Aha, this is good to know. I was questioning myself and why I hadn't seen "open in app" during the instance that inspired me to post this thread. I must have been doing choice "c:" above. I agree, **** you Apple - you've gone from designing for the user 90% and for Apple 10% to designing for Apple/Jony Ive 90% and the user 10%, whether it's spotlight behavior, removing headhone jacks & magsafe ports, rendering iTunes/Music App as useless for anyone who owns their own music, or producing iOS/OS's to be showcases for someone's personal minimalist tastes rather than serve as pinnacle examples of the world's best user-focused UI's.
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Thanks for the reply but you completely missed the point.
I agree that going to a "shortcut" version of a contact for quick access is fine & great. But stopping there and not granting some kind of quick access to the editable Contact there for all users of the iOS is just nonsense, and is highly noticed because very often I wish to use spotlight to get to a Contact for either editing or I want to see something else for that contact that doesn't show up in the Top Hit.
While we're at it, here's another lame-brain "improvement" by Jony Ive's UI. Before when you went to edit a Contact such as by clicking "add to existing contact," you would see the new phone number or email you wish to add as blue font, which stood out from the black font so you knew which was the new number being added. But now that Jony Ive has eliminated the use of intuitive buttons and chose to rely on colored font to mean "this is an actionable link," the new phone # added to an existing contact no longer shows up as blue but is black and blends in with the rest of the existing contacts data, making you have to guess or worse yet, back out and go back to where you were adding a number to a Contact, to make a note of what the # is so you can later assign it as home/work/mobile, etc. I realize Jony's work around was to add a greyed-out "recent" notification next to the number being added now, but that doesn't always show up consistently. (bug?) The first time I added a number to an existing contact that way and saw the blue font representing the new info to be added, I smiled at Apple's "it just works"-ness. It's another reminder of how many things are less good now vs. before. Thank you Apple.