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Mozilla Sunbird 0.5 Released

linux pickle writes "Mozilla has released version 0.5 of Sunbird, its calendar app. New features in this release include numerous stability and usage improvements, Google Calendar synchronization support, and much improved printing support. Check out the release notes or grab a copy."

100 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. My god this is groundbreaking news by mikecardii · · Score: 1, Funny

    Stop the presses holy hell! *head a-splodes*

    1. Re:My god this is groundbreaking news by moderatorrater · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Umm, I don't know who modded the parent troll, but let's be honest, when the story's went for nearly five minutes with nothing but this post, he might actually be right. Just sayin'.

    2. Re:My god this is groundbreaking news by ElleyKitten · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hahaha thanks. I probably was a little harsh, but it just struck me that this probably is unnecessary. *shrug* Considering it was at .3 for about 2 years, learning that they finally got to a new version is actually surprising news.
      --
      "What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
    3. Re:My god this is groundbreaking news by Columcille · · Score: 2, Informative

      ...which has nothing to do with news for nerds.

      --
      I love my sig.
    4. Re:My god this is groundbreaking news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dear Utopian,

      I'm a bit busy right now. Cheney asked me to come back home for a nooner, and thought I would love to discuss this proposition, I cannot sit down right now.
      Perhaps some other time?

      Love,
      *S

    5. Re:My god this is groundbreaking news by jack455 · · Score: 1

      I am looking forward to checking out the googlecalendar integration. I used to use Sunbird and still use googlecalendar so I'm happy to see this. I'm not sure why nerds don't consider this news, but either way I learned something new...

  2. Lightning Is Released, Too by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 4, Informative

    Lightning, which is the Sunbird plugin for the Thunderbird email client, was also released.

    Update as usual: Tools > Add-ons > Find Updates

    Great work, guys!

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    1. Re:Lightning Is Released, Too by DNeoMatrix · · Score: 1

      I don't need Exchange support, but can I sync it with a regular ubuntu LDAP server? if so - any tutorials?

  3. What would be cool ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is a combined / integrated application that incorporated Firefox, Thunderbird and this Sunbird... that each part could be run separately if you wished.

    It could save on the download because each part would share the UI code, networking code, etc, given that they're all built upon a custom platform layer, and each download replicates that.

    Ah well, I'm sure it will never happen.

    1. Re:What would be cool ... by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Funny

      Thank you - best laugh I've had all day. What should we call this all in one thing? I don't think anything like it has ever been done before. :)

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    2. Re:What would be cool ... by Aladrin · · Score: 4, Informative

      Maybe we could call it SeaMonkey or something... Hmm...

      http://www.mozilla.org/projects/seamonkey/

      I know you know this exists, but it's polite to include a URL when you're sassing someone who doesn't. ;)

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    3. Re:What would be cool ... by Soylent+Beige · · Score: 1

      Dropping my previous moderatations on this thread (grumble).

      There is a Calendar Extension for Seamonkey: http://highlandsun.com/hyc/mozilla/

      --
      Everyone hates me because I'm paranoid.
  4. Question by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

    I'm looking for a way to give my Exchange server a toss (because I hate Exchange *and* because I'm stuck with running it on Windows SBS 2003). How close is Thunderbird/Sunbird to the point where I can go to my manager and make the pitch?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    1. Re:Question by packetmon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You should consider SurgeMail. I did away with Exchange for 200+ users using it. To the users it was transparent. They weren't using some of the core functions of Exchange anyway so it was worthless to me. After showing them how things worked, give or take a month and a half of "teach the idjit/PEBKAC (l)users", all was well and it offered the same level of functionality of Exchange. Only a couple thousand dollars cheaper.

    2. Re:Question by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What you probably need for an Exchange replacement is something that supports CalDAV. iCal in Leopard will, and it's on the Sunbird roadmap, but I don't think it's in this release. Novell's Hula also supports CalDAV, and might be an option.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Question by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Im thinking of replacing the toilet in my bathroom, how close is BMW to making a 325 that can fill that need? Exchange is a messaging and collaboration server, Thuderbird and Sunbird are user applications.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    4. Re:Question by bvdbos · · Score: 1

      Sunbird 0.5 / lightning 0.5 also support caldav-servers (have been for quite some time now)...

  5. Can sync (sort of) with exchange by also-rr · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you are dedicated it's possible to pull your appointments from an exchange server, covert to iCal, and then import them into Sunbird.

    I still prefer KOrganiser, not least because it has an exchange plug in. Integration with the mail client is also better in my opinion.

    In fact Kontact is overall a fantastic piece of software. My only gripe is the fact that it's handling of IMAP mailboxes is horrific, but I believe that is slated for a total revamp in KDE4.

    1. Re:Can sync (sort of) with exchange by forsetti · · Score: 1

      If you are dedicated it's possible to pull your appointments from an exchange server, covert to iCal, and then import them into Sunbird.

      How do you pull your appointments from an exchange server?

      --
      10b||~10b -- aah, what a question!
    2. Re:Can sync (sort of) with exchange by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Funny

      you are obviously not dedicated. get back to us when you are.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    3. Re:Can sync (sort of) with exchange by also-rr · · Score: 1

      Pull from exchange to iCal with e2i and then import from iCal into whatever calendar system you like.

    4. Re:Can sync (sort of) with exchange by MajorBlunder · · Score: 3, Funny
      If you are dedicated it's possible to pull your appointments from an exchange server, covert to iCal, and then import them into Sunbird.

      Yes, but in order to be that dedicated you would first have to be committed... To a to a highly secure facility for the chronically insane

      --

      "I'm making perfect sense, you're just not keeping up."

    5. Re:Can sync (sort of) with exchange by WonderPhil · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Re-posting under my login vs my first AC post:
      With this latest announcement of Google Calendar Sync ability this opens up the option of getting my Outlook at work to sync up with my Sunbird at home on my Mac OS X desktop via a couple of hops.

      1. Outlook PC at work to ScheduleWorld.com using a Funambol client to extract from Outlook.
      2. ScheduleWorld.com to Google Calendar via ScheduleWorld's Google sync ability. You can make step #2 automatic by enabling this in the preferences of your ScheduleWorld (free) account.
      3. Sync at home from Google Calendar to Sunbird.

      ScheduleWorld has a link to Thunderbird / Sunbird, but I have had limited success with it. If the sync ability is built in to Sunbird, this should be a way smoother approach.

      Let the calendar integration begin!

  6. Half way there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    0.5 to go.

  7. I'm Sorry by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm sorry to report that Thunderbird/Sunbird is nowhere near ready to replace Exchange. Depending on your needs, it might be a good fit though.

    I'd say download it and try it out. If it's too basic for your needs, and it probably is, then look at some of the open source groupware packages.

    There's some neat open source groupware out there.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    1. Re:I'm Sorry by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And nearly all of it will never replace Exchange because most of the packages are too difficult to install and configure, are based on technologies that don't scale very well (like PHP), or don't synchronize well or at all with Outlook.

    2. Re:I'm Sorry by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The big thing my organization needs Exchange for is shared calendaring and event management. I find Exchange's address books hokey, and am going to be setting up an LDAP server to manage that anyways. Basic isn't bad, in my opinion.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:I'm Sorry by cawpin · · Score: 1

      Lightning/Sunbird has shared calendar support already. If that's all you're looking for go for it.

    4. Re:I'm Sorry by wetelectric · · Score: 1

      Nope, tried it at mine. Lightning (a must if you are going to be using Thunderbird in the work place) missing decent native shared calendaring support. This is big stopper. But if you have users that do not require it, go for it. I've rolled it out for our laptop users, i.e users not connected to the exchange server..

      --
      Most people have no idea what they are doing, and are silently panicking on the inside.
    5. Re:I'm Sorry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      So use Zimbra or Open-Xchange. There's a *ton* of great groupware out there. I don't get the whole "Exchange is my god!!" thing.

      GOOGLE PEOPLE!!

    6. Re:I'm Sorry by DrXym · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I'm sorry to report that Thunderbird/Sunbird is nowhere near ready to replace Exchange. Depending on your needs, it might be a good fit though.

      They would be far closer to replacing exchange if they supported Exchange. The Evolution Exchange plugin has been open sourced for ages now, porting it the cross platform Thunderbird and Sunbird would make the suite hugely more attractive to enterprises locked into MS Office for their client software.

    7. Re:I'm Sorry by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've actually tested Zimbra in my environment.. Currently we use Eudora for Pop3 and Oracle Calendar. The biggest problem I have with much of the "open source" groupware is that it is Browser only. (zimbra has an offline client that is a resource PIG). For my traveling users, they are not always connected to a network. They still need to be able to lookup when/where their next appointment is. I am planning on moving everyone to Thunderbird/IMAP for email, and would absolutely love to use an opensource calendar app, but an offline client is a must, as well as the ability to control sharing of calendars (central management), delegation, check free/busy time, etc.. If I could find a good, open source calendar server that works with Sunbird/lightning, supported SyncML for PDA's and smartphones, I would be in heaven..

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    8. Re:I'm Sorry by flydpnkrtn · · Score: 2, Informative

      PHP doesn't scale well? Wha?

      "The PHP Scalability Myth"
      http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2003/10/15/php_ scalability.html

    9. Re:I'm Sorry by charlesnw · · Score: 1

      You mean like the open source Funambol (formerly called sync4j)? http://www.funambol.com/

      --
      Charles Wyble System Engineer
    10. Re:I'm Sorry by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Interesting.. Off to do some reading... thanks!

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    11. Re:I'm Sorry by Jason+Hood · · Score: 1

      Given that Exchange is a service on a server and Sunbird is a calendar client, I would say your right. Sunbird will never replace Exchange. But it could replace outlook ;)

      --
      Are you intolerant of intolerant people?
    12. Re:I'm Sorry by mp3phish · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, you won't find much to read there.

      The documentation is horrible and there is literally nothing on that website that explains how the system works, only the feature set. But absolutely NONE of the featureset is explained in detail.

      Short of setting up your own server with the software and spending a ton of time, you probably will not get any answers on what works with that system. Also, after lots of research, the synCML plugin for lightning is no longer supported because the mozilla calendar application was re-written and renamed lightning, meaning that the plugin no longer works and as far as I can tell hasn't had activity on it for over a year.

      This is just what I can see from my research on that website, so if you find anything useful that can fill in the gaps I would like to hear it. Hope you can get more info than I did.

      According to the site, you can even sync nokia phones with the thing, though there is nothing anywhere showing you how it works and details of supported features. All the stuff on the site looks awesome, but unfortunately, unless your an insider it seems quite difficult to get anything actually working.

      --
      Your ignorance is infinitely greater than you realize.
    13. Re:I'm Sorry by Zonk+(troll) · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nope, tried it at mine. Lightning (a must if you are going to be using Thunderbird in the work place) missing decent native shared calendaring support. This is big stopper. But if you have users that do not require it, go for it. I've rolled it out for our laptop users, i.e users not connected to the exchange server.. Lightning/Sunbird do support shared calendaring. Use either WebDAV or FTP to host it and install it on the client as a remote calendar (whatever it's called). Writing is supported.

      If you want to dump exchange, though, go with Scalix. The Community Edition is free for 25 users, though when you get above that it's not cheap. Still, it does everything Exchange does, runs on Linux, provides an excellent web client, full integration with Outlook via a plug-in, and full integration with Evolution via a plug-in.

      There are two ways to install it. With an easy to use graphical installer that even a Windows admin can handle, or manually.
      --
      "The Federal Reserve is a fraudulent system."--Lew Rockwell
      End The FED. -
    14. Re:I'm Sorry by hairyfeet · · Score: 1
      Take a look at Xandros server which has Scalix groupware and an Active Directory to LDAP migration wizard.It also brags (although I haven't personally tried it yet) that it connects seemlessly to Outlook clients.If you are wanting to replace your Windows server,it would be the way I'd go.Also has Xen built-in and the license allows for unlimited virtual machines on the server.

      Although I've only recently started using their server,so far it seems as rock solid as their business and home desktop OS products which I've been using for my laptop and desktop for two years without a single headache.Yes it is not free but companies like having the licenses and support.And it has been the most complete "works out-of-the-box" distro I've ever run(and at last count I'd tried over 40,including all the big names like SUSE,Red Hat,Ubuntu,ETC).Give it a try.I bet you'll find it'll do everything you need and then some.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    15. Re:I'm Sorry by wslagendijk · · Score: 1

      However, this does look like an active project: http://sourceforge.net/projects/sync4jmozilla/

    16. Re:I'm Sorry by Pav · · Score: 1

      It's much closer than you think.

          OpenGroupware (the nightly build) supports CalDAV. Sunbird 3.1 works fine, although apparently there is a bug with OpenGroupware preventing Sunbird 0.5 working flawlessly at the moment (after a reminder happens in Sunbird a duplicate calendar event gets created). With the Lightning plugin for Thunderbird you've got email and calendar in the one app, and there are extra plugins for free/busy information and shared address lists through GroupDAV from OpenGroupware. That's sounding an awful lot like an Outlook/Exchange replacement to me.

      -Mark

    17. Re:I'm Sorry by khanyisa · · Score: 1

      If you want to dump exchange, though, go with Scalix. The Community Edition is free for 25 users, though when you get above that it's not cheap. Still, it does everything Exchange does, runs on Linux, provides an excellent web client, full integration with Outlook via a plug-in, and full integration with Evolution via a plug-in. Or rather go with Zimbra. The Community Edition is free for any number of users - it's real free software. And all the rest is true of it as well... Plus it seems you can use lightning to access your shared calendars in Zimbra
    18. Re:I'm Sorry by julesh · · Score: 1

      That article is interesting, but by concentrating on either very large sites or very small sites, it misses one point where Java does excel: fitting large numbers of concurrent connections on a single server. A Java servlet architecture allows session or application scope objects that remain in-memory for long periods of time. This is useful for information cacheing (thus reducing the number of database queries the application will need to perform) and for maintaining user session information. Techniques for persisting objects between queries in PHP rely on serializing them at the end of one query and deserializing them for the next, which is an unnecessary overhead.

  8. Screenshots by crazyvas · · Score: 2, Informative
  9. Exchange Required by imag0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would *love* to use it- but without Exchange calendaring support, it will be effectively a non starter for me and for thousands of other geeks out there who would love to use Thunderbird as their primary mail client at work.

    1. Re:Exchange Required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Screw Exchange. Exchange support is the last thing in the world that the Sunbird team should be working on. The whole point of this project should be to get people to *stop* using Exchange.

      Then you better bring to the table the features that Exchange has that folks want. There is no good central calendar sharing server software in the OSS world that can do what Exchange can and integrates everything together with email. It simply doesn't exist, so folks won't migrate for that reason.

      A good first step in moving would be to integrate your client so that it can use exchange until an OSS exchange server replacement is made. That's what the grandparent wanted, and it's a very reasonable request.

      The vast masses aren't going to migrate away from MS based on principle. They want things that work. You aren't going to break the hegemony until you provide them with something that works as well. Sunbird isn't there yet. Not by a long shot.

    2. Re:Exchange Required by Sebastopol · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Screw Exchange.

      Then Sunbird is doomed to a small niche.

      Apparently you've missed the last 10 "revolutions".

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    3. Re:Exchange Required by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Sunbird doesn't need to work with Exchange. What we need is a Exchange server replacement that will work with Outlook and Sunbird.
      It is easier to migrate a single server than a thousand clients.
      Once you have a server that that supports Sunbird "and Sunbird+Thunderbird can do everything Outlook can" it will be easy to migrate people off of Outlook.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:Exchange Required by jimicus · · Score: 1

      There already is a drop-in replacement for Exchange (though I forget what it's called).

      I looked into it. At the time I looked into it, it had the following things which made it a problem for me:

      1. Entirely proprietary. (There may have been an open version but it was severely crippled)
      2. Dependent on Active Directory.
      3. Poor/no support for IMAP (this has since been fixed, but IMAP support is at 1.0)
      4. (This is the big killer) Per-client pricing which winds up being near enough the same price as Exchange.

      That was the best alternative I could find - and the only one which didn't require installing some half-baked sucky plugin for Outlook which sort-of works and sort-of doesn't. Of course, because I'd now be running some other product than Exchange, if I hit problems there's no reason why they couldn't point the finger at Outlook and why Microsoft couldn't point the finger at them - so the support could easily be effectively pointless. Not really an acceptable business risk if it's going to cost me the same as Exchange anyway and require me to set up the same Active Directory environment if I don't already have it.

      The only other option is something Web-based, such as Horde but at the end of the day, most business users don't care about the server. They just want the client they like (ie. Outlook) to work.

    5. Re:Exchange Required by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Well I wouldn't call that an Open Source replacement for Exchange.
      "he only other option is something Web-based, such as Horde but at the end of the day, most business users don't care about the server. They just want the client they like (ie. Outlook) to work."

      Yep that is why it would be easier to get ride of Exchange by replacing the server.
      Heck My office doesn't have an Exchange server and I would love to have a FOSS version of Exchange. The problem is it would have to work with both Outlook and Thunderbird.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    6. Re:Exchange Required by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Well I wouldn't call that an Open Source replacement for Exchange.

      And you'd be quite right not to. It isn't. It is, however, the best you're going to get right now.

    7. Re:Exchange Required by higuita · · Score: 1

      There already is a drop-in replacement for Exchange (though I forget what it's called).

      i know postpath, it a linux with postfix and a MAPI layer..can replace exchange and still looking like a exchange for everything help (other exchanges,, outlook, and other services). the only things that should break are the things that try to work directly with the mailstore, and of course, things that run directly on the exchange server (it now linux, cant run windows apps)

      i never really used it, because the requirement of a AD made the test impossible without building a parallel testing AD and i didnt had time nor would risk a production exchange and AD (if ain't broke, dont f* with it)

      is this the one you are talking about or there is another exchange compatible server?

      higuita

      --
      Higuita
    8. Re:Exchange Required by jimicus · · Score: 1

      I think that's it.

      I enquired as to the pricing, and IIRC it was licensed in a similar manner to Exchange (you pay for the server and also for client access licenses) and at a similar cost.

    9. Re:Exchange Required by RoloDMonkey · · Score: 1

      There is no good central calendar sharing server software in the OSS world that can do what Exchange can and integrates everything together with email. It simply doesn't exist, so folks won't migrate for that reason.

      Although you are technically correct, apparently this version of Sunbird has Google Calendar sync support, and Google Calendar does have calendar sharing integrated with email.

      I looked at a previous version of Sunbird and I was not impressed, but maybe it is time to look again. I use Google for Your Domain for my personal domain, and I am trying to convince my company to look into it. I am willing to help write some conversion scripts if it means I might be able to sync across several different servers/clients.

      --
      Long live the Speaker Bracelet
      Rolo D. Monkey
    10. Re:Exchange Required by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I left out the other big problem that Thunderbird and Sunbird have. Syncing with smart phones. One day I will get around too writing a Bluetooth extension for Thunderbird.
      But I wouldn't hold your breath I am married so my nights of all night hacking are a thing of the past.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  10. Problems? by ThisIsWhyImHot · · Score: 1

    I just installed this a few hours ago and I'm having problems with it crashing firefox. I tried a reinstall but it didn't change anything. Anyone else having these problems?

    1. Re:Problems? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Anyone else having these problems?

      My only problem is that I can't figure out why it's an app in the first place and not a website.

  11. Wedged by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    I already wedged it trying to install it on my Mac. I guess it doesn't like important my huge iCal database, the program is totally frozen.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  12. Nevermind by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    It just took over 5 minutes to import my iCal database. no big deal, seems to work pretty nicely. So far I like it better than iCal.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  13. Darwin Calendar Server Support? by amper · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This should be the number one priority for the Sunbird team, if it's not already working (anyone have info on this?). Apple will have iCal 2 out with Mac OS X v10.5 in October, and the iCal Server with Mac OS X Server v10.5. Darwin Calendar Server is available for testing on Mac OS X v10.4, and should also run on any UNIX-like system.

    1. Re:Darwin Calendar Server Support? by trawg · · Score: 1

      If they're serious about market share, surely they should be going after the #1 calendar application rather than smaller ones first?

      I would love to ditch Exchange for Sunbird + some other open solution. As soon as SOMEONE makes a replacement for Exchange that even has SOME of the functionality that Exchange offers plus a nice decent front end application, I'm sure zillions of people will switch. At the moment though Outlook+Exchange just kicks the ass of pretty much everything else.

      (I think this shouldn't just be Mozilla's #1 priority - it should be the open source #1 priority. Exchange is still the main reason businesses stick with Microsoft. Including ours. We'd switch in a second if there was something remotely equivalent to Exchange - that doesn't require 4000 man hours of dicking around to make it work.)

  14. Please Fix It by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Funny

    Please use your influence as a Microsoft customer to get them to add CalDAV support to Exchange, in the spirit of cooperation and interoperability. Does anybody know if the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is looking to standards for their calendering systems as well?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  15. sounds like the XUL Runner idea by centinall · · Score: 2, Informative

    what you're describing sounds a lot like what they wanted to do with XUL Runner. Each mozilla app could be packaged as a plugin for XUL Runner. So, you would have XUL Runner installed and then you could just download and install the firefox plugin, the thunderbird plugin, the sunbird plugin, etc... They had scheduled this for firefox 3, but it looks like it's not going to happen at least for now.
    http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/mitchell/archives/2 007/05/xul_and_xulrunner_investment.html

    Getting off topic a little, but I'm surprised that during all the recent talk of Flash, Silverlight and JavaFX, no one brought up XUL or WebKit as an alternative to a rich application framework(don't know what else to call them...). Neither of these is that ready to compete (mainly because of multimedia issues) with flash and silverlight, but they're no less ready than JavaFX at the least.

  16. Re:Kalendar by n0-0p · · Score: 1

    Lightning is the Thunderbird extension that provides the same capabilities as Sunbird. It supports iMIP and other email invitation formats. It also has a Provider for Google Calendar Extension .

  17. Looks awesome! by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

    I've been using Sunbird for a while now as my sole calendaring app for my tech. consulting business. It's been great, given a bug here and there (but who doesn't encounter bugs in OL/Exchange?). I've also installed it as a Webdav shared calendar for one of my clients, and they love it too. Never had a problem with it, save the timezone issue a while back (but who didn't have issues with that?)

    Now the events in Sunbird 0.5 are shadowed, looks much nicer. Thanks guys!!

    Oh, and if anyone wants to make an opensourced Sunbird Palm sync plugin, I'd be willing to pay for the development. That's one of the only things I'm waiting for with Sunbird - other than that, it's done everything I wanted it to.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Looks awesome! by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 2

      Bidirectional Pocket Pc Sync.

      I'd switch in an instant if it had support.

    2. Re:Looks awesome! by Morel · · Score: 1

      If you're serious about getting Palm sync to work, send me an email. I'm looking for people to support a project to do exactly that.

      Cheers,

      Morel

    3. Re:Looks awesome! by schweini · · Score: 1

      IIRC, Sunbird und Google Calendar support open standards, and CPAN is full of Palm-related modules, so i'd guess that that shouldn't really be that hard to do.

  18. Congratulations to the team by addie+macgruer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do love this programme, it ties together all the nonsense that I have / am forced to use so that I know what I'm doing...

    * my own iBook, running iCal

    * iPod sync'ed off of iCal

    * Novell Groupwise at work, on both company Dell laptop and desktop

    * Windows Mobile 2003 PIM thing as my work mobile phone

    And what runs on everything? The open source stuff, running on many platforms and generating files to import for everything. No agenda as to 'doesn't import / export files for other platforms'. Cracking interface too, simplicity itself. Perfection is when there's nothing extraneous left to remove.

    Keep up the good work!

  19. That feature is key. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    I use notes at work, and love the ability to peek at others' calendars and find free time. I'd love that feature at home.

    --
    Blar.
  20. Re:Attractive to others as well by PCM2 · · Score: 1

    I imagine it would also make it an attractive target for Microsoft patent lawyers.

    I see. So tell me, what open source projects have been the target of Microsoft patent lawsuits to date? And exactly which patents are you talking about? Microsoft doesn't seem to want to disclose this information, so if you have any insight I'm sure we'd be all ears.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  21. Do you know what Exchange is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Exchange is a messaging/calendaring/groupware server. Thunderbird/Sunbird are email and calendar client apps.

    They're entirely differnt types of software and incapable of replacing one another.

    What you're thinking of is Outlook. I knew what you meant, but maybe you could act like the words in our language actually have some kind of meaning.

  22. Re:BFD by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    I once believed that career success meant nobody could tell you how to dress or what time to be where.

    I still believe that, but extend it to include, "nobody can require you to use Word, Exchange, or Notes."

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  23. Too late, Google Calendar wins. by xant · · Score: 1

    I was the first one to download Sunbird 0.0.1alpha and try it out, and even use its integration with iCal resources. But it was crashy, and the features it had were flaky. I'm sure they've improved matters since then.

    But I'm not gonna use it now, because I've found Google Calendar. SMS support alone is worth the switch. It also has contacts integration so I can invite people to meetings from my contact list, and it has an upsell story: You can run Google Apps for Domains and get the PIM/Groupware features people rely on from Exchange, but managed and cheaper.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  24. Google Sync is the most important... by DTemp · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Syncing with google calendar is the most profound new feature to me. Having a calendar stored on one computer is no good to someone who moves between several computers. This is the same reason I use IMAP email, store my sent emails on the IMAP server so I can read even them from whereever I am, and why I DONT use gmail: because it doesnt support IMAP.

    Off topic: anyone hear any rumors about gmail supporting IMAP?

    1. Re:Google Sync is the most important... by DTemp · · Score: 1

      Oh right, and I also dont use gmail because I cant stand web-based email.

    2. Re:Google Sync is the most important... by Bardsley · · Score: 1

      I agree that syncing to google is probably the most important feature but I was using the previous release of sunbird (0.2 I think) with all my google calendar data. This is still possible in 0.5 but it still doesn't seem possible to add an event to google via Sunbird. Does anyone know how to do this? Am I missing something?

    3. Re:Google Sync is the most important... by Bardsley · · Score: 2, Informative

      Should have looked before I posted. Bidirectional access to Google Calendar from Sunbird is possible with the Provider for Google Calendar extension...

    4. Re:Google Sync is the most important... by Virgil+Tibbs · · Score: 1

      cheers... i was going to point this out but you have solved it for em and made my day :)
      that etension should be included by default though...

      --
      www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
    5. Re:Google Sync is the most important... by rvqbl · · Score: 1

      Just a quick clarification. I don't know if it technically syncs with Google. You can subscribe to Google calendars and show it in Sunbird, you can create events in Sunbird that will write to Google calendar, but it does not keep the information in Sunbird if you are offline and any changes that are made offline are not later transferred to Google calender. It is still handy, but only if you are online. Peace...

  25. Can it now track events, listed by date and time? by SydShamino · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...because it couldn't when I last used it in March.

    Seriously, I tried to organize my SXSW schedule using Sunbird.
    1. I added all playings of all movies at SXSW Film that I wanted to see into the SXSW online calendar.
    2. Then, I sync'd Sunbird to the online calendar.
    3. So that I could make local edits, I exported/reimported the calendar data as a local calendar.
    4. I looked at conflicts, etc., and determined which movies I could see on first showing versus catching reruns.
    5. When I had it about half done, I saved it and closed Sunbird.
    6. The next time I opened Sunbird, I discovered that various events had been shifted by 1 or 4 hours ahead or behind. I could find no way to set the time zone for these events to correspond to my local time zone, and I could not find a pattern between the events that had problems and those that didn't time shift.
    7. I tried to manually fix the failures, manually deleting the entries and recreating them locally. It didn't help.
    8. ???
    9. I gave up and used the crappy SXSW online tool, since I didn't want to sign up for a Google account and those were the only options.

    (FYI all online stuff I could find about this related to the DST shift, and told me to install Microsoft patches. All of those patches were already in place before I installed Sunbird or found any of these problems.)

    --
    It doesn't hurt to be nice.
  26. Re:Still Falls Short by defaria · · Score: 1

    Active Directory IS LDAP! I create LDAP Directories in TB's addressbook all the time. Granted you need to get through the front line help desk people to the LDAP people who know the appropriate LDAP magic words but it is indeed doable...

  27. Re:BFD by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

    According to the release notes, Lightning can send meeting invitations.

  28. Re:That's a pretty stupid number one priority by defaria · · Score: 1

    http://finchsync.com/ Can't sync... Bullshit!

  29. It's nice that the Mozilla suite... by akahige · · Score: 1

    ...of apps is making forward progress.

    Now all they need to do is to create a decent contact manager. And no, Thunderbird does not count as a contact manager, decent or otherwise.

  30. Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calendar by ssstraub · · Score: 1

    Why not use both? I have my Sunbird (Lightning, actually) syncing back and forth with Google Calendar so I get a real desktop client at home, but still can see my schedule online from anywhere.

    It's mentioned in the release notes, and you can get the extension here.

  31. Calendar Server by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 1

    If you're looking for an open source calendar server that works nicely with Sunbird, may I humbly recommend Citadel. It syncs up nicely with Sunbird via the webcal (DAV) standard, and also hosts a wonderful array of groupware features such as email, address books, instant messaging, forums, etc. And everything is available via a slick AJAX-style web interface (including that same calendar you're maintaining in Sunbird). Give it a try.

    --
    Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
  32. Re:Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calenda by xant · · Score: 1

    Serious question.. what do you use the desktop client for that you can't do online?

    One argument I always hear when I ask that question is "So I can use it when I'm not online." But let's be serious, you're probably online almost all of the time when you have a computer handy. And now I have an additional argument.. my Google Calendar is probably more accessible than an offline laptop simply because it can SMS me alerts, and I can SMS events back to it.

    I just don't see any reason to do the calendaring thing outside of a web browser, and I wonder why someone would.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  33. Come on! Years of development for a calendar soft! by nektra · · Score: 1

    How many programmers does it take to change a light bulb?

    A: "You're still thinking procedurally! A properly designed light bulb object would inherit a change method from a generic light bulb class!"

  34. like google calendar by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

    only it uses more space on your hard disk...

  35. All I'd like to do is by wysiwia · · Score: 1

    - managing my dates and tasks locally on my PC
    - synchronize these with my smart phone
    - possibly access dates and tasks of my family members (LAN)
    - possibly access web calendars (e.g. Google calendar)

    Can SeaMonkey/Lightning full fill these rather simple requirements?

    O. Wyss

    --
    See http://wyoguide.sf.net/papers/Cross-platform.html
  36. No, it really just can't. by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but you are both pedantic and wrong. I am well aware of the difference between Outlook and Exchange, and Sunbird cannot replace Outlook.

    Unless something has changed, Sunbird cannot perform the killer use case of Outlook+Exchange. Not even with CalDAV. And without that use case, Sunbird is useless as a groupware client.

    The use case is: User creates a new event, User selects invitees, Invitees' availability is displayed to the user, User clicks "AutoPick Next", System selects the next available timeslot where all invitees are available, User saves meeting, Invitees are emailed an invitation, Invitees select "Accept", "Decline", or "Propose new time", System tracks invitees' responses.

    The steps in italics I do not believe to be supported in Sunbird. I would be happy to be proven wrong, but to my knowledge, Sunbird Just Can't Do That. Until it can, it is only a calendar for single users.

    I'm sorry if this message came off as a little irritable, but frankly I'm irritated that when I post a response to a question that asks about Exchange vs. Sunbird, I get a half dozen responses about how Exchange is a server app and Sunbird is a client. That may be true, but please explain to me how that should change my answer.

    As far as I can tell, all it should change is 's/Exchange/Outlook/g', because Sunbird (or Thunderbird+Lightning) doesn't replace Outlook any more than it replaces Exchange. In my mind, the client vs. server detail doesn't warrant a smarty-pants response. I'm pretty sure all of you knew what I was talking about.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  37. Re:Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calenda by swv3752 · · Score: 1

    Automatically import email calendar invites? Send email calendar invites from your work account? Pop up reminders for meetings.

    For my private life, I use Gcal, but for work I need something a bit more.

    And yes, I use Thunderbird/Lightning in an Outlook/Exchange environment.

    --
    Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  38. Re:BFD by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    I once believed that career success meant nobody could tell you how to dress or what time to be where.

    I still believe that, but extend it to include, "nobody can require you to use Word, Exchange, or Notes."

    So by your standards a tramp drunk on meths at eleven in the morning would be a career success.
    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  39. No offline support by renoX · · Score: 1

    Google Calendar synchronization support with no offline possibility is quite useless I think, if I have to go online I'll use directly Google calendar..

  40. Re:BFD by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    >So by your standards a tramp drunk on meths at eleven in the morning would be a career success.

    If he believes he is, then sure. Why not? The burden on society thing? The "drugs are illegal and this makes him an outlaw" thing? If that's how far to the extreme you have to go to shoot me down, I think you just told me I'm right :-)

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  41. Re:Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calenda by xant · · Score: 1

    You've got me on one of those three.. I can send calendar invites from my work account (which is forward to Gmail) but for some reason they don't seem to work for outlook users. The reverse direction does work, and I add items to my calendar that originated in outlook, all the time.

    I get reminders by SMS or, if I have calendar open, browser alert. (But usually it's SMS.)

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  42. Re:Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calenda by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell - sunbird only works with gcalendar and this new extension when you are online. which makes me ask, what is the point?

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  43. Re:Just sync Sunbird/Lightning with Google Calenda by ssstraub · · Score: 1

    This is true to a point. The main difference is the latency of a click on a desktop app is (for all practical purposes) zero and is greater than zero for a browser app, often by quite a bit. When I'm in a clicking frenzy, I don't want to wait for the AJAX to load if I can avoicd it, and with a native app, I can. In time, this issue will go away. For most people, this probably isn't an issue even now--You have to click fast enough to notice.

    There is also the annoying issue that I have more than one google account, and my gf uses yet another google account, so there is a constant log in/log out battle going on, where Thunderbird and the associated Google Calendars are always logged in to the account(s) that are set up in it. I'm not sure of any work around for this, and logging out and back in all the time, even with saved passwords is very annoying.

  44. Now I've gotta Google by flydpnkrtn · · Score: 1

    Because I'm interested in web server architectures that scale I have to Google everything you mentioned in your post :-)

    If I could I'd mod you up man... that's a lot of info on Java servlets you crammed into one post.