If you’ve run into something, want to suggest an idea, or just have a question about how the app works, this is the right place.
Email hello@therealadammork.com. We read everything. We typically reply within a couple of business days. There is no chat widget, no ticketing system, no support portal — just a person on the other end.
When you write in, it helps to include:
On your phone. Casual Contacts has no servers, no accounts, no sync. The cards exist in a local database on your device and nowhere else. iCloud backup of your phone includes them; nothing else does.
Your records are included in any iCloud or Finder/iTunes backup of your iPhone. If you restore a backup to a new device, your records come with it. There is no separate export or sync feature in v1.0.
Tap the card from the list, then tap any field. The visual regenerates as you type.
Open the card and tap the delete button at the bottom of the detail screen. Deletes are permanent — there is no trash or undo.
Each permission is optional and only used for the feature it powers:
You can grant or revoke any of these at any time in iOS Settings → Casual Contacts.
Not yet. The card-rendering system relies on SwiftUI rendering quirks we haven’t ported. We’ll announce here if that changes.
Yes. The full source lives at github.com/Stacks-du-Beurre/casual-contacts — Swift, SwiftUI, the card-generation algorithms, all of it. Read it, fork it, file an issue, send a PR.
Bug reports go to the same email above, or as a GitHub issue at github.com/Stacks-du-Beurre/casual-contacts/issues.
If the app crashes, iOS will offer to share a diagnostic with the developer the next time you open it. Tapping “Share” helps us a lot — the report contains a stack trace and no personal data.
Email or open an issue. We can’t promise everything will get built, but we read it all and the roadmap is shaped by what people ask for.
For a full description of what the app does and doesn’t store, see the Privacy Policy.