Google Calendar
rickyb writes "After months of rumors and speculation, Google Calendar is now live. It features integration with Gmail, full iCal support, and a bunch of other goodies I'm just starting to discover. The wait is over!"
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Even while in the mysterious future, it took a few minutes of lag for my sign-up to work. I bet they'll have to restrict registration soon, so get in while you have the chance!
But does anyone know how I can sync it with my Palm Pilot?
I logged on this morning and created a new calendar, made a few screenshots here. Looks nice, didn't see much in the way of gmail integration but maybe I wasn't looking hard enough.
"$121 billion market cap and they have someone writing error messages who thinks "anyways" is acceptable English."
Most non-native english speakers find this acceptable or just dont care.
200GB/2TB $7.95 Coupon: SAVE90DOLLAR
WTF? Is that possible? Did a traveling salesman just try to cross the road to change a lightbulb?!
Nice, you can subscribe to your calendar in iCal, and it imports iCal files. Doesn't seem to have a limit on the number of calendars you can have at once, but I may just be overlooking something.
Hope it works in Safari soon. It doesn't even load unless I use Firefox.
"Google awarded patent on time." It was really only a matter of google!
erm,
http://calendar.yahoo.com/
There is really something "cheesy" with these Google fans... OK ending paranoia mode.
How is it integrated with gmail? By the link in the top left corner? I cant find that it is integrated so nice right now.....
Heck, most native English speakers find it acceptable.
"Calendar is unavailable right now, please try again in a few moments"
To me, full iCal support would typically mean the ability to publish to google calendar directly from my iCal compatible program, not export each calendar entry and import them.
Full 'read only' iCal support would seem a more apt description.
The Palm support (I'm using Mark/Space's Missing Sync) is what I was wondering as well. Hopefully it wouldn't screw with custom fields and/or categories.
I have been nosing around in it for a few hours now. The main thing that I still miss is the ability to sync with a PDA, but I'm sure that will be hacked into the app. at some point. Furthermore:
* The user interface is pleasant, at least far more pleasant than any other web-based calendar I worked with before.
* The abilty to search for and import iCal calendars is very nice.
* You can manage multiple calendars from you account
* Sharing calendars with other users seems to work nicely
All in all, a decent start...
My first thought are that obviously there are some Apple fans working at Google. Still they've done a good job. Now if you could just schedule meetings in Gmail and it would be a useful enterpise calendar.
What was the 13th one called?
Undecimber
Do I get geek card bonus points now?
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Let's see how fast the Wikipedia article will grow now that it has been released...
If it were Google Calendar and not Google Calendar Beta.
I wish there was a way (maybe there is but I can't find it) to specify which Google applications you want to be automatically logged into. In my case I never want to be logged into the feature that remembers my searches, I find that feature disturbing. However if I log into Calendar or Gmail or Personal Homepage it starts remembering all my searches again until I log out and then I have to log in again when I use gmail or whatever. So I just don't use any of the features right now because it's too irritating.
----
Yea I am wondering if they should put it back into BETA. Google betas are much more stable. :) At the moment it has taken 3 minutes just to get the calendar screen.
iCal is a calendaring file standard. Apple just chose to use the same name for their Calendar product (the obsession with "i*"). Gmail is compliant with the iCal standard, which happens to allow Apple's product (which is standard compliant) to interoperate.
10b||~10b -- aah, what a question!
The iCal calendar format (.ics) has been the de facto open calendaring standard for a few years now. The Mozilla Calendar Project (aka "Lightning") supports it as well.
.ics calendars out there to Google Calendar, such as sports schedules for the local teams.
This isn't really a "Google cooperating with Apple" thing as much as it is a "Google using the most popular open calendaring format in the world today, for which there are already thousands of publically-accessible calendars, because it is in Google's own best interests".
Still, it's a great example of the good that comes from open standards. I love the fact that I can add all the existing
OtakuBooty.com: Smart, funny, sexy nerds.
I'd say it's the nerds who think it is important.
I am using Firefox to access and it is terribly slow. Also if you click a time slot you get a pop up for a new item, I think. However, I am not getting a clear display. Images seem missing or somehting. Maybe this should be Alpha not beta
for all of you behind a firewall. Be warned though, https://www.google.com/calendar/render sometimes redirects to http://www.google.com/calendar/render when your session has timed-out. Is there a FF extension that could rewrite urls and force https://www.google.com/calender to be used? Cheers, Palad1 ps: this thing does seem to grok webdav, I'll check tonight with iCal
I know I'm being picky, but why does the Gmail link in the calendar page goto the http Gmail site and not the Https version? In fact Google Talk does that too.
Even Yahoo secure email with https by default.
What's wrong with them doing both? Anyways (heh) it's not to do with sounding professional, it's to do with not sounding sloppy. Being lazy with your speech demonstrates a laziness of your thoughts. Shouldn't personal pride be enough? I personally could care less (heh) how they've written it, but I would care if I was them.
The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
I am surprised that they have not implemented it yet. I use dict.org as well dictd on my home system. But it does not do as good on correction/guessing as Google does. In fact, near as I can tell, they have the best.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Yes, but, once they get all of the kinks out, they can use the application to manage the formal launch event.
So they got that goin' for them. Thanks. I'm here all week.
Meanwhile, I like the completely understated interface.
It will also be fun to dig into the APIs. My biggest complaint against Palm Desktop is that integrating it with other stuff is too challenging. My biggest complaint with Outlook, besides its momma, is that its internals are a zoo.
With Google, one hopes for more opportunity for user add-ons.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
Native "American" speakers, I don't hear it in England, even by non-native English speakers.
The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
Google Calendar has been pretty slow for me this morning, and not all options are always saving correctly, but I guess it will take them a few more days to iron out the bugs and get used to the user load. Seriously neat is the ability to quickly add an entry by typing 'dinner with Chris next Thursday 5pm'.
I don't see any Gmail integration yet, like the ability to identify mails that mention appointments and ask you if you'd like them put into the calendar. But it's mentioned on the features page so I'm sure it will be there soon.
---- scrm
I live on my EVDO cell phone. I check my gmail on it ~10 times a day (albeit I hardly compose any email of length on it).
I currently do not use a celender client, however I see myself using this (as I never have to worry about being on an internet-connected computer and not being able to access it).
Those said, I really hope they make CL2 available via WAP or simple HTML so that I can use it on my phone. I'd LOVE to get a text message to remind me of calender events.
I use google servers to host my aunt's small business email through her domain. It's a gmail interface with her company logo on it. They love it. So I know it's not just for nerds as she's barelly (if at all) computer literate.
Why don't they support Mozilla and Firefox yet? That should be their top-level priority, and MSIE second. Sigh.
Anybody else likes Googles "private" calendar link feature? It's a link with a hash part, which enables someone access to the calendar without any username or password. Google says, that "you should not give away" that link. But that concept at all is complete crazyness!
Looks just like the "My Account" screen to me?
Guess they're probably still recovering from the Slashdot effect
--
Q
Hi! I'm from Google!
We'd like some more personal information about yourself
and your associates and your company and your business transactions
and your...........
Just enter everything for us here and here and.....
Remember: We fight evil.........
They're right you know.......
They already know about everything I search for. If I let them, they would also know about every usenet article I read, and have all my email too, but I'm not willing to give them that. And now, I can add to the list of things I could let them know about me who I have appointments to see, and when. Sure, why not? Perhaps next we'll be seeing Google Bank, Google Dating Service, Google Medical Records, Google Credit History, Google TV, Google Phone Company? All services supplied for free, just let them own everything there is to know about you.
Perhaps they're cultivating an appeal to a demographic who's sick of business as beige and natty usual. Pity if the suits in midtown doubt the strategy, but based on a quick and dirty survey of everyone currently in my apartment (me), it's a 100% home run for Google. For all we know, the site was developed in proper Queen's English, and marketing came along later to mangle it for that shoestring/indie/DIY atmosphere.
I admit this doesn't explain why they chose to represent "shoestrting/indie/DIY" with redneck speak like "anyways." Folk is trendy, I guess.
Bonsai Kitten: TNG
http://www.planzo.com/ works well enough for me.
iCal is a calendaring file standard.
Well strictly speaking icalendar (rfc 2445) is the standard, but (as with vcalendar) it's a bit of a mouthful. iCal (to me) is Apple's software, but ical is the standard.
Slashdot looked deep within my soul and assigned
me a number based on the order in which I joined
I love Google (cautiously) but I wish that they would tread a little heavier. They have so many great technologies (sorry for the buzz word) that they are working on, but they move too slow to release them. I've moved to Gmail, Google Home, GDS, Blogger, Groups, and even Pages (just for kicks) but I'm still waiting to use a social network, edit documents online, make 3d models, and much more. I guess I'll just have to give in and start living my life forever beta.
Anyone else have a similar problem?
I have a hosted Gmail solution for my domain, and would have loved to use that account for Google Calendar, but it wasn't letting me do it. The only way to do it was to create a new Google Account using that (already gmail-hosted) email address, and then to create the Google Calendar account. However, doing it this way does not add the Calendar link in the Gmail interface, like it appears in the regular Gmail accounts.
More geekery:
Among Rich Hall's sniglets is "Decembuary", which is defined as the time in January when you continue to write the number of last year on checks.
And from Treehouse of Horror VI:
Marge: [voice over] It all started on the thirteenth hour, of the thirteenth day, of the thirteenth month. We were there to discuss the misprinted calendars the school had purchased.
Homer: [shivering, looking at the calendar] Oh, lousy Smarch weather.
[spies the thermostat with a note from Willy over it]
[reads] "Do not touch Willy." Good advice! [cranks it]
Someones need to create the Firefox extension to show when I have events now just like the GMail notifier.
Someone has to bring this up. Do you really want the Justice Department getting court orders from Google to hand over everyones calendars so they can go on another fishing trip? Or, just think of the data mining potential for Advertisers. They are probably really wetting their chops on this one. Use a DavMod calendar on a descrete server. Other wise you are just asking for trouble.
Please mod me 1 or troll. It's where the truth is these days, even on Slashdot. Beware the power of moderators everywh
It's nice to be able to pull holidays in, but I wish you could delete, alter, and set reminders for them. Instead, you're forced to copy it into 'your' calendar which produces a duplicate event.
I didn't see any typo on the Chinese page.
The PRC must have a bigger proofreading budget.
I think the GP was trying to point out that the "e" is supposed to be capitalized, rather than identifying speakers from the UK.
Would be a nice feature. For instance, I selected the US Holidays calendar after I had created my own. I wish I could merge them together.
Starmen.net
Within 5 minutes I've input my class schedule for the semester, my exam schedule, invited all of my friends to Google Calendar and given them access to view mine, imported all US holidays into my calendar, and if I had a sports team that I really cared about, I could have imported their schedule too.
This is an amazing app. The way it separates different calendars in the UI is ingenious. I hope enough people start using things like this that more public calendars become available. I'd like to be able to import schedules for concerts in the area, etc. This thing certainly deserves to catch on.
"And we salute the government, key leaders in the industry and all of you who have made the rise of the Internet in China such a tremendous accomplishment."
No more google for me.
At risk of getting bashed for supporting MS. . . I am forced to live and die by my exchange cal for work. I hope there will be an integration with this cal so I can keep track of meetings.
I think it's got time-zone problems. I correctly told it I'm in GMT but after I exported my Outlook calendar Google has rescheduled all my meetings to strange times in the middle of the night.
"Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace." V.Stone, Microsoft Corporation
Does it have a ToDo list? I know there are a few homemade extensions out there for google's homepage, but they just feel clumsy. It'd be nice to integrate a checklist of things I need to do in with google calendar. Also, can I integrate the calendar in with my google/ig page?
Man, what I really want is a sharp google-esque (or yahoo, whatever) calendar I can install on my own host. WebCalendar feels clumsy, I tried 30boxes and didn't like it, and there were a few out there that seemed nice, but only read iCal files. What I really want is something like Outlook Web Access, only not Outlook, but something free, OSS, and that I can install on a webhost. Bah!
So we can import our calendar to their web app, but not actually view it on the acutal web?
OK - it's actually Safari "sorta" - here's the notice you get:
"Sorry, Google Calendar does not support your browser yet, so things may break in unexpected ways. Press OK to see a list of browsers that we support. Or cancel to try to use it anyways." (sic)
Just to be on the safe side I'll wait until they fix it so it breaks in expected ways.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
I say we gaol people for using americanisms.
imagine you already have a bunch of search history and email stored at google DB. You already use google earth or google local, meaning your location is known to them. Now all that is needed is a new button : "Get a life", next to "I'm feeling lucky", so that the empty bits in the calendar will be automatically filled with suggestions from the sponsors.
Some Google Calendar hot keys:
a - Agenda view
c - Create event
d - Day view
j and k - forward and back on days/weeks/months
n and p - next and previous, same as j/k
m - month view
q - quick create event, can add date and time and info and it will be added accordingly. I particularly like how it doesn't force the calendar view to focus on the new event. (e.g. april 14 breakfast at tiffanys 03:00)
s - calendar settings
x - 'next four days' view
/ and ? - both highlight the search input field, but add a / or ? to the beginning
(on a side note, is there a hotkey for firefox that automatically highlights the input field on a viewed page?)
I certainly agree with your sentiment; but for what it's worth, "anyways" is dialectic English, common in Canada at least. I used to have to make a conscious effort not to say it. Heck, I know people from my neck of the woods who say "anywheres" too!
He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
Here comes the mode down for not being a Google fanboy but ... after transferring my calendar events over to GC, I'm pretty unimpressed by GC when compared to Planzo. For instance I found the following issues:
1) On 12/24 I made an event that stretches out over to 2am on Christmas morning. I then added an all day event for Xmas Day and the display overlayed on top of the 2 day event making the previous event unreadable.
2) I can enter descriptions for events, but clicking the event, clicking on the time on the agenda or nowhere else do I actually see the description I just entered. Even if it is a settings change, it should be displaying by default.
3) With all of the Web2.0/AJAX functionality Google has spearheaded, why would a user be require to click an event on the calendar instead of simply mousing over to get the event's details? Planzo does this and it's much better especially when you consider the X to close the popup is over to the right and requires the user to move the mouse all over.
Interface wise, when compared to other online calendars, this fails miserably. They should have just purcahsed a Planzo and incorporated their technology instead of building this app from "scratch".
Hagrin.com
"Breakfast at Tiffany's next Thursday" put an event for April 20 - but untimed - guess we'll have to meet at the IHOP next to Tiffany's - they have breakfast all day...
d WoybDQganBlbGxpbm9AZ21haWwuY29t'],['a','ZTNmZjc5MX N1NGRtNWxwOGc3ajg3dWoybDQganBlbGxpbm9AZ21haWwuY29t ','breakfast at tiffany\047s','20060420','20060421','anBlbGxpbm9AZ 21haWwuY29t',0,0,1280,'tiffany\047s ',0,'',null,null,[]],['_RefreshCalendarWhenDisplay edNext'],['_Ping','500'],['_Ping','3000'],['_Ping' ,'15000'],['_ShowMessage',['Your event was created.']]]
Of course the intermediate error message I got was worthy of the first chapter of Mostly Harmless:
TypeError - Undefined value - undefined['r','__4','ZTNmZjc5MXN1NGRtNWxwOGc3ajg3
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
Why isn't Verizon Wireless part of the phone notification system on Google Calendar?
Or is this addressed in a FAQ and I was too lazy to go look for it?
Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
"If by "live" you mean "barely functioning," then you'd be right."
Ugh, no kidding. Opera isn't at ALL supported. It'll let you in, but then you get javascript errors all over the place. Weak.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
This is actually pretty neat. Aside from having the ability to share Calendars in Office, this also allows you to share Calenders with your friends. Pretty clean too.
[%] Cingular Ringtones
Umm.. yahoo calendars already support synching with a palm.
A really nice feature with Google Calendar is the SMS message notification option. You can input your cell phone information and Google Calendar will text message you (if you choose the option) as well as email you (if you choose) to remind you of your events. This avoids the "need to be at your computer to be reminded" problem with computer/internet based calendars. pretty slick! I'm still waiting on my SMS Verification code though... we'll see if it ever gets here.
This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
No option to send SMS reminders to Verizon users?
What gives? The list is pretty populated with the other major carriers, wonder if Verizon is being left out on purpose?
-j
This sig is just as redundant as the rest of this posting
Definitely needs better GMail integration.
Why didn't Google personalize it with a cool name like, Galendar? Pretty nice now I can dump my 30boxes.com woo hoo.
Can I bum a sig?
The one thing that I really, really like about 30boxes is that you can set tags on events and specify permission to people at the tag level. If Google implemented this feature, I'd seriously consider switching to it. Interface-wise, I think they have 30boxes beat (at least, day view, month view,etc)
Just my 2 cents...
This has the potential to be snakes-on-a-plane cool.
I have recently been becoming more dependant on Yahoo! Calendar and, in so doing, it's limitations are becoming more glaring and more annoying. This forces me to consider changing to some other calendaring software/thngie, but I really don't want my calendar/thingie to be tied to just one comptuer (hence Yahoo!). Google cal is iCal compliant, or so they say, and I don't think Yahoo! Calendar is. Or, if it is, I somehow missed it. (which is possible)
Furry cows moo and decompress.
I don't know about you, but I'm not interested in making the job easier for NSA and writing them where I'll be having lunch tomorrow, since they already listen to my phone. What's next? sizeofmypenis.google.com?
First thing I missed, which will make it impossible to import existing calendars:
* No to-do's. All events must have a start and end time.
Anyone else want to add a wish?
- Mike
Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
I mean, this is really a basic calendar application. Why not even let the person set a country or location so that local holidays would show up in the calendar?
Schedule and calendar applications are a dime a dozen. Heck, anybody with at least a year of programming skills can write their own appointment manager, I have. It does everything I want it to do, without superfluous extras, and if I want it to do something more, I can write my own support for it.
If this is what we can expect from Google, time management and I bet they will so release a Money or Quicken substitute, then I can start to see Google's stock drop quickly.
Surprised Google hasn't released Google Notepad, it would have about the same impact as a calendar application.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Looks like the only thing we need now is something to allow syncing of the 'iCal' and 'Google Calendar' calendars. Maybe I'll find a use for isync, since Apple seems to have made it so focused on .Mac these days.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
Right, but is the API open?
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
Okay, so tell me which is more secure, an HTTPS connection with the login information in the URL as a GET or an HTTPS connection with the login information in a POST?
You fail it.
What URL do you use?
I do https://gmail.com/ after the login, it always switches to http.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Anyone?
If you're in the states, use https://gmail.google.com/ and it won't redirect to http. In europe I think the formal URL is different, maybe googlemail.google.com Gmail.com is, I believe, simply a redirect and won't hold the https state. No idea why it's not configured to do so; maybe it's to avoid scaring the locals on the mismatched security certificates or something.
You better watch out, there may be dogs about . .
That's not geekery, that's comedic nonsense.
Undecimber is a real month often used in the Lunar Calendar. You'll find it in many time keeping APIs such as java.util.Calendar and the International Components for Unicode. Anyone who's done even a cursory study of alternate calendars should know that.
*huff* More geekery, indeed!
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
it already is BETA. i played with it earlier today, before it hit slash, and it worked fine. it's just swamped by all the hits, but either than that it is a pretty nifty app.
Stop Computers/Cars Analogies on S
i wish they had an offline version for desktop. install it on the local machine, probably running in the background but can be pulled up in a click to quickly add/check/edit an event. no browsers, internet connectivity, logging in etc. takes care of the security issues as well. and oh, maybe put in a single button that will sync your calendar with your online account with one click so you can access your calendar from anywhere else if you have to.
My sig has been answered.
Even with all the features working it will not function for my needs. They really need to work on repeating events, for example as a college student I have a class that meets the same time on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Currently there is no way to input this event, besides putting it in three times.
Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
Try to setup the SMS for phone alerts... Verizon is the only carrier not listed. Why is the US's largest wireless carrier not an option?
Google knows when they plan to get killed. :p
is that google is filled the Calendar for you. With all the stuff google collects from you and other this would be easy. And than, in the next years, google will order your food and will make all shoppings for you. Than, again a few years later...
What about Febtober ?
Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
"We look at the rise of China, the investment and the smart people and we are in awe of what has occurred here," Schmidt said.
"And we salute the government, key leaders in the industry and all of you who have made the rise of the Internet in China such a tremendous accomplishment."
Well said for the fork tongued Stanfordite. Exclusionist (Stanford Arrogance) and a sellout(China)!
There are certain games that can't be published or sold in Germany.
Irrelevant and only asking to get someone to G*dw*n a thread.
Get over it - it's a global economy and that means different rules in different places.
Thankfully France (the only country to resist the siren song of Asian slave labor) knows what problems happen (and react properly) with such sellout economies and has the balls to stand up to China. Google seems to be a hypocrite again in the same subject- fighting France and those who would normally take the tack of anti-globalization (when working with countries similar to economic models such as France would be the "norm" if by policy) as much as they help towards the execution squads in China.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
I heard they find it exceptable too!
They also find it an affective!
I'm a bit of a Google fanboy, but I chekced out the Calendar and was nonplussed. I've been using Kiko (http://www.kiko.com/ for a while now, and it does everything Google Calendar currently does, in a nicer interface (at least in my opinion). iCal import and RSS subscription, flexible AJAX-y interface, etc. But the appointment creation interface is niftier to me: I can just write 'Fill out reports' and then add in catgories, locations, and contact invitations later as in the Google version, or I can write:
:)
Fill Out Reports @Office +bob@mywork.com [Work]
And Kiko knows what to do, creates my appointment and sets the Location as 'Office', the category as 'Work', and invites Bob via email, with no extra clciking or form filling on my end. Also, I can create an appointment and write 'Pay Phone Bill Every Month', or 'Call Accountant Every Week' and it does the Right Thing and creates automatically repeating appointments with no extra work on my part.
It can also send appointment reminders via email, IM (AOL only at this point), or even SMS, which is handy as heck when I'm out of the office. Calendar sharing with contacts or the poublic at large is dead easy too.
Plus, there's more features, such as syncing, coming. If you like Google Calendar, do yourself a favor and check out Kiko. It's free too and I, at least, like it a lot better right now. (And, no I don't work for them, but I have corresponded with a couple of the Kiko folks over email, and they are *very* responsive, quick, and nice, so I'm rooting for them.
"Two things are infinite: the universe, and human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the first one." - Albert Einstein
How do I export my Google Calendar data?
. py?answer=37111&topic=8566
http://www.google.com/support/calendar/bin/answer
Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
It would seem to me that most non-native English speakers (being one myself, and probably thinking that everybody is like me) are actually more irritated by this than native speakers - because we learn it the right way.
Axe me while I slumber
I wonder if you can allow access to your own calendar via the iCal standard. So if you're using a calendaring client such as Lighting or Sunbird you can view your own calendar.
Having said that, who needs a calendar client anymore? Web 2.0 anyone?
When the posters fear their moderators, there is tyranny; when the moderators fears the posters, there is liberty.
Has anyone started hacking the API so that we can access it from our own software? A proper SyncServices module for MacOS would be a good start...
I created a shared calendar for me and my wife. If she adds things to our calendar, I might have a fighting chance of knowing what's going on in my own life.
"Seven years of college down the drain. Might as well join the f-ing Peace Corps." - John 'Bluto' Blutarsky
After a few tests, I have the feeling that you need a GMail account to at least _see_ a published calendar, right?
If yes, it is a pity. If google wants to convince people to switch to GMail, they should at least allow them to just have a look (some kind of preview) to a published GMail calendar...
...this looks remarkably similar to kiko
"Nae Kin! Nae Quin! Nae laird! Nae master! We willna be fooled again!"
And of course it doesn't work properly in Opera...
It seems to be working fine now.
The Spoon
Updated 6/28/2011
One entry found for anyways.
Main Entry: anyways
Pronunciation: -"wAz
Function: adverb
1 a archaic : ANYWISE b dialect : to any degree at all
2 chiefly dialect : ANYHOW, ANYWAY
...all cock-blockery aside...
Yea, I would think that would be a nice function, but it doesn't look like it supports verizon phones! What's up with that?
Undecimber is a REAL month used in computer science for 13 month Lunar Calendars. Why does everyone insist on following up with made up names?
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
All your dates are belong to us!
If you don't understand that "anyways" is a very calculated choice of words, you're a mareketing moron.
---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.
All in all the calendar is a nice feature. I might even try putting up some events in there. I notice it lets you get notifications via cell phone, I wonder if I get charged for incoming SMS messages. I don't see a tick box for getting notified via email. That would be nice.
So just because someone gave a real answer, nobody else is allowed to say anything funny? I wasn't aware of that rule, and I apologize for offending you to such a great extent...
Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
Meh. I'm just grumbling because it seems like it would make more sense to post these gags in response to the original post rather than my snarky (but accurate) reply.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
I imported a calendar from Outlook and Google got all the times mixed up. Now there's no way to delete the enties en masse. I have to go through and delete them 1 by 1. NOT cool
- Mike
Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
Your comment seems to indicate that this is somehow the fault of Google.
Actually, it's without doubt the fault of the greedy Verizon corporate leadership that needs to make money on every single move of a finger that you make.
Not exactly about Google but near-topic.
I have my calendar in Exchange/Outlook.
We are heavy users of the "offline" part -- print the monthly view and stick it on the fridge for the computer-indifferent parts of the family.
One feature that I miss is the ability to have small icons that represent events instead of text. For example, marking recycling collection days, etc.
Is there an application that that supports this and can read Outlook calendars?
I gotta say, though, for my and my partner's needs, it may be just about perfect. We can each have a seperate calendar under one login so that we can immediatly see what we have scheduled, but more importantly I can add/edit client events for him and he can add/edit them for me. No other basic or free calendar has met these needs for us, so this may be exactly what we've been looking for.
Google Calendar has a very important feature that actually makes calendaring much easier to use than in Outlook 2003: the 'Quick Add'. Found in a small menu below 'Create Event' in the top-left corner, 'Quick Add' allows you to type in a dynamic expression that describes an event; for example, 'Pack Saturday' or 'BBQ @ 7:30pm tomorrow'. With this one feature, Google has surpassed Outlook's efficiency at creating appointments. I wonder when Outlook will learn that forcing users to tab through multiple fields in a standardized form like 'Subject, Location, Start Time, End Time' is not the fastest nor the most intuitive way to enter appointments. Also, no double clicking required - a single click in a time slot and a bubble to enter an appointment comes up.
tried multiple times to import my site's http://www.tourfilter.com/ical">public ical feed into a "public calendar" and it just plain doesn't work. How are Boston googlers going to get their concert notifications!?!!
so if I use google Calendar, google now knows that I will be going to a soccer game at the ozdome tonight.
they also no from previous searchs that I like waterloo dark maybe they will tell the local bar. and then they might actuall stock it.
while this is not exactly an example of evil. remeber what google is doing with your information is not in your intrest. it is in there intrest.
--meh--
Ook
More to the point, why are the carriers only American? Where's the British ones?
If you select "weekly", checkboxes for the days of the week come up so you can customize.
Only requirement for good karma: be pedantic as much and as often as possible.
Good, now the OpenOffice.org help forums (www.oooforum.org) will finally start to see a decline in the complaints of "but it doesn't have Outlook!"
- RG>
Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
Now I can Google search for when people are at work or on vacation, and go steal all their stuff after I Google up their address!
Thanks Google! You Rock!
Finally, something better for criminals to do then send me spam.
- Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I think that one positive result of calling this service Google Calendar instead of Gcal (or something similar) is that maybe people will start spelling "calendar" correctly. Of course, I could be wrong...
I tried it, and while it's very slick, they have a few quirks to iron out. For example, they let you repeat an event every "Monday, Wednesday and Friday", but if you want a certain event to repeat on one particular day of the week (e.g. "every monday"), you're out of luck. You have to wonder what they were thinking when they decided to implment the former, but not the latter.
All in all though, it's a promising start.
I've been using Yahoo! Calendar for years, and tried out Google Calendar today.
I like:
-The UI and the instantaneous response to commands
-The sharing options
-The fact that it's iCalendar compatible
I didn't like:
-I imported my events, and all of them are incorrectly shifted to Pacific Time
-There's no repeating events options? Like birthdays? Or weekly meetings?
-I had some repeating events from Yahoo! and when I tried to delete them there was no option to delete only one or all repeating events
Final decission: not ready yet, good try though!
Before you waste your time writing a post, you might want to check that it is true. Google sends cell phone reminders. Clearly you are a Yahoo fanboy if you are spouting such false statements without making a judgment for yourself.
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
Wow, this is so strange. Anyways isn't said elsewhere? I DO say it all the time. Is it considered improper?
Rich.
libguestfs - tools for accessing and modifying virtual machine disk images
Just tried the URLs at Apple's iCal Library, which are prefixed by the 'webcal' protocol and they are recognised when imported by Google Calendar.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
Uh, while yer at this grammar thing, eh, "dialectic" refers to philosophical discussions, not common idiom. Anyways, the average canuck does engage in a kind of philosophical discussion daily, such as "What the hell's wrong with the Oilers, anyways?" Not to, like, stereotype or anything, eh.
Damn those pesky terrorists
It would be great if I had the option of nicknaming address. I want to type the where as work and it recognize that I work at 1 main street, NSAville, Ohio. That way I only have to type in work to get my map or Tom's to get to Tom's bar that way I won't have to remember the address for Tom's I could already have programed it into my settings. I also want it to give me map directions starting from the location of my previous appointment. That is if the appointments are concurrent.
granted, it's required for their indexing/targeted-advertising model, but i won't use a mail service that stores my private communications forever on someone else's systems, nor will i use a calendar that gives others the dates and times of my proctologist appointments.
if they could find a way to provide the service that respects privacy, i'd be more interested, and i bet more companies would be as well. perhaps a version that lives on one's own servers and does away with the advertising, for a licensing fee.
free software, open standards, open file formats, no software patents.
I exported from Yahoo an some appointments are shifted by 3 hours, and some by 2 hours. It appears that the difference is split on whether the entry was made in EST or EDT.
I haven't cracked open the CSV from Yahoo yet to see what it looks like however.
So true - On the VX8100 phones, a long time ago they upgraded them to enable the on phone mp3 player by default.....
:/
... as simple as going into the service menu and turning the mp3 player back on.
Guess what the newest upgrades do?
Disable it to 'make it easier for the customer, instead of using a PC and transfering those messy files to memory card they can just buy the music on the phone using get it now' is what the repair guy told me.
How hard would it have been to have both features?
Hmmm, I can't seem to create a new calender.
Go through the setup, click create new, and voila, back to main screen with no new calender added.
Beauty is truly in the eye of the tiger
for example: yahoo has two reminders, custom set per event - so email me a week ahead and then on the day. google only has one.
also contacts: google uk has none, no birthday field, no anniversary field, all of which auto populate the calendar.
agreed it is non ajax slowness and too many clicks, but it does have a good feature set for general birthday and other reminders.
and it has a mobile/pda friendly version too.
so, take it easy, horses for courses
J
...for non-history buffs, during the French Revolution, the government of France renamed all the months. If I recall correctly, it lasted less than two years. And it makes reading about events during the Revolution amusing, as all the dates have both the "Revolutionary" and "Julian" dates listed.
Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
My iCal calendar entries contain umlauts (my native language is Swedish). These seem to turn into question marks when I import the calendar into Google Calendar. OK, this is based on exactly one attempt.
J
If Google came out with a drop in mail / calendar / storage / search appliance, I could see small to medium businesses dropping their exchange servers and all the licensing and support headaches they include. Either that or I'm optimistic and a little crazy.
I did the phone setup this morning around 8.30am. The confirmation code they sent to my phone at that time just arrived at 3.45pm.
drink beer, and let the water run the mill
How long until this is integrated with Google's personalized homepage? Its been a good 9 hours and I'm not seeing it....
I'll fill this in later
No it doesn't -- at least not on any of my computers (which happen to run either Linux or Mac OS).
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Couldn't care less. "Could care less" means you do care, because it is possible for you to care less than you do now. "Couldn't care less" means that it is not possible for you to care less than you do now, because you do not care at all. Care = 0.
Anyone else having this little glitch where it takes two or three tries to get a recurring event to have the correct start and end times?
Steven N. Severinghaus
Oh please!!! Didn't you spot the '(heh)' after "could care less", which also appeared after my use of "anyways", the bad word in question? Subtle, I know, but still, come on!
:-p
myeh, I forgive ya
The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
I took a first stab at adding a todo list to the sidebar of the Calendar page. It still needs quite a bit of work, right now it stores three entries locally; but it's a skeleton for me or someone else to make it store todo entries in a Calendar entry, in S3, your own server, etc etc:
http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/3827
I would really likee integrating GTalk Status and G Calendar for e.g. If I m in a meeting or sleeping or biking etc.. I could be able to just pull-in that to G Talk status message - shouldnt be that hard technically speaking and can lead to more 'integration' of currently 'defragmented' array of Google services.
My god people need to learn how to read. I said Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. There is no Friday or Thursday in that equation. Now to actually be helpful: if you click weekly it gives a choice of days to click. So I should modify my original complaint from not being available to not being intiutive. It took me a while to figure out, but now I am up and running.
Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
It's interesting to see how the arms race continues--just before Google calendar released, Kiko added iCal feed consumption as well. I wonder what other features will debut as Kiko, Google, and others all try to one-up each other in the calendar wars....
U.S. War Crimes blog. Email for free Mandriva support.
Also, I like Kiko's interface where you can easily turn labels on and off depending on what you want to see. I believe they're going to implement the share-by-label system as well.
U.S. War Crimes blog. Email for free Mandriva support.
Interestingly, the other day someone else was complaining about Google ads being everywhere, and mentioned blocking pagead2.googlesyndication.com. Since I copied his trick, I now get part of the Firefox "can't connect" error page where I would normally have seen ads. An effect of this that I never considered was that Google as a result gets less data about me. If you use Linux, stick this in /etc/hosts
Hopefully this won't become widespread, because then they'll move googlesyndication under the google.com domain, but until then, we crackpots can feel a little safer.http://www.k5n.us
Actually, the fact that they do in fact handle repeating events well is exactly the reason I'll be using this calendar. You need to play around a bit more before claiming it doesn't support it, because it does (repeat weekly, just like you would with Sunbird).
:P
Most of the free calendars I've tried are awful for repeating events. For instance, 30 boxes support is recent and minimal. Mozilla Sunbird repeating exception handing is clunky. For instance, if you have a MWF class, and you want to change the description for a particular day to say "EXAM", Google's smart enough to ask you if you want to just change that one instance, or change all of the repeating events. For Sunbird, you'd have to edit the event, create an exception to remove the event that day, and the create a new event. And be careful with Sunbird not to hit delete, or you lose the whole batch. Google at least asks you what you want to do.
Personally, Google's behavior for repeating events reminds me a lot of the old Lotus Organizer, and I've been looking for similar support in something I can host online for a long time.
The only problem I've run into with the Google Cal so far is there seems to be a good amount of lag in reading things from the server, and the cache gets out of synch. So, when I created a new calendar, it didn't show up until I relogged in.. and then after seeing "Loading" for awhile, eventually it did pop up. Hopefully it'll work itself out once the slashdot crowd stops creating millions of new events
Google know about people we interact with -- GMAIL
Google knows about our friends and our social life -- Orkut
Google knows about what we rant -- Blogger
Google knows what news we read -- personalized google news
Google knows what we lok for over internet -- search history
There are many moer things like this
Now they also know what we are doing and where we'll be at a particular time of day
whats going on guys ?
I've been waiting for a decent iCal calendar app for years (web based or otherwise). After experimenting with Sunbird for a while, I decided that it wasn't quite ready. So far, Google's Calendar is a breath a fresh air.
The ability to share Calendars will prove to be the most powerful feature. However, it is important that sharing permissions are very flexible. This means that for each individual event, you have the option to chose who sees it, not just an "all or none" setting. I haven't experimented with the app enough to know if it can do this yet, but if it can't, I hope Google fixes it soon.
The Event Pubisher Guide contains instructions on how to construct a URL to share an event, which other people can add to their calendars. But the manual construction of the URL can be tedious. Hence, I came up with a quick page, the Google Event URL Generator to generate URLs with ease. Still a work in progress, but usable.
I do like the multi-calendar approach of Google so far, but I am surprised that there are no "Labels" like in gmail. This was a GREAT idea that avoids duplicate entries and is basically just a form of 'tagging'. You can have numerous Calendars, all viewable from one interface, but there is no way to put one event into multiple Calendars. This limitation will make the shared Calendar feature, one that I had high hopes for, drastically more difficult. And have you tried to Google for the new Calendar? Its like Google hasn't even indexed its own service. Check out my post for a list of all the Google Service SEOs.
http://isaacbowman.com
Who's making you use any Google services? If the ToS are unacceptable go to the competition. Markets work.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
So many of these online calendars including google's and 30 boxes just don't seem to have an interface designed by people who use calendar software a lot. Outlook may be inefficient and clunky, but it's easy to see what you've got going on at a glance. Even the Agenda view in Google only shows the start times of appointments, not the end times. Great if you're meeting a friend. Not great if you're using the thing for work. The best online calendar I've found for actual practical use (not the prettiest. Not AJAX. Not anything fancy) is the one used on the free service mail.centralpets.com. I've asked them what software they run, but they won't say. A few stray clues suggest it's from a Spanish company. Google just has to stop trying to be a slick interface maker and deliver information. They're an information company first. Software and slickness second.
A beginners' guide to Portland, OR?
http://www.topshelfmedia.co.nz/Labs/AuctionICalend ar
:)
Paste the URL of an ebay auction into this form, and it will create an iCal file to import into your new Gmail Calendar
Hello all,
my name is Bruno Lowagie and it was a pleasant surprise to see that the PDF that is created when you click on the print icon in Google Calendar is generated by iText: see http://www.lowagie.com/iText/
That's my own little Java-PDF library! This is GREAT!!!
Please excuse this if it has been posted already (a search did not find it).
This is not useful to me unless I can give a link for my students in the course web page for them to view the calendar.
If I have to cancel an office hour for a meeting whose time I can't change, I immediately update my calendar and my students can (with Yahoo) check to see if my schedule has changed before they drop in. [As Faculty Senate President this year, it happens more than I'd like.] Google's Calendar is much nicer than Yahoo's to use and view, but it can't seem to be viewed publicly. There is no way I can expect my whole class to use an news reader or a calendaring application which can use the ical format.
Also, it has a great deal of difficulty importing my ical files. I have to enter about half by hand.
As much as I am in love with Google, I'd have to call this 'alpha'.
The same defenders of privacy who complain about as much as giving their name to the New York Times registration page, now feel free to drop all their data, search patterns, pictures, email and appointments in Google.
They know what you like, who are your friends, what your familiy looks like, where you look live, what your house looks like and what you do day in and day out. Let's face it, Google owns you. They make the KGB look like amateurs.
In Capitalist USA, the KGB is a private for-profit enterprise, the people willingly surrender their personal data and the data is passed on to whatever large corporation has the means to pay for it.
At the time I was building an interface for input, and in fact was about to decided to skip ICal as we kept simplifying the spec, but ended up having a coordinator enter coaches' calendars using Outlook and uploading the ics files via ftp to a publically accessible folder. They were rendered in the (unfortunately read-only) phpicalendar program. I actually tried to write those ics files on the fly from the server to phpicalendar but no go, and it would take a while too, so just wrote to the ics file directly a VCALENDAR structured file.
One thing for sure is that these calendaring apps, Google's included, are way too hard for ordinary people to use, or have reasons I think why they would fall into disuse unless artificially made into required items. They need a much simpler version of the interface for ordinary people, and they need some more interfaces with the outside world. At the moment it looks too branded and google being happy about google in google's universe. It's a search engine right? They say they have public calendars but you can't find them (maybe somewhere after you log in?). They say you can publish events from your site but it is really unclear.
What they have to be is a calendaring hub like that site which has tons of public calendars. Give a unique name or short url to everybody's calendars whether on google or not, and let people use simpler interfaces in Google Calendar (or without logging in even) to write into calendars so permissioned. They should make it a nobrainer for people to be able to access a stream of events as an rss feed or something better, and similarly for anyone to publish their events without having to wade hip deep into their web app. Well maybe I'll add that to my next version!
Vista:XPSP2::ME:98SE