
email message.
Tip: If you've got snapshots in iPhoto, it's particularly easy to add a picture to any address
card. Just drag a picture directly from the main iPhoto window to the picture frame on the
address card to insert it.
19.10.4.1. Replacing and removing a picture
To replace a photo on an address card, just drag a new image on top of the old one. If you
want to get rid of an existing picture without replacing it, select the card, then choose
Card Clear Custom Image (or, in Edit mode, press Delete).
19.10.5. Finding an Address
You can search for an AddressBook entry inside the currently selected group by typing a
few letters of a name (or address, or any other snippet of contact information) in the
Search box (Figure 19-26
). To search all your contacts instead of just the current group,
click All in the Group list.
Tip: You can press -F to jump directly to the search field and start typing. Your
savings: one mouse click.
If AddressBook finds more than one matching card, use the and keys, or Return
and Shift-Return, to navigate through them.
Figure 19-26. With each letter you type, AddressBook filters your social circle and
displays the number of matches at the bottom. The matching records themselves
appear in the Name column, the first of the matching card entries appears in the
far-right pane, and the matching text itself appears highlighted in the matching
card.
Figure 19-27. The options that become available when you click the field labels on
an address card vary according to field type. Pop-up menus let you send email, open
a Web page, or view a map, depending on the type of field you've clicked.
Once you've found the card you're looking for, you can perform some interesting stunts.
If you click the label of a phone number ("home" or "office", for example), you see the
Large Type option: AddressBook displays the number in an absurdly gigantic font that
fills the entire width of your screen, making it possible to read the number as you dial
from across the room. You can also click the label of an email address to create a
preaddressed email message, or click a home page to launch your Web browser and go to
somebody's site.
You can also copy and paste (or drag) address card info into another program or convert
it into a Sticky Note.
Tip: Once you find a street address in your Address Book, you can find those coordinates
on a map by Control-clicking (or right-clicking) the address part of the card and choosing
"Map Of" from the shortcut menu, as shown in Figure 19-27
. Your Web browser
obediently leaps up to display the address on a Google map.
19.10.6. Changing the AddressBook Display
You can't do much to customize Address Book's appearance, but the Preferences pane
(Address Book Preferences) gives you at least a couple of options in the General pane
that are worth checking out:
• Display Order. Choose to have names displayed with the first name followed by
the last name, or vice versa.
• Sort By. Sort the entries in AddressBook by either first or last name.
• Font Size. Choose from Regular, Large, or Extra Large. Unfortunately, you can't
change anything else about the font used in the Address Book; the color, face, and
style are all locked down.
19.10.7. Printing Options
When you choose File Print and click the to expand the Print box, the Style pop-
up menu offers four ways to print whatever addresses are selected at the moment:
• Mailing Labels. This option prints addresses on standard sheets of sticky mailing
labels—Avery, for example—that you buy at office-supply stores.
Tip: As you manipulate settings, you can see your changes in the preview pane on
the left. If the preview is too small for you to see, use the Zoom slider. (It doesn't
affect your printout.)If you want to access the traditional Print dialog box (to
specify paper type, for example), use the unlabeled pop-up menu in the middle of
[...]... protect your AddressBook data: POWER USERS' CLINIC Automatic Notifications In Address Book, notifying friends and family that your email address has changed is a piece of cake Choose AddressBook Preferences General and turn on "Notify people when my card changes." From now on, whenever you change the information in your own address card (like home address, email address, or phone number), AddressBook asks... features in one clever way: to print yourself a portable phone book when you're heading off for a visit to a different city That is, set up a smart group that rounds up everyone you know who lives in Chicago, and then print that as a pocket addressbook 19.10.8 Address- Book Backups When you think about it, the contents of your AddressBook may represent years of typing and compiling effort Losing all... command Periodically choose File Back Up AddressBook If something goes wrong—say, a batch of important contacts gets inadvertently deleted—you can go back to a previously saved version to rescue the data by choosing File • Revert to AddressBook Backup Backup your entire AddressBook database.Open your Home Library Application Support folder Copy the entire AddressBook folder to another disk— burn it... contacts for which you have, in fact, entered physical mailing addresses • • Lists If all you want is a paper backup of your AddressBook entries, use this setting In the Attributes list, turn on the checkboxes of the fields you want printed—just name and phone number, for example Pocket AddressBook This feature prints out a convenient paperaddress book from your virtual one If you pick Indexed from the... change-of -address card If you do, click Notify In the resulting dialog box, choose which groups of people you want to notify, and then personalize the outgoing message When you click Send, AddressBook delivers an email to all the people in the groups you chose, attaching your new vCard (Section 19.10.1 .2) When your recipients get the email, they can simply drag the vCard into their own Address Books to...the dialog box top choose Paper Type or whatever Return to the Labels or Envelopes panes by choosing AddressBook from the same pop-up • Envelopes This feature is great if you have bad handwriting; rather than handaddressing your envelopes, you can have AddressBook print them out for you Use the Layout pop-up menu to pick the size of your envelopes—it's usually listed on the outside... Machine Chapter 6 tells you how Note: If you've upgraded from Mac OS X Tiger to Leopard, you've probably noticed that the AddressBook can no longer communicate wirelessly with Bluetooth cellphones If you miss that feature terribly, especially the ability to send text messages from AddressBook over your phone's Bluetooth connection, consider the emitSMS Dashboard widget.It lets you send off SMS notes to... Mac It works with almost any Bluetooth phone and can look up recipients in the AddressBook You can even write missives longer than the standard 160-character limit (although you're still billed for each 160-character chunk)—which is much easier to do from the comfort of your Mac's keyboard anyway Download emitSMS from this book' s "Missing CD" page at www.missingmanuals.com ... Flip Style pop-up menu, each page's edge will even list the first letters of the last names listed on the page, making it a cinch to find the page with the address you want (Here again, you can pick which fields you'd like to include—phone numbers, addresses, and so on.) As you fiddle with the options presented here, you get to see a miniature preview, right in the dialog box, that shows what you're . 19. 10. Address Book
Address Book is Mac OS X's little-black -book program—an electronic Rolodex where
you can stash the names, job titles, addresses,. then print that as a pocket address book.
19. 10. 8. Address- Book Backups
When you think about it, the contents of your Address Book may represent years