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Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Monday February 4, 2013 12:47:20 PM
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Well, that opens a whole can of worms. What should contacts software be able to do?

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Monday February 4, 2013 12:46:39 PM
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jabailo - I'm fairly luddite when it comes to payment technology. It's not that I'm against NFC and payment by apps, it's just that I haven't gotten around to figuring out how to use them. 

I'm well on my way to being the 2030s equivalent of the old person who holds up the whole line at the grocery store because they insist on writing a check. 

Alan Reiter
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 10:22:17 PM
no ratings

Hi jabailo (John),

I've experienced the same reactions when I've used Google Wallet. Assuming the POS terminal works, the cashiers and other customers sometimes stare in amazement and ask what I did.

I'm not a big coffee drinker and I'm not a fan of Starbucks roasts, but I'm surprised that Starbucks can't look up a loyalty card based on one's phone number. That really is primitive.

By the way, for loyalty cards, credit cards and other numbers, I store them in BlackBerry's Password Keeper app which uses AES encryption, so I have the information if I haven't taken the appropriate card.

Alan Reiter
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 10:15:35 PM
no ratings

Hi Mitch Wagner,

I like Evernote, but I really do look towards the future and think today's contacts software is quite primitive compared to what it should be able to accomplish. Of course, you could say that about many things, including me!

jabailo
IQ Crew
Friday February 1, 2013 8:17:40 PM
no ratings

It's funny who is using what these days.

For example, I was just at Starbucks.  I didn't have my Rewards card (which gives me points everytime I buy there) so I asked the counter person if she could look it up by phone number.  No she said, eventhough she has a state of the art IBM Pos workstation!  I quipped that every local supermarket can do that.

Another one is the Near Field Readers on credit card swipers.  It's like this lost technology they installed in some places and forgot about.  For example, I went into RiteAid and used one, and the cashier was shocked.  "How'd you do that!?" so I explained it to her.  In general, using it produces awe, like using a magic wand.  Many times the NFR is there but broken or disconnected.

 

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 6:05:58 PM
no ratings

Are you thinking of mood rings? :)

BTW, the Evernote Hello app isn't so you can identify people when you meet them again. It's basically an address book app; it's designed to let you get in touch with people later. 

Alan Reiter
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 5:55:06 PM
no ratings

Hi Mitch Wagner,

Good idea.

I seem to remember reading a science fiction novel years ago where people walked around with various colored shapes above their heads that indicated their emotional state. No Internet or social networking profiles, though, so it's not sufficiently data-dense.

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 5:47:30 PM
no ratings

I want life to be like Second Life, where everybody walks around with their name floating above their head. You right-click on their avatar, it calls up their profile. 

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 5:44:54 PM
no ratings

Supposedly if you use a person's name frequently, you're more likely to remember it, jabailo. I'm not sure if that actually works, jabailo. I've never tried it, jabailo. 

The iPhone has an app called "Bump" that lets you exchange contact information by tapping phones together. I've never really used it. 

In some techie circles, business cards are obsolete. You just Google the people you want to contact, or look them up on Twitter. 

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Friday February 1, 2013 5:42:43 PM
no ratings

Yes. Mixing Facebook and business raises larger issues. People let their hair down on Facebook, but people often don't want to do business with hair-let-down people. 

One of my favorite people on social media has a real potty-mouth, and frequently uses crazy profile photos on Twitter. But her LinkedIn profile is very professional, as is her profile photo there, where she's wearing a suit and is made up and ready for business. 

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