Joystiq has your stash of criminally complete GTA IV news!
AOL Tech

Keepm keeps all your contacts in one place

Keepm
Over the years, odds are you've accumulated more contacts than you know what to do with. What's more, those contacts are spread out across an array of applications and services. There's your Gmail, AOL, Yahoo!, and Hotmail contacts. There's the contacts stored in Outlook on your desktop. And then there are your social networking contacts on sites like Orkut and LinkedIn. Keepm lets you import all of your contacts from each of those locations and store them online in one place.

When you need to find an email address or phone number, you can then just login to Keepm and find it, no matter where you had initially stored it. You can also share individual contacts with others by sending an email from the site. And of course, you can export your contacts as V-Cards or CSV files.

While we'd be much happier with Keepm if it were actually integrated with an application that lets you use your contacts like Gmail or Outlook. Give us a tool that lets us combine all of our contacts and make phone calls or send email from that application and you will make us very happy.

Note that Keepm also needs your Gmail, Yahoo! or other email passwords to import your contacts. The site says it won't save your login information, but you do have have to trust the site before using it. But that should go without saying for any web-based contact manager.

[via CyberNet]

Related Headlines

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br> tags.

New Users

Current Users

Download Squad Features


Geeking out on the squadcast. Tune in and then tune out.

View Posts By

  • Windows Only
  • Mac Only
  • Linux Only
Categories
Audio (830)
Beta (325)
Blogging (685)
Browsers (18)
Business (1361)
Design (803)
Developer (925)
E-mail (511)
Finance (127)
Fun (1734)
Games (544)
Internet (4752)
Kids (129)
Office (491)
OS Updates (574)
P2P (175)
Photo (457)
Podcasting (167)
Productivity (1298)
Search (245)
Security (532)
Social Software (1083)
Text (436)
Troubleshooting (51)
Utilities (1898)
Video (1009)
VoIP (138)
web 2.0 (728)
Web services (3310)
Companies
Adobe (182)
AOL (48)
Apache Foundation (1)
Apple (466)
Canonical (35)
Google (1296)
IBM (28)
Microsoft (1304)
Mozilla (455)
Novell (19)
OpenOffice.org (43)
PalmSource (11)
Red Hat (17)
Symantec (14)
Yahoo! (350)
License
Commercial (667)
Shareware (194)
Freeware (1943)
Open Source (895)
Misc
Podcasts (13)
Features (380)
Hardware (167)
News (1107)
Holiday Gift Guide (15)
Platforms
Windows (3571)
Windows Mobile (421)
BlackBerry (44)
Macintosh (2047)
iPhone (82)
Linux (1569)
Unix (78)
Palm (176)
Symbian (121)
Columns
Ask DLS (10)
Analysis (24)
Browser Tips (293)
DLS Podcast (5)
Googleholic (195)
How-Tos (97)
DLS Interviews (19)
Design Tips (14)
Mobile Minute (125)
Mods (68)
Time-Wasters (374)
Weekend Review (38)
Imaging Tips (32)

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Sponsored Links

Advertise with Download Squad

Most Commented On (60 days)

Recent Comments

Urlesque Headlines

BloggingStocks Tech Coverage

More from AOL Money and Finance

More Tech Coverage

Weblogs, Inc. Network

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: