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Address book

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: address book
(′ad·rəs ′bu̇k)

(computer science) A feature in an e-mail program for storing e-mail addresses.


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(1) A database of e-mail addresses that is maintained in an e-mail program. See Web white pages.

(2) A database of names, addresses and phone numbers that is maintained in a personal information manager (PIM), contact manager or other application that deals with people's addresses. See PIM.

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Business Dictionary: Address Book
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A feature of some E-Mail applications, and other application software, that stores names, E-Mail Addresses, and other contact information in an accessible format.

Wikipedia: Address book
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An address book or a name and address book (NAB) is a book or a database used for storing entries called contacts. Each contact entry usually consists of a few standard fields (for example: first name, last name, company name, address, telephone number, e-mail address, fax number, mobile phone number). Most such systems store the details in alphabetical order of people's names, although in paper-based address books entries can easily end up out of order as the owner inserts details of more individuals or as people move. Many address books use small ring binders that allow adding, removing and shuffling of pages to make room.

Contents

Little black book

A related term that has entered the popular lexicon is little black book (or simply black book). Such books are used as dating guides, listing people who the owner has dated in the past or hopes to in the future. More explicit variations are guides for sexual encounters. It is unclear how prevalent this is in practice or when it originated, though such books have been mentioned in many pieces of popular culture. For example, the 1953 film version of Kiss Me, Kate features a musical scene in which Howard Keel's character laments the loss of the social life he enjoyed before marriage, naming numerous female romantic encounters whilst perusing a miniature black book. More recently, the mid-2000s Guinness Brewmasters advertising campaign features the "little black book" as an invention of one of the brewmasters.

Little black books are also known as "Fig Lists." This is a play on the word of a date being the outing between two interested parties. A "fig" is a date that is very shallow in nature and the male involved in the event usually has no interest in the female beyond the current "fig."

Software address book

Address books can also appear as software designed for this purpose, such as the "Address Book" application included with Apple Computer's Mac OS X. Simple address books have been incorporated into e-mail software for many years, though more advanced versions have emerged in the 1990s and beyond; and also in mobile phones.

A personal information manager (PIM) integrates an address book, calendar, task list, and sometimes other features.

Entries can be imported and exported from the software in order to transfer them between programs or computers. The common file formats for these operations are:

Individual entries are frequently transferred as vCards (*.vcf), which are roughly comparable to physical business cards. And some software applications like Lotus Notes and Open Contacts can handle a vCard file containing multiple vCard records.

Online address book

An online address book typically enables users to create their own web page (or profile page) which is then indexed by search engines like Google and Yahoo. This in turn enables users to be found by other people via a search of their name and then contacted via their web page containing their personal information. Ability to find people registered with online address books via search engine searches usually varies according to the commonness of the name and the amount of results for the name. Typically users of such systems can synchronize their contact details with other users that they know to ensure that their contact information is kept up to date. Examples of online address books include Telnic, Unyk and WikiWorldBook.

Network Address Book

Currently, most people have many different address books: their email accounts, their mobile phone, and the "friends lists" on their social networks. A Network Address Book allows them to organize and manage all of their address books through a single interface and share their contacts across their different address books and social networks.

See also

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Business Dictionary. Dictionary of Business Terms. Copyright © 2000 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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