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Mozilla.org Announces Open Source Calendar

Mike Potter writes: "According to an article at Mozillazine.org, Mozilla.org will be releasing an open source calendar. "Thanks to an extremely generous offer of code from OEone Corporation, the new calendar project will have a significant codebase to start from. OEone make Penzilla, an operating environment for internet devices based on Linux and Mozilla. ... For more information on, and a technical description of Penzilla Calendar, see OEone's website." I think we'll be seeing a lot more applications built with Mozilla, now that its stable." Mundane as it may sound, with tabs in place (and behaving more sanely), a good calendar is probably my most-wished-for Mozilla feature. The screenshots certainly bode well for this one.

11 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. Open Source Calendar? by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Awesome! I always thought Thursday was a stupid name. I think i'll call it Mikesday.

  2. feature creep? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't this creeping featuritis? All I want for Christmas is Mozilla 1.0...

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  3. PIM's on Computers not such a good idea by euroderf · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I like PIM's, but myself I stick to a file-o-fax. It doesn't crash or lose data, and is easy to read, never runs out of batteries and is portable. I don't see what advantage a computer would bring, it would tie me down and lose data.

    But my main gripe is the interactivity of the new PIM's, like Outlook Express in Office XP. They allow one's data to be inspected by one's superior, and make for an invasion of personal space by the hierarchy at work.

    One of my girlfriends Joselle had to cancel a date with me because her boss inserted a work appointment at the same time, without notice, and she had to obey.

    The only way to be truly provate and control your schedule is to have it written down privately. Computers allow for the domination of one's calendar by the digital elite.

  4. I just did a search by ajuda · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I just did a search for "calendar" on freshmeat... 131 projects found
    Do we really need mozilla to include yet another thing which we can just find somewhere else? Before we know it, Mozilla will include its own kernel! And they are wondering why 1.0 is soooo far off?

  5. Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? by elefantstn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, I think they're donating to Mozilla because it's built on Moz technology (XUL, etc.). But since it will presumably be GPL (like the rest of Mozilla), there's no reason Gnome or KDE can't use it. What does it matter if it was donated "to" them? It's GPL, Gnome/KDE are GPL, if it's good, put it in there!

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  6. Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mozilla is more cross platform than Gnome or KDE (i.e., it runs on Windows at least as well as Linux, from what I've seen). If OEone wants to target Windows users, then using XPCOM and the other Mozilla technologies make more sense than Gnome or KDE. Remember, they're not using the Mozilla browser, but rather the cross platform toolkit that the browser also happens to be built on top of.

  7. Do people read the articles anymore? by ihatelisp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What are all these complaints about bloat and never-will-be-released 1.0?

    • Mozilla is an open project. Any outsider can contribute and develop applications that use the Mozilla platform.
    • It is clearly stated that Calendar will be post-1.0 work. Mozilla.org is not going to hold the 1.0 release for the calendar.
    • Key Mozilla developers will concentrate on the 1.0 release and will not spend much effort on the calendar.
    • If you don't like it, don't compile it into your build. You have the source, after all.

    Free software is about freedom and choice. Stop discouraging side projects just because you don't like it.

  8. Calendaring server is what we need by BigJim.fr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We now have clients a plenty, but no way to share selected parts of our calendar with groups or individuals. A server would be really great and also be a step on the quest for a mSexChange replacement. What are the open standards for calendar sharing ?

    1. Re:Calendaring server is what we need by Linux_ho · · Score: 5, Informative

      RFC 2445, 2446, 2447

      These documents describe the iCalendar protocol, supported by Outlook and Palm Desktop, if I remember correctly.

      Open source servers:
      ReefKnot - still pre-alpha, developing a Perl iCal library and server implementation, looks like it has promise for the future.

      WorldPilot - a Zope product, looks like it mostly works well, I'm looking forward to playing around with it. Anyone know of any others?

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      include $sig;
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  9. Re:Alternative Calendar Systems by Sc00ter · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Yah, I'll switch to that when the world switches to Metric Time

  10. The planet *doesn't* have a 13 lunar month year by maggard · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Basic science:

    There aren't 13 lunar "months" in a solar year. Indeed there is no resonance between the two at all.

    However from the linked site you seem only tenously acquainted with reality, apparently not enough to ever actually look at a lunar calendar.

    Score: -3 (troll with pseudo-science & bad math!)

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