and even “like” items, just as you might if you accessed Facebook or Twitter manually.
If you have duplicate contacts—two contact cards with the same information—you can also link them together. View one of the duplicates, display the app bar, and choose Link.
To edit a contact’s information, right-click anywhere while viewing a contact card and then choose Edit from the app bar. A new view called Edit contact info will appear, as shown in Figure 8-9.
Figure 8-9: You can easily edit a contact’s information.

Edit the information as needed and then click Save in the app bar to save the changes.
You can also add a new contact, of course. To do so, display the app bar while in the People app’s main view and click the New button. (It resembles a “+” sign.)
This interface is fairly obvious and similar to the Edit screen mentioned previously, but the one area to call out is the Account drop-down list: This interface determines which account will store the new contact. By default, People will use your Microsoft account for all new contacts, but you can change that on the fly if you prefer to associate it with another account.
The Windows 8 People app, like previous Microsoft contacts management solutions such as Windows Live Messenger and the Windows Phone People hub, supports the notion of favorite contacts. Favorite contacts, or Favorites, are provided a special and prominent location in the main view of the People app, so you can access them more easily.
To add a contact to favorites, open that person’s contact view, display the app bar, and then click Favorite. When you return to the main view of the app, that contact will have been added to the favorites area on the left.
To remove a contact from favorites, simply visit the person’s contact card, display the app bar, and toggle the Favorites button again. Bam, they’re off the island.
If you find yourself interacting with a certain contact frequently, you can pin that person’s contact tile to your Start screen for quick access. To do so, open that person’s contact view, display the app bar, and then click Pin to Start. You’ll be shown a preview of the tile, as shown in Figure 8-10, and be provided with a chance to edit the tile name.
Figure 8-10: Pinning a contact to the Start screen

To view the new tile, return to the Start screen and navigate to the end (right side). As you can see in Figure 8-11, your contact now appears in live tile form on your Start screen.
And it is indeed live, and not just a static picture. By default, the contact’s live tile will animate and will display recent activities culled from their What’s new feed. You can, of course, disable that effect: Simply right-click the tile and choose Turn off live tile from the app bar that appears. (You can also unpin the tile from this interface.) Other possible configuration options include moving the tile to a new location, perhaps in a new or existing tile group.
Figure 8-11: A frequently-accessed contact appearing as a live tile on the Start screen

Like many other Metro-style apps, the People app supports the system-wide Search contract, so you can use this capability to find a particular contact whether you’re currently in the app or not.
To search from within People, type Winkey + Q. This displays the standard Search pane, with the People app selected. Now, just type part of the name of a contact you’d like to find. When you press Enter, the search results appear within the People app, as shown in Figure 8-12.
What’s amazing about these new system-wide Metro features, of course, is that you don’t even have to be using People to search for contacts. In fact, you can do so from anywhere in Windows 8: the Start screen, another Metro-style app, or even from the desktop.
Figure 8-12: Search from within People.

To see this in action, return to the Windows desktop (Winkey + D) and tap Winkey + Q. The Search pane appears as expected, so start typing part of the name of a contact you’d like to find. But this time, instead of just typing Enter, select People from the list of apps.
Seeing What’s New with Your Friends, Family, Co-Workers, and Other Contacts
In addition to functioning as a super-powered address book, the People app also provides a What’s new feed that aggregates content from Facebook, Twitter, and other accounts. It’s a one-stop shop where you can find out what’s going on with your friends, family, and other contacts, no matter where they’re posting information. The What’s new view is shown in Figure 8-13.
What’s new provides a decidedly Metro-y take on this sort of information, with each post segregated into a tile-like space. Scrolling occurs horizontally—that is, left to right—and not vertically, as with document-based applications. And while the app will refresh this view periodically, you can refresh it yourself by enabling the app bar and clicking the Refresh button.
One of the neatest things you can do, of course, is interact with your contacts by leaving comments and other feedback to their posts. What you can do varies from account type to account type. For example, you can also choose to “like” a Facebook post, mark a Twitter “tweet” as a favorite, or “retweet” something you see on Twitter. To do any of this, find a post you like and click it. It will display full screen, as in Figure 8-14, providing a more complete view that includes others’ comments as well as whatever actions are available.
Figure 8-13: The What’s new view provides a way to easily keep up with your friends and other contacts’ activities.

Figure 8-14: A contact’s post shown in all its full-screen glory

Then, tap the Add a comment box on the bottom to add a comment. You can optionally click a Like, Favorite, or Retweet button if available, again depending on the account to which the post was made.
Viewing Your Digital Persona… And Creating Your Own Posts
In addition to your contacts and their aggregated activities view, People provides a handy front end for managing your own digital persona, or the online account or accounts that establish you as an entity that can perform tasks and establish relationships with others. Called Me and shown in Figure 8-15, this interface is to you as the What’s new view is to others, a look at what’s going on… with you.
Figure 8-15: The Me view is all about you.