LDAPeopleVersion: 2.2
Developer: Luzian Scherrer
Age rating: 4+
Rating Description
4+ Applications in this category contain no objectionable material.
9+ Applications in this category may contain mild or infrequent occurrences of cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and infrequent or mild mature, suggestive, or horror-themed content which may not be suitable for children under the age of 9.
12+ Applications in this category may also contain infrequent mild language, frequent or intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and mild or infrequent mature or suggestive themes, and simulated gambling which may not be suitable for children under the age of 12.
17+ Applications in this category may also contain frequent and intense offensive language; frequent and intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence; and frequent and intense mature, horror, and suggestive themes; plus sexual content, nudity, alcohol, tobacco, and drugs which may not be suitable for children under the age of 17.
Compatibility: Compatible with iPhone and iPod touch
Requires iPhone OS 2.0 or later
Filed Under: Productivity
Fully compatible with iPhone OS 3.0!
LDAPeople is a versatile LDAP addressbook client. Use it to:
● search LDAP based directories for addressbook records
● quickly send an e-mail, make a phone call or browse the website of found addressbook records
● look up the address of found records in the map application
● copy addressbook records from the directory into your local contacts database
LDAPeople features:
● support for an unlimited number of LDAP directory configurations
● configuration options for directory server specific attributes
● freely customizable LDAP filters
● complete attribute mapper for mapping directory server attributes to local contacts attributes
● support for SSL (LDAPS)
● support for LDAPv2 and LDAPv3
● anonymous bind or simple authentication
● configuration import and export
● copy LDAP contacts to your local addressbook
LDAPeople will enable you to:
● quickly search for people in the directory of your school / university
● look up the contact information of fellow coworkers in the directory of the company you work for
Get to your LDAP directory from an iPhone
by John C. Welch, Macworld.com
Like a lot of IT people in a mostly-Mac company, my organization has a directory service set up to help manage our users and computers. In our case, it’s Apple’s Open Directory, which is based on LDAP, or the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol.
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