People (Windows)

People
A component of Microsoft Windows
Details
Included with Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10, Windows 10 Mobile, Windows Holographic
Replaces Windows Contacts

People is a contact manager that is included in Windows 8 and 10. It allows a user to organize and link contacts from different email accounts. People has a unique graphical interface, unlike Windows Contacts' File Explorer-based interface, based on the Metro design language that had already been used for Outlook.com and the integrated online People service. In addition to being an address book, it provides a list of recent mail conversations with a selected contact. It used to also be a social media hub, in which users could integrate their social networking accounts (e.g. Twitter), but API changes in both Windows and social media services caused this functionality to break. [1][2]

People works with other Metro-style apps, but it has its own front-end interface and can be opened by end users. Unlike Windows Contacts, it does not currently allow users to import or export .pst files, vCard files, Windows Address Book files, or other files directly. Instead, it gathers contact information from email accounts the user has set up on other services in Windows, such as Mail and Calendar, Skype Preview,[3] or the Xbox app. Changes, additions, and deletions made in the People app will be exported to the corresponding email accounts. Users can select which accounts should display contact info in People.

The People app supports Outlook.com People, Google Contacts, iCloud contacts, Yahoo! contacts, and other contact lists that can be imported by logging into an email account.[4]

Features

Cloud and app integration

Since newer Windows apps do not tend to support Windows Contacts or use a user's designated Contacts folder, the People app is helpful. It syncs with contact lists in the corresponding email accounts and can be used as a way to organize contacts with different profiles on Mail and Calendar, Skype, Xbox, and other apps. People has links at the bottom of its hamburger menu for launching Mail and Calendar, and users can click on email addresses in Mail to save it to any account in People. People also adjusts to users' system-wide light or dark settings.

Real-time updates

People allows real-time updates to contact's information. For instance if the user's contacts just moved and has a new home address, when that contact enters their new information in their Gmail or iCloud account information, the user's contact information would be updated automatically in real time for other users connected to that account. The same thing happens when the user changes his or her details — the user's friends and colleagues immediately receive the new information.

Single contact list

When a user connects another social networking service such as Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn to their Microsoft Account, Outlook.com automatically imports and de-duplicates contacts on these connected social networks into the contact list. If duplicate contacts still exist, users can manually link contacts in the People app; however, this change only works on the individual device the links are made on. If a user wants to link the same contact from two different email accounts, he or she will need to manually link the contact on each device.[5]

Development

The first version of People was a text-heavy app added to Windows 8 as one of many apps written to run full-screen or snapped as part of Microsoft's Metro design language philosophy. It is one of three apps on Windows that originate from Microsoft Outlook, from which the Mail and Calendar apps also originate. Structurally, the three apps were one, but each had its own user interface. Like many Microsoft apps introduced for Windows 8, many of the features and controls were hidden in the Charms Bar or a menu at the bottom of the screen that was triggered by right clicking and it relies on horizontal scrolling through sets of lists. When a user with a Microsoft account added an email account on one computer with Windows 8 People, the account would be automatically added to all other Windows 8 computers the user is logged into.

During the initial development of Windows 10, Microsoft deprecated the functionality of the Windows 8 Mail, Calendar, and People apps.[6] It rebuilt the apps with new Windows 10 APIs later in development. While Mail and Calendar were rebuilt as one underlying app, the new People is now a separate app that still interacts with Mail and Calendar.[7]

An early concept image for Windows 10's People app show the hamburger menu and history feature, neither of which were present in the initial release of Windows 10. It also shows three features that have not been released: a what's new panel, a link to a messaging app, and a section for managing group contacts. It is unknown if these features are still planned.[8]

Although People replicates much of the functionality of Windows Contacts, it is not a true replacement, as Contacts still exists and functions properly in the most recent release of Windows 10. Some apps, including Mail and Calendar, formerly used Windows Contacts to manage contacts but switched to using People to manage contacts.

See also

Reception

People has received a mostly positive reception and a four-star rating on the Windows Store, but some users have complained about the app's lack of features present in the mockup and errors connecting People to social media and messaging apps.[9][10]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.