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Quality Open Source Calendaring / Scheduling?

Jim R. Wilson writes "In past jobs, I've used Microsoft Outlook/Exchange, Novell Groupwise, and Google Calendar for handling business appointments. I'm sorry to say it, but I have yet to see a rival to Microsoft's scheduling features. On Slashdot I have occasionally read rumblings that there are better open source email and calendaring solutions out there. Can anyone substantiate this claim? What are the OSS alternatives? Can any compete with Microsoft's resource scheduling?"

8 of 492 comments (clear)

  1. no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    no

  2. Could you help us help you? by narrowhouse · · Score: 5, Informative

    Jim,

    I hate to say this, but unless you give us a few reasons why some of the solutions you have looked at are not sufficient I doubt you will get any meaningful response.It's a pretty common problem when people ask for an open source replacement for a program they have used and were reasonably happy with.

    Without some starting point for comparison you will just get dozens of stories about how product X works fine for them.

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  3. CalDav by jlittle · · Score: 5, Informative

    CalDav is the wave of the future, with most calendaring clients supporting it (but not MS), and many servers commercial and otherwise also supporting it (Zimbra). The real coming out party was the commercial release of both OSX Server 10.5 and the client, which have both ends. But guess what, the server is open source: calendar server can be gotten and put on any platform. If you want something today, Zimbra or OSX Server are there for the taking. RedHat has a Messenging product coming out based on Zimbra for this exact purpose.

  4. What about Darwin Calendar Server? by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apple provides a nice calendar server with Leopard server - but it works with Linux (any anything else running Python) as well...

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  5. Not really by initdeep · · Score: 5, Informative
    Zimbra http://www.zimbra.com/


    Scalix http://www.scalix.com/


    are the two closest, but honestly, neither is a perfect replacement.

  6. Re:Haven't found much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sure about public folders?

    http://www.microsoft.com/exchange/evaluation/topquestions.mspx?wt.svl=overview

    Q. What is happening with Public Folders?
    A.

    Public Folders are included and supported in Exchange Server 2007. Microsoft has communicated that future releases of Exchange Server may not include public folders. If you use Public Folders, read the Exchange Team Blog on the topic of public folders for more guidance.

  7. Re:What features? by jimbojw · · Score: 5, Informative

    In other words, what features do you use in MS products that you haven't found in the free/open source applications?

    Sorry I wasn't clear enough in my initial question. What really impresses me about Outlook/Exchange is when you go to schedule a meeting, it allows you to see when all the participants, rooms and resources (like projectors) are available in a horizontal chart of sorts. People who are busy are marked off in blue, out of office is purple, etc. To find a time that works for everyone, you just scan across until you see a vertical bar of white (everyone free), or try to minimize conflicts.

    I don't know of MS holds a patent on the UI, but I haven't seen it anywhere else. Also, with respect to calendaring, in Outlook you can open up several calendars (yours and others) side-by-side in order to see who's free when. It's a pretty simple bit of eye candy, but nonetheless, I've only seen it in Outlook.

  8. Re:Haven't found much by greginnj · · Score: 5, Informative

    Pencils are dangerous in space.

    1. They are more pointed than pens, and thus more likely to puncture things that shouldn't be punctured.

    2. They create dust, which is a no-no on space missions. Wood pencils (obviously) from sharpening. Mechanical pencils are prone to have their leads break off, and float about. More to the point, the operating mechanism of both kinds of pencil is to rub off graphite dust onto paper. Some of this dust may be released by smudging.

    Remember that graphite, and thus graphite dust, is conductive. Do you want to take the risk of conductive graphite dust causing a component to short out?

    Why do you want NASA missions to fail???? ( oblig bit o funny )

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