Business Contact App
Streamline your contact management with the leading business contact app. Discover how to track, sync, and integrate for better networking.
seen from China
seen from Trinidad & Tobago
seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Belgium

seen from Philippines

seen from Australia

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Hungary

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from United States
Business Contact App
Streamline your contact management with the leading business contact app. Discover how to track, sync, and integrate for better networking.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Print Labels with Apple’s Contacts App for Your New Year’s Cards
It’s easy to print mailing labels on standard label stock using your Mac’s Contacts app. You can even add a personal touch by including a graphic and using a custom color and font choice.
Here’s what you need to do:
1. In Contacts, choose File > New Group to create an empty group into which you can collect your card recipients. Name the group something like New Year’s Greetings.
2. Click All Contacts to see your full collection of contacts, and then drag your recipients from the center column to the New Year’s Greetings Cards group. Note that you have to click and hold briefly before Contacts lets you start dragging a contact; if you drag too soon, Contacts assumes you want to select more contacts. You can drag contacts one at a time or select several at once and drag the entire selection. This doesn’t move contacts out of All Contacts—you’re just adding them to the Holiday Cards group, which functions much like an iTunes playlist.
3. Once the New Year’s Greetings group is populated with all your recipients, click its name in the sidebar, and then choose File > Print to open the Print dialog. 4. To set up your cards, you need to see details in the Print dialog, so at the bottom of the Print dialog, click the Show Details button (if it’s already called Hide Details, you’re all set). You also need to see the special controls for Contacts, so make sure Contacts is chosen from the pop-up menu underneath the page range fields. Then from the Style pop-up menu, choose Mailing Labels.
5. Beneath the Style pop-up menu, make sure Layout is selected, and then in the Layout view, from the Page pop-up menus, choose the manufacturer of your labels and the number associated with the labels. (Avery 5160 is the most common label type and is readily available at office supply stores and online.)
6. Click Label to switch to the Label view. From the Addresses pop-up menu, choose the type of address you’re using. Home is likely the most appropriate; if you choose All, Contacts will print both Home and Work addresses if available. You can also choose to print company and country here, and if you print country, you can exclude your own country, which makes it easy to include overseas friends and relatives without printing the country for most people.
7. Although the defaults are fine, if you want, you can change the color of the label text, select a small image to print next to each contact, and change the font. 8. It’s time to print, but not on your label stock just yet! Click the Print button to print a draft of your labels on plain paper. You’ll use this draft for two things—checking the addresses for accuracy and verifying that the labels will print properly on the label stock. To check if the labels will print correctly, stack a page from the draft on top of a sheet of blank labels, and then hold them up to a bright light or sunlit window. You should be able to see whether the positioning is right—it should be in most cases. If not, make sure you’ve chosen the right label in the Print dialog, and if all else fails, create a custom label with your own margins and gutters to make it work. 9. Once you’ve fixed addresses for everyone who has moved recently and verified your positioning, you can print for real on your label stock.
Cool beans! Most of the work comes in selecting people, making sure their addresses are correct, then updating those that have changed. Actually printing labels takes only a few minutes. As you stick your labels on envelopes, think of all the other ways you can use this new skill.