Hi Dwayne, I don't know if this does everything you need, but I use Handy Address=20 Book. I chose it above all, for the Google sync feature, as they=20 describe it on their website: http://beiley.com/habook/features.html Synchronize contacts Contacts can be synchronized between your Google account, your mobile=20 phone, and Handy Address Book. Changes made in any of these address=20 books will automatically be updated on all. Makes it easy to keep your=20 contact information updated on all platforms. It is $40; the documentation is online and they have an evaluation=20 version but I don't know if the Google Sync option is included in it. Friendly regards, Patrick Murphy On 09/07/2013 5:13 PM, Dwayne Reid wrote: > Good day to all. > > This is probably a record for me - two non-PIC related requests in a > single afternoon. Grin> ! > > Maybe I'm going through a mid-life crisis or something, but I'm > making some changes in the way I currently do things. This time, its > contact management. > > Up until now, I've been using an ancient phone-book program from Word > Perfect called "Notebook". This is a really simple database from the > '80s in which the data entry fields can be sized and moved about on > the data entry screen along with a companion print sheet screen where > those data fields can be mapped to columns on a printed piece of > paper. I like it because I can get up to 230 or so names, phone > numbers and addresses onto a single sheet of paper. Its worked well > for me for the past 30 plus years. > > I also maintain a phone list in my cell phone. This is completely > separate from my paper phone list, mostly because my older cell > phones didn't have the ability to store anything more than name and > number. But now I have a Galaxy S4, which does have the capacity to > hold much more information than anything that I've had previously. > > Along with my new S4, I'm now starting to embrace a new software > package / platform called Evernote. I chose Evernote over > Microsoft's OneNote mostly because just about everyone who has used > both packages prefers Evernote - and Evernote runs natively on my S4. > > So now I have a conundrum. I have an ancient paper-based phone book > that works well but that I'd love to retire. I have an excellent > contact manager in my Galaxy S4's phone book. And I have a shiny, > new application called Evernote that runs on both my Windows PCs and my S= 4. > > My problem is that my S4's phone book isn't available on my PC. I > could move everything over to Evernote, but my phone doesn't use > Evernote as a phone book. > > I *really* don't want to maintain more than one phone book. I've > been doing that for years with my paper-based version and my old cell > phones and I just don't want to do that anymore. > > So now I'm looking for a way to have it all: a single place where I > can maintain contact information (name, phone number, address, > perhaps email address(es) that is accessible from my PC, my phone, > and a printed piece of paper. > > Any suggestions? > > Many thanks! > > dwayne > > --=20 http://www.piclist.com/techref/piclist PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .