Fitting Slashdot Into Your Schedule
droleary writes "Looking for more ways to fit the new iCal into your life, or just a way to check web site updates without it looking like you're not working? Well Subsume Technologies has just announced a cool new way to do it: wCal. You can subscribe to frequently updated calendars that are headlines of (hopefully a growing number of) web sites, including a constant-refresh-ending Slashdot: Apple calendar (the press release has the subscribe link)." I first heard of this idea from Morbus Iff back on Sept. 11, and am still not convinced of the utility, but it's an interesting idea. Maybe it will catch on.
I have shied away from putting my appointment calendars and client contact information on the web, and I don't see any compelling reason to start. I've already seen arbitrary changes in so-called "privacy" terms & conditions.
I would like to see something a little better than the date app than shipped with my PDA, though.
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I spend all day reading and replying to the comments. Will this tool tell me when there is a new comment? God can you think of the bandwidth killer this could be.
I don't know about this - It's a calendar program, not a news ticker. This smacks of iPods with calendaring too - it CAN be done but should it, and doesn't it dilute the PURPOSE of the application - forcing one day for the iCal team to have to add features (or be blamed later) that are out of scope from the start.
I recall hybrid Spring PCS cell phone/MP3 players and other such monsters. iCal is just getting started, I would hate to see it morph into a non-focused application.
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
Interesting use and integration of standard technologies (iCalender, WebDAV and RDF) but it seems like an overly complex way of checking news-feeds. I'll stick with using SlashDock and NetNewswire.
RSS is a much easier format to use, and there's already much easier, much better tools like Slashdock that take advantage of RSS without being unweildy (as this seems to be).
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NetNewsWire parses rss feeds and does a damn good job of it.
The first thing I thought when I saw this was "Wow, they have a topic that's tailor made for me!" I'm a moderator for the third time in two weeks. Does it really happen that often?