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Cardhop’s
Cardhop’s












cardhop’s
  1. #Cardhop’s for free#
  2. #Cardhop’s plus#
  3. #Cardhop’s free#

  • Business card scanning: This feature, which is only in the iPhone and iPad apps, does a decent job of importing data from business card scans.
  • It even has solid printing capabilities, with support for lists, labels, and envelopes, and I like how it’s instantly accessible with a global hotkey. I’m a keyboard guy, so I enjoy typing at my apps. In particular, the parser is great for looking up or adding contacts, or adding information to an existing contact. I may not have a contact-first approach to communications, but I still appreciate Cardhop’s other features.

    #Cardhop’s free#

    Month-by-month options are available, but I can’t see any reason to use those other than to extend the 14-day free trial. A family plan for up to five users costs $5.42 per month paid annually ($64.99). Happily, the price remains the same despite the addition of Cardhop to the mix: $3.33 per month paid annually ($39.96). However, rather than create yet another subscription, Flexibits has bundled Cardhop with Fantastical-for all of Apple’s operating systems-in a single Flexibits Premium subscription.

    #Cardhop’s for free#

    Access to the new Cardhop 2.0 features requires a subscription, just as last year’s upgrade to Fantastical 3.0 provided basic calendaring for free but required a subscription for the new and advanced features. While Cardhop 2.0 has some new features, most notable is the fact that Flexibits has moved to a freemium model that provides Cardhop 1.0’s basic features for free. Plus, I often rely on past content to inform what I’m saying. In both cases, I think of the medium first-email, text message, phone-and then pull up the contact in the appropriate app. Unfortunately, much as I like Cardhop for standard contact lookups and editing on the Mac, I never use it to initiate communications with contacts, nor do I use it at all on the iPhone. Flexibits remains steadfast in its belief in Cardhop’s contact-first approach-find a contact and then choose how you want to communicate with them. The basics remain the same in Cardhop 2.0-notably, it still lives in the menu bar on the Mac.

    cardhop’s

    I’ve written about Cardhop for both macOS and iOS (see “ Cardhop Puts Contacts Front and Center,” 18 October 2017, and “ Cardhop Rethinks How You Use Contacts in iOS,” 4 April 2019). The company has now released Cardhop 2.0 for the Mac, iPhone, and iPad. Apple now gives us Calendar and Contacts, and those who want more power, flexibility, and better interfaces can instead choose BusyMac’s Bus圜al and Bus圜ontacts or-my current favorites- Fantastical and Cardhop from Flexibits. That’s why we had combined packages like Now Up-to-Date & Contact, Claris Organizer, and Palm Desktop in the past. Many events involve people, and if you’re going to have a phone call with someone or meet at their office, it’s handy to have their contact information associated with the event.

    #Cardhop’s plus#

    #1580: iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro, Apple Watch Series 7, redesigned iPad mini, and upgraded iPad, plus iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and tvOS 15Ĭardhop 2.0 Bundled with Fantastical in Flexibits PremiumĬalendars and contacts go together like macaroni and cheese.smart displays, iOS 12.5.5 and Catalina security update, iPhone 13 problem with Apple Watch unlocking #1581: New Safari 15 features, Center Stage vs.

    cardhop’s

  • #1582: iOS 15.0.1 and iPadOS 15.0.1, Apple Watch Series 7 dates, cautionary tale about backups, using Live Text and Safari extensions.
  • #1583: Ten years without Steve Jobs, iOS 15.0.2, Exif and Visual Lookup in Photos, iPadOS 15 multitasking, easier 2FA codes.
  • #1584: New MacBook Pros, new AirPods and HomePod mini colors, Monterey release date, notification grouping tip, Find My story.













  • Cardhop’s