iPod & iTunes: The Missing Manual, 2nd Edition Free Open Book

iPod & iTunes: The Missing Manual, 2nd Edition

Previous Section  < Day Day Up >  Next Section

7.1 Introduction to the iPod Address Book

Before Apple incorporated the Contacts program into the iPod's software, people went through all kinds of contortions to get their address lists onto the music player. They went so far as to create short, silent MP3 files, named "Bob Smith" from the album "(212) 523-1522" recorded by the artist "23 Broadway, New York, NY 10023," just so that they could look up their phone numbers. Shareware wizards rode to the rescue, but using the iPod as a little black book was still an exercise for geeks. (See the end of this chapter for more about organizer software for the iPod.)

But starting with iPod software version 1.1, all of the extraneous hassle went away. In most cases, you can simply export the contacts list from Palm Desktop, Entourage, Outlook, or another compatible program, and then drag the exported file into the iPod's Contacts folder. Presto: You've got your friends and associates listed right there alongside your Rolling Stones and Little Walter albums. Your little white box is now a little black book.

At this point, you can just use the ExtrasContacts command on the iPod (Section 1.6.3.2) and zip down the list with the scroll wheel to the name of the person you want. Click Select to see the person's name, address, phone number, and other information from your desktop program's exported contacts file. Figure 7-1 shows a sample.

Figure 7-1. A contact file on the iPod can display all the basic information on how to reach your friends and associates, including the person's name, job title, company, and so on. Unfortunately, the iPod doesn't pick up more elaborate bits like the photos found in some address book programs.
figs/07fig01.gif


POWER USERS' CLINIC
Anatomy of a vCard

When it added the Contacts feature to the iPod, Apple included a sample vCard in the technical support area of its Web site (http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=61568), so curious minds could see what a vCard looks like when opened in a text-editing program like TextEdit or (for Windows) WordPad. If you're not put off by odd-looking punctuation and formatting, you can even make your own vCards. Just reproduce this text, making sure to fill in the proper information where indicated here in italics, and save the file with a .vcf extension.

  • begin:vcard

  • version:3.0

  • fn:Sample

  • n:Sample;;;;

  • title:Accountant

  • org:Sample Company\, Inc.

  • note:Here's a sample to show you all that can be displayed in a contact on your iPod.

  • url;type=work:http://apple.com/support/ipod

  • adr;type=work;type=pref:;;200 Industrial Park Circle;Metropolis;CA;98765;USA

  • label;type=work;type=pref:200 Industrial Park Circle\nMetropolis\, CA 98765\nUSA

  • adr;type=home:;;10201 Fine Drive;Smallville;CA;98765;USA

  • label;type=home:10201 Fine Drive\nSmallville\, CA 98765\nUSA

  • tel;type=home:408-555-9292

  • tel;type=work:408-555-3131

  • tel;type=cell:408-555-1010

  • end:vcard

If you want to back up all your vCards in one big file, you can copy and paste the text for each contact one after the other in a text file. Just make sure you have begin:vcard as the first line of each new contact and end:vcard as the last line.

You can read more about the vCard standard and where it's headed at http://www.imc.org/pdi.


7.1.1 The vCard

A vCard is a special file in a format that many email and Rolodex programs recognize, including Microsoft Outlook and Entourage—and the iPod likes it, too. It's basically a digital business card that you can pass around between email programs, organizer software, Web pages, and handheld computers. It can display all the typical text-based things you'd expect from a business card, like name, title, phone numbers, and addresses—plus goodies like corporate logo graphics and clickable URLs. If you've ever gotten an email attachment with a .vcf file extension, you've got yourself a vCard.

What makes the vCard format especially handy is that it's becoming a standard, so you can set up your own vCard within a program like Outlook or the Mac OS X Address Book and attach it to an outgoing message. You can send it off in Outlook on your PC, and the vCard will arrive in full glory in the Entourage inbox on your friend's Mac. Even better, your recipient can usually add your vCard to his own address book by just dragging it into the list. A vCard can save time and typing on both ends of the message.

So when Apple made the iPod ready for contacts, it made it vCard-friendly. Now you can use the information that's already in just about any popular desktop organizer program without having to retype anything.

NOTE

Many contact-management programs these days can export their data to the vCard format. But if you've been using an older program that doesn't deal in vCards, and you're dreading having to retype your list to get it into the Mac OS X Address Book, take a look at a shareware program called vCard Creator (available at the "Missing CD" page of http://www.missingmanuals.com). If you can export your contacts in the form of a tab-delimited database from programs like Microsoft Entourage, Now Contact, Palm Desktop, or several database programs, the vCard Creator shareware can convert it into the vCard format.

The vCard format itself is capable of storing many more fields of information (individual info blobs like name, street, city, zip) than the iPod can display, however. The iPod can show only the following information: name, addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, title, company name, Web address, and your own notes on the person.

    Previous Section  < Day Day Up >  Next Section
    Index: [A][B][C][D][E][F][G] [I][M][N][O][P][R][S][T][U][V][W][Y]


         Main Menu
    iPod & iTunes: The Missing Manual, 2nd Edition
    Table of Contents
    Copyright
    The Missing Credits
    Introduction
    I: iPod: The Hardware
    II: iPod: The Software
    III: Beyond the Music
    7. iPod as Address Book
    7.1 Introduction to the iPod Address Book
    7.2 Transferring Contacts to the iPod
    7.4 Copying Contacts from the Macintosh
    7.4 Copying Contacts from the Macintosh
    7.5 Manually Deleting Contacts
    7.6 Address Book Settings
    7.7 Even More Organizer Shareware
    8. iPod as Calendar
    9. iPod Games and eBooks
    10. iSync
    11. The iPod as Hard Drive
    IV: Extreme iPodding
    V: Appendixes
    Colophon
    Index


    More Books
    PHP Hacks
    Processing Xml With Java - A Guide To Sax, Dom, Jdom, Jaxp, And Trax
    The Koran (Holy Qur'an)
    Macromedia Flash 8 Bible
    Search Engine Optimization for Dummies
    YouTube Traffic
    PHP 5 for Dummies
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets
    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
    The Pilgrim's Progress
    Wireless Hacks
    Flash Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips & Tools
    PayPal Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
    Amazon Hacks
    Pdf Hacks
    The Da Vinci Code
    Google Hacks
    The Holy Bible
    Windows XP For Dummies
    Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
    Seo Book
    Upgrading and Repairing Networks
    Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 UNLEASHED
    Windows XP Annoyances
    Windows XP Hacks
    Microsoft Windows XP Power Toolkit
    Teach Yourself MS Office In 24Hours
    iPod & iTunes Missing Manual
    PC Hacks 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
    PC Overclocking, Optimization, and Tuning - 2th Edition
    PC Hardware In A Nutshell 3rd Edition
    PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition
    Upgrading and Repairing PCs
    Google for Dummies
    MySQL Cookbook
    Teach Yourself Macromedia Flash 8 In 24 Hours
    PHP CookBook
    Sams Teach Yourself JavaScript in 24 Hours
    PHP5 Manual
    Free Games Paper Airplanes
    500 Juegos Gratis 500 Giochi Gratis 500 Jeux Gratuits 500 Jogos Gratis 500 Kostenlose Spiele