My current setup is - Radicale as CardDAV and CalDAV server (on a 13.2 box) - Evolution + the KDE tools (KAddressBook) + Thunderbird with the Cardbook extension as Linux clients - CardDav Sync installed on the Android devices The connection from the Android devices to my CardDAV server is done using the native Android VPN (or OpenVPN) when I'm running around, otherwise over wifi. By defining a WebDAV address book in Evolution I could easily correct all the problems (dups, etc) I had after the migration from the old phone to my new Samsung. And by using radicale I have also the Android calendar synchronized with the Linux clients (Evolution+KDE tools+Thunderbird++), so I could also easily correct some calendar migration problems. This setup works well, I have just a small issue with radicale crashing sometimes, however I never noticed any data loss. Btw I have this setup as I will NEVER put personal data on a server, probably located in a foreign country, managed by unknown individuals. This was always my policy, long before the input from Snowden that told me that my approach is probably not to bad.... Marco Il 03. 04. 16 22:13, Carlos E. R. ha scritto:
On 03/04/2016 21:08, Carlos E. R. wrote:
I have dozens with combined entries that display in airdrop as separate entries. None can be stored on the SIM.
All these entries are a fault of the motorola migration app used to migrate the phone book from my previous phone (a Samsung). A friend has told me that she has the same problem, having also done a phone migration.
I need a phone book application that knows all about these nuisances and allows me to completely edit the entries till there are no duplicates and all are correct.
Well, I managed to clear up the dups. Something like 30 entries removed by hand using airdroid. I may need a second round...
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