$0.99
View on iTunes
Category: Productivity
Released: 20 Aug 2014
Published: 15 Apr 2020
Latest version: 1.2.3
Size: 2.64 MB
Seller: Nikolay Entin
© Nikolay Entin
LANGUAGES:
English, German, Russian
COMPATIBILITY:
13.0 or later
Released: 20 Aug 2014
Published: 15 Apr 2020
Latest version: 1.2.3
Size: 2.64 MB
Seller: Nikolay Entin
© Nikolay Entin
LANGUAGES:
English, German, Russian
COMPATIBILITY:
13.0 or later
Link'em
The App provides functionality to keep Address Book in organized form. It’s especially useful for people, which have a lot of contacts. When Address Book gets bigger it’s hard to remember all the people, who they are, what business or private relationships exist between me and them.
It offers possibility to visualize relationship between contacts, easy navigation between stored sets, keeping organized Address Book in case of redundant records (e.g. several contacts, which are specified by only first name "Alexander")
The App supports easy identification of role-based relationships (e.g. employer -> employee)
Typical usecases:
- I’ve got a recommendation for a good dentist from my classmate - they meet regularly. So I’ve entered contact data of the dentist in my address book. Year later there is a reason to contact the doctor, but it will be better if I refer to our common friend, it may eventually help me to get the appointment faster. But after a year I may already forget who gave me this contact.
Solution: if I’d have possibility to see relationships between the contacts, I can easily find out that the doctor is friend of the classmate.
- On weekend we suppose to visit cousin of my wife. The cousin lives in a big family with 3 children and parents of her husband. It’s hard to remember all the names, though writing them in notes of cousin’s entry in my address book is not good solution either - eventually I’d need to store phone numbers of the parents and children. Creation of separate records in address book is troublesome either - I even don’t know the family name of parents, and creation of records like “Mike” or “Jenny” may produce ambiguity.
Solution: if I’ll be able to connect people in relationships, there will be no ambiguity even if there are many records with the same names (e.g. only first names recorded). I also will be able to record and later remember who from this family is child, brother, parent, etc.
- I’m a businessman and regularly visit customers. On each visit I collect bunch of business cards. Even I can recognize titles of the people from the business cards, sometimes it’s hard to remember subordination of the people. I.e. who is chief, who is subordinate.
Solution: entering data to my address book and specifying relationships between colleagues allows me to recognize sort of Org-chart in the future.
If you have any questions, problem reports, new ideas or want to participate in beta-testing of new versions, don't hesitate to contact me at linkem.support@arcor.de or leave comment on this site: https://www.facebook.com/linkem.ios/. You're welcome to use English, Deutsch или Русский.
It offers possibility to visualize relationship between contacts, easy navigation between stored sets, keeping organized Address Book in case of redundant records (e.g. several contacts, which are specified by only first name "Alexander")
The App supports easy identification of role-based relationships (e.g. employer -> employee)
Typical usecases:
- I’ve got a recommendation for a good dentist from my classmate - they meet regularly. So I’ve entered contact data of the dentist in my address book. Year later there is a reason to contact the doctor, but it will be better if I refer to our common friend, it may eventually help me to get the appointment faster. But after a year I may already forget who gave me this contact.
Solution: if I’d have possibility to see relationships between the contacts, I can easily find out that the doctor is friend of the classmate.
- On weekend we suppose to visit cousin of my wife. The cousin lives in a big family with 3 children and parents of her husband. It’s hard to remember all the names, though writing them in notes of cousin’s entry in my address book is not good solution either - eventually I’d need to store phone numbers of the parents and children. Creation of separate records in address book is troublesome either - I even don’t know the family name of parents, and creation of records like “Mike” or “Jenny” may produce ambiguity.
Solution: if I’ll be able to connect people in relationships, there will be no ambiguity even if there are many records with the same names (e.g. only first names recorded). I also will be able to record and later remember who from this family is child, brother, parent, etc.
- I’m a businessman and regularly visit customers. On each visit I collect bunch of business cards. Even I can recognize titles of the people from the business cards, sometimes it’s hard to remember subordination of the people. I.e. who is chief, who is subordinate.
Solution: entering data to my address book and specifying relationships between colleagues allows me to recognize sort of Org-chart in the future.
If you have any questions, problem reports, new ideas or want to participate in beta-testing of new versions, don't hesitate to contact me at linkem.support@arcor.de or leave comment on this site: https://www.facebook.com/linkem.ios/. You're welcome to use English, Deutsch или Русский.
What's new in Version 1.2.3
Added possibility to show in the side panel only contacts, which are [not-]presented on the current diagram
Changed access to App User Guide.
Unfortunately, because of changed Apple's privacy policies, access to information about Contact's Notes availability is removed from the App.
Fixed some issues related to change of light/dark mode
Fixed some localisation issues
Changed access to App User Guide.
Unfortunately, because of changed Apple's privacy policies, access to information about Contact's Notes availability is removed from the App.
Fixed some issues related to change of light/dark mode
Fixed some localisation issues
Download
Version | Uploader | Link |
---|---|---|
1.2.3 For iOS 13 | telefonbuch | Link 1 |
1.2.3 For iOS 13 | telefonbuch | Link 2 |
1.2.2 | telefonbuch | Link 3 |
1.2.2 | telefonbuch | Link 4 |
1.2.2 | telefonbuch | Link 5 |
1.2.1 | telefonbuch | Link 6 |
1.2.1 | telefonbuch | Link 7 |
1.2.1 | telefonbuch | Link 8 |
1.2.0 | telefonbuch | Link 9 |
1.2.0 | telefonbuch | Link 10 |
1.2.0 | telefonbuch | Link 11 |
1.1.14 | telefonbuch | Link 12 |
1.1.14 | telefonbuch | Link 13 |
1.1.14 | telefonbuch | Link 14 |
1.1.13 | telefonbuch | Link 15 |
1.1.13 | telefonbuch | Link 16 |
1.1.13 | telefonbuch | Link 17 |
1.1.12 | telefonbuch | Link 18 |
1.1.12 | telefonbuch | Link 19 |
1.1.12 | telefonbuch | Link 20 |
1.1.11 | telefonbuch | Link 21 |
1.1.11 | telefonbuch | Link 22 |
1.1.11 | telefonbuch | Link 23 |
1.1.10 | telefonbuch | Link 24 |
1.1.10 | telefonbuch | Link 25 |
1.1.10 | telefonbuch | Link 26 |
1.1.9 | telefonbuch | Link 27 |
1.1.9 | telefonbuch | Link 28 |
1.1.9 | telefonbuch | Link 29 |
1.1.7 | telefonbuch | Link 30 |
1.1.7 | telefonbuch | Link 31 |
1.1.7 | telefonbuch | Link 32 |
1.1.4 | telefonbuch | Link 33 |
1.1.4 | telefonbuch | Link 34 |
1.1.4 | telefonbuch | Link 35 |
1.1.0 | telefonbuch | Link 36 |
1.1.0 | telefonbuch | Link 37 |
1.1.0 | telefonbuch | Link 38 |
1.0.9 | telefonbuch | Link 39 |
1.0.9 | telefonbuch | Link 40 |
1.0.8 | telefonbuch | Link 41 |
1.0.8 | telefonbuch | Link 42 |
1.0.8 | telefonbuch | Link 43 |