Fine-tune and prune your phone’s contacts list

http://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/09/technology/personaltech/contacts-apps-apple-google.html?

Fine-Tune and Prune Your Phone’s Contacts List

Filling in more of the blanks and dumping duplicates opens up new ways to manage the people in your life.

The default contacts apps from both Apple’s iOS software and Google’s Android system offer plenty of shortcuts and customization tools to keep your phone’s address book organized and more useful.
The default contacts apps from both Apple’s iOS software and Google’s Android system offer plenty of shortcuts and customization tools to keep your phone’s address book organized and more useful.Credit…Apple; Google; Apple; Google
The default contacts apps from both Apple’s iOS software and Google’s Android system offer plenty of shortcuts and customization tools to keep your phone’s address book organized and more useful.

By J. D. Biersdorfer

Jude Biersdorfer has helped readers navigate their digital products since 1998.

Feb. 9, 2022

Your phone’s contacts app can be easy to treat as a simple address book. But the default versions usually included in Apple’s iOS 15 and Google’s Android 12 can be much more useful — providing specific ringtones, travel directions, birthday reminders and more — if you take the time to flesh out the entries for your favorite people. Here’s a quick guide.

Apple’s iOS Contacts app and Google’s free Contacts for Android include a card for your own details. It may seem odd, but the information you provide is helpful when working with your phone’s assistant app or using auto-fill fields in the Safari and Chrome browsers. For example, specifying family relationships on your personal contact card helps Siri or the Google Assistant when you say, “Call Mom,” although you’ll probably need to verbally confirm the relationship with the assistant.

Apple, far left, and Google both provide a personal card for your information, which you can use later for sharing with others, auto-filling forms and commanding your virtual assistant.
Apple, far left, and Google both provide a personal card for your information, which you can use later for sharing with others, auto-filling forms and commanding your virtual assistant.Credit…Apple; Google
Apple, far left, and Google both provide a personal card for your information, which you can use later for sharing with others, auto-filling forms and commanding your virtual assistant.

To find your card on the iPhone, open the Contacts app. If you don’t see it at the top of the list, tap the + icon to set it up. Select your card and tap Edit. Tap “add related name” and choose relationship labels for family members in your contacts. In the Medical ID area, you can designate an emergency contact visible on your phone’s lock screen if you are incapacitated.

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The contacts app included with iOS, far left, and Android both offer ways for you to introduce your friends and family to your phone’s virtual assistant.
The contacts app included with iOS, far left, and Android both offer ways for you to introduce your friends and family to your phone’s virtual assistant.Credit…Apple; Google
The contacts app included with iOS, far left, and Android both offer ways for you to introduce your friends and family to your phone’s virtual assistant.

In Google’s Contacts, tap your Google Account profile icon in the top-right corner, select Contacts App Settings, choose Your Info and tap Edit Contact to fill in your details. On many Google Pixel models, you can designate emergency contacts in Google’s free Personal Safety app or on the lock screens of other Android phones.

To create a contact on an iPhone or an Android phone, open the contacts app, tap the + button and fill in the fields. (If you sync your contacts with your computer or an online service like iCloud or Google, the new cards appear there, too.)

In both Apple’s iOS, far left, and Google’s contacts apps, adding an entry on the phone requires filling in the blanks.
In both Apple’s iOS, far left, and Google’s contacts apps, adding an entry on the phone requires filling in the blanks.Credit…Apple; Google
In both Apple’s iOS, far left, and Google’s contacts apps, adding an entry on the phone requires filling in the blanks.

A contact can be more than just a digital Rolodex card. You can add phonetic name-pronunciation guides, social-media handles, images, short notes (like “vegetarian” or “Bengals fan”) and birthdays; those dates are then added to your iPhone’s optional birthdays calendar or Google’s Calendar app for Android.

To update a contact, select it and tap the Edit button in the top-right corner of the iPhone screen or the Edit Contact button in the lower-right corner on an Android phone. In the editing mode, add new details, like addresses for future travel directions. To add a profile picture, tap the photo icon and choose an image on your phone.

On the iPhone’s contact-editing screen, you can assign a specific ringtone and text tone for that person. If you want to delete the contact, scroll to the bottom of the screen and tap Delete Contact.

In the iOS, far left, and Android contacts apps, you can assign a specific ringtone to a person so you can tell who’s calling without having to look at the phone’s screen.
In the iOS, far left, and Android contacts apps, you can assign a specific ringtone to a person so you can tell who’s calling without having to look at the phone’s screen.Credit…Apple; Google
In the iOS, far left, and Android contacts apps, you can assign a specific ringtone to a person so you can tell who’s calling without having to look at the phone’s screen.

In Google’s Contacts on an Android phone, tap the three-dot More menu in the top-right corner of an open card to get to the options for assigning a specific ringtone, sharing or deleting the contact, and more. (You can delete multiple entries at once from the main list in the More menu: Choose Select, tap the unwanted contacts and tap the trash icon.)

Finding multiple entries for the same person? In iOS 15, you can link the contacts to hide the duplicates. Just open one of the entries and tap Edit. Scroll to and tap Link Contacts, select the other version and tap Link to unify the cards. (If you’re syncing your iPhone’s contacts with the Contacts app on a Mac, you can also groupdelete and merge entries from your computer.)

Apple's contacts app for iOS, far left, allows you to link multiple contact cards for the same person, while Google's contacts software includes a Merge & Fix tool.
Apple’s contacts app for iOS, far left, allows you to link multiple contact cards for the same person, while Google’s contacts software includes a Merge & Fix tool.Credit…Apple; Google
Apple's contacts app for iOS, far left, allows you to link multiple contact cards for the same person, while Google's contacts software includes a Merge & Fix tool.

Google’s Contacts includes a Merge & Fix command to clean up duplicates. Tap the Menu icon in the upper-left corner, choose Merge & Fix and follow along; the tool is also available for Google Contacts on the web, as is the ability to label contacts.) If you prefer to merge contacts manually, tap the More menu in the upper-right corner and choose Select to pick the entries from the list. Tap the More menu again and choose Merge.

Now that your contacts have been updated, put them to work. For instance, you can add an iOS widget to your iPhone’s home screen for quick access to your favorite folks. On many Android phones, you can save a contact shortcut to your home screen from Google’s Contacts menu.

Saving your most frequently used contacts to an iOS widget, far left, or an Android home screen saves time.
Saving your most frequently used contacts to an iOS widget, far left, or an Android home screen saves time.Credit…Apple; Google
Saving your most frequently used contacts to an iOS widget, far left, or an Android home screen saves time.

A card’s share option makes it easy to text or email contact details to others. Tell your phone’s assistant to open a specific contact so you can get to the one-tap shortcuts for making video calls, sending electronic cash and more. Or save time and just tell your assistant to start the call or message for you.

J.D. Biersdorfer has been answering technology questions — in print, on the web, in audio and in video — since 1998. She also writes the Sunday Book Review’s “Applied Reading” column on ebooks and literary apps, among other things. @jdbiersdorfer

A version of this article appears in print on Feb. 10, 2022, Section B, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: How to Fine-Tune Your Phone’s Contacts List. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe


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