Mozilla.org Announces Open Source Calendar 265
Mike Potter writes: "According to an article at Mozillazine.org, Mozilla.org will be releasing an open source calendar. "Thanks to an extremely generous offer of code from OEone Corporation, the new calendar project will have a significant codebase to start from. OEone make Penzilla, an operating environment for internet devices based on Linux and Mozilla. ... For more information on, and a technical description of Penzilla Calendar, see OEone's website." I think we'll be seeing a lot more applications built with Mozilla, now that its stable." Mundane as it may sound, with tabs in place (and behaving more sanely), a good calendar is probably my most-wished-for Mozilla feature. The screenshots certainly bode well for this one.
Now after this, all mozillla needs is.... (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Now after this, all mozillla needs is.... (Score:1)
On a side note... mozilla's bloat factor is getting pretty high. I'm glad you can get the source and compile it browser only.
Pat
Re:Now after this, all mozillla needs is.... (Score:1)
Works very well with Exchange.
Re:Now after this, all mozillla needs is.... (Score:2)
Open Source Calendar? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Open Source Calendar? (Score:1)
On second thought, this would suck, cuz you'd never get a weekend off.
HMMM.....
Re:Open Source Calendar? (Score:2)
You need to make your week three days long. Friday, Saturday and Sunday. It would be great if Friday could start at 5:00pm, too.
Re:Open Source Calendar? (Score:2)
next step.... (Score:1)
Re:next step.... (Score:1)
This is a mail from XXX , we need you to do this with your calender.
Re:next step.... (Score:1)
So if an open source version were being used, one would have an admin set up the permissions such that users could not modify them.
feature creep? (Score:4, Insightful)
NOT Feature Creep - will be post-1.0 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:feature creep? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:feature creep? (Score:2)
One of the principle goals of Mozilla is to produce an application platform for developing applications just like this. It goes without saying that the more disparate kind of apps you have hammering away on this platform, the more robust and stable it becomes.
So if it does slow things down, it's only because it's finding bugs that would otherwise bite later on.
Re:feature creep? (Score:2, Redundant)
b) The browser is the only part of Mozilla that is required. Everything else can be turned off during the install.
So what's the problem?
Mod Parent (Score:1)
Re:feature creep? (Score:1)
Just so long as it isn't so integrated that an 'invitation to a meeting' that gets automatically added to your calendar will run an accompanying script in the process.
I'd really hate it if this 'Look-Out' work-alike managed to provide work-alike functionality for malware.
PIM's on Computers not such a good idea (Score:3, Insightful)
But my main gripe is the interactivity of the new PIM's, like Outlook Express in Office XP. They allow one's data to be inspected by one's superior, and make for an invasion of personal space by the hierarchy at work.
One of my girlfriends Joselle had to cancel a date with me because her boss inserted a work appointment at the same time, without notice, and she had to obey.
The only way to be truly provate and control your schedule is to have it written down privately. Computers allow for the domination of one's calendar by the digital elite.
Re:PIM's on Computers not such a good idea (Score:1)
Re:PIM's on Computers not such a good idea (Score:2)
Re:PIM's on Computers not such a good idea (Score:2)
Re:PIM's on Computers not such a good idea (Score:1)
Computers don't run out of ink.
>>> But my main gripe is the interactivity of the new PIM's, like Outlook Express in Office XP. They allow one's data to be inspected by one's superior, and make for an invasion of personal space by the hierarchy at work.
It being a M$ product not withstanding, I rather like the idea of my boss(es) being able to check my tasks and my progress without having to bug me with meetings and phone calls, and just let me work.
>>> One of my girlfriends Joselle had to cancel a date with me because her boss inserted a work appointment at the same time, without notice, and she had to obey.
Sorry to hear that, but that's what bosses tend to do.
>>> The only way to be truly provate and control your schedule is to have it written down privately. Computers allow for the domination of one's calendar by the digital elite.
I disagree. Collaboration, like this, is necessary to be more efficient in the workplace. Your boss(es) having the ability to check your tasklist and schedule can alleviate confusion and conflicts that would only lead to more stress for you and everyone else. Really, it's a good thing.
Wow (WARNING: OFFTOPIC) (Score:1, Offtopic)
PIM's vs. paper... very interesting, but what really caught my attention in your post was this little gem:
Wow, not only did you have a date scheduled, but you've got more than one girlfriend!Man, being a geek ain't what it used to be. I guess Scott Adams was right [stanford.edu]
I just did a search (Score:3, Insightful)
Do we really need mozilla to include yet another thing which we can just find somewhere else? Before we know it, Mozilla will include its own kernel! And they are wondering why 1.0 is soooo far off?
Re:I just did a search (Score:2, Interesting)
Many are based on things like php and zope, requireing both a webserver and application server software. A number of them require mysql or other database software. Many are entirely web based (from my experience limits usability for calendar software), a few others are only commandline. And because we are talking about freshmeat, I would bet a large portion of that 131 projects are still in an early stage of developement and simply not usable.
Only 10 have a popularity rating above 0.00%
Only 7 have a viability rating above 0.00%
Mozilla is/will be both stable and platform independant. It will not require a database back end. It also probably will not require you to view your calendar in simple html.
Re:I just did a search (Score:2, Insightful)
Linux itself has 21%. This for an OS that has a new version every three weeks or so (not counting the Alan Cox "Hi I'm a Juggernaut and Can Compose Kernel Diffs In My Head" releases). It says that vitality is "based on age of project, number of announcements and date of last announcement." So if I don't announce every CVS checkin my project isn't healthy?
Bah. Freshmeat's vitality system has GOT to be revamped. I'm not saying it's not a potentially good measure of a project, but I think it's way off.
Aside from that, though, yeah. If more people decided to work WITH existing projects to make them BETTER instead of setting off to build "the best darn CD player there is for X11," we might have less projects, but the overall quality of each would be better.
Re:I just did a search (Score:2)
(JK about the second part, but I really wish sourceforge out have seperate sections for projects with stable branches, and ones without, but then again, thats what freshmeat is for)
Re:I just did a search (Score:2)
Personally, I have Apache, Jakarata/Tomcat and Postgresql running on my home LAN. I really have better things to do than to install php or zope and mysql and have to administer those as well. I'm willing to bet this is the same opinion of some system admins in a corporate environment.
Despite the "platform independance" of apache/mysql/php, A windows user simply will not go to the trouble. Additionally, I do not think its a good idea for a workstation (or a win95 box) to be running server software.
Of course, I'm speaking as a single user. When you get into groupware, things change. The web-based systems probably work much better in that case, and if you already have apache/php/mysql, it isnt that much trouble to get most of those systems working.
Simple said, non-webbased systems like Korganizer work better for me. A calendar integrated with mozilla would work even better since I could use it on windows if I ever have to.
Re:I just did a search (Score:1)
STOP GIVING THEM IDEAS!
why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:1)
Why doesn't this company donate the source for this calendar to something with more reach like a windowing environment? I'd *love* to have a calendar nicely integrated with the whole computer, not just the web browser. It'd also do a lot to convince more novice users that Linux is a friendly environment.
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:4, Insightful)
First of all, I think they're donating to Mozilla because it's built on Moz technology (XUL, etc.). But since it will presumably be GPL (like the rest of Mozilla), there's no reason Gnome or KDE can't use it. What does it matter if it was donated "to" them? It's GPL, Gnome/KDE are GPL, if it's good, put it in there!
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:2)
Gerv
why not gnome or kde instead? XUL is why. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:1)
It makes sense to integrate an e-mail application with a web browser:
Now, it makes sense to integrate a a calendar application with an e-mail client, for obvious reasons.
You might say that what we need is a set of interfaces so *different* applications can coexist. But that is what Mozilla is! Everything is a component providing a set of functions (exported via XPCOM) to the rest of mozilla.
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:2)
Mozilla is not just a browser. The purpose of Mozilla is to provide a higher quality software base for the Netscape Communications Suite, that's why the Mozilla source was opened in the first place. A communications suite certainly has need of a calendar app, and therefore this third party add-on does add value to the Mozilla package.
It wasn't given to KDE or Gnome directly because it wasn't designed for KDE or Gnome. And why would it be? OEone is a company, and companies want their product to be available to the maximum number of people possible. Mozilla targets almost 100% of desktops, more than any other software I know of. KDE is used on maybe 1% of desktops. I don't think it's any mystery why a company would design their software to work with Mozilla rather than KDE.
It was extremely gracious and generous of OEone to release the source to their code. It is a gift to the community! We should say thank you, and if it isn't useful to you, either do the work to make it useful or shut the hell up.
If this is the kind of attitude companies are met with when they decide to open their source code, is it any wonder so many companies don't?
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:2)
I know there are countless users of open source software that don't write code, I'm one of them. I realized that I had 2 choices when it came to getting Linux to do exactly what I want, either find someone who can code and get them to do the work, or learn to code and do it myself. I chose to learn to code, so I bought some books and I'm struggling through it. Sure it's tiresome to hear "write it yourself", but it's more tiresome to hear people bitching about something that's being given to them for free! I'm tired of listening to all these pathetic whiners saying "why'd they do it that way or not do it this way and why doesn't it have this feature..." The vast majority of the code is produced by people working on their own time and for their own reasons, and they provide their code to the rest of the world for free just because they are cool guys. They certainly don't do it to support a bunch of 1337 h4x0rs whos only contribution to the community is spewing flames at Windows users!
I'm not suggesting that you or the other guy are that bad, but Christ, show some fucking gratitude when somebody gives you something!
Re:why not give this to gnome or kde instead? (Score:2)
I have one problem with this statement, and that is the use of the word "need". It treats Linux like a business, which it isn't. SuSE and Red Hat are businesses, and if you're looking for somewhere to suggest features, those are likely excellent places to start. I suppose that would be the third option to the two I mentioned before. It would certainly be nice to have a better way to address the needs of the average user. I would love to see a site where I could donate money for a feature, and other people who wanted that same feature could donate also, until the project is worth enough for someone to take it on. I recall an article on /. a while back that brought up this idea, and I have seen developer sites with messages posted to the effect of "I will pay someone $3000 if they can add [feature] to [project]" (unfortunately I can't remember where I saw that and I haven't run across anything like it recently).
I would even be interested in starting a site to do this from, but I don't have the resources to do it myself. Initial investment would include a server(s) that can at least pretend to handle the initial slashdoting when the service is opened, and some cash to open an account with a descent interest rate. My plan is this: the donations are made by [check, credit card, paypal, whatever] and held in this interest bearing account. When a project is completed, the triumphant coder get's a check equal to the donations and the site keeps the interest to cover overhead. Will it work? I don't know. It depends on how popular the service becomes. Worst case would be that people don't choose to use it, next worst is the site has to take a small percentage of the reward to help cover costs.
I worked for a company a while back that was a facilitator for 1031 delayed exchanges for aircraft, exchange meaning trade for like item, like trading one plane for another (you could also do this with houses and other big ticket items). The delayed exchange allowed you to sell the plane and keep that money tax free for the purchase of another plane within a year (as I recall, I was just doing data entry). The money had to be held in escrow by a third party (the facilitator) in order for it to be tax free, but the facilitator requirement was removed a few years ago. This particular company's fee was one quarter of one percent (.25%) of the amount held.
We wouldn't need office space, as the servers could be in my house (my lines are capable of 6M DSL, but my wallet isn't :( , another reason I can't go it alone on this). If anyone's seriously interested in something like this, drop me a line. I read all responses to my /. posts, the email above is valid (save /.'s anti-spam mangling) and the link on my user page will give you my daytime phone number (ask for Pete). If you'd rather steal my idea and do it yourself, go for it. All I ask is that you send a thank you my way, it doesn't even have to be publicly acknowledged.
I would love to see Linux dominate the desktop as well, and that's where my fledgling hacking skills are aimed. The "code it yourself" response is a direct result of so many coming to open source expecting to get something for nothing. That isn't what it's about, a contribution is still required for everything to work smoothly, but that contribution doesn't have to be monetary. I haven't seen the statement that "linux is only free if your time is worthless" lately, but it's still equally valid.
Arg. (Score:1)
So much for reading the article (Score:1)
An *excellent* calendar (Score:2, Redundant)
Korganizer has alarms, ical import, html export, kmail integration, and more. And it isn't massively bloated by Mozilla things like XUL, XPCOM and it's nasty brethren.
Some screenshots:
http://korganizer.kde.org/screenshots/main.gif
http://korganizer.kde.org/screenshots/event.gif
http://korganizer.kde.org/screenshots/preferenc
http://korganizer.kde.org/screenshots/webexport
http://korganizer.kde.org/screenshots/find.gif
Use it enjoy it, and contribute to it.
Re:An *excellent* calendar (Score:2)
Re:An *excellent* calendar (Score:2)
In terms of functionality, I didn't find it too impressive either: limited drag-and-drop functionality, little groupware functionality, little web integration, lots of annyoing dialog boxes.
KOrganizer is s nice looking, basic organizer. But as far as I'm concerned, it isn't the ultimate organizer by a long shot. A calendar add-on to Mozilla reaches more people and takes up less space. I don't know how good the OEone calendar is, but it certainly makes a lot of sense.
Re:An *excellent* calendar (Score:2)
Re:An *excellent* calendar (Score:2)
That should be all that's required.
In other news... (Score:1, Redundant)
In addition to MozCalander, and MozOffice, the Mozilla organization has annouced MozSink, an Open Source replacement for the Kitchen Sink(tm). It is believed that this could revolutionize Open Source development.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
I wondered when Emacs would get embedded in Mozilla ;-)
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
A calendar? (Score:1)
Re:A calendar? (Score:2, Informative)
As for browser/calendar integration, I think it may be more associated with the email client than the browser.
Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:2, Interesting)
13 moon positions and 20 sun positions over 13 moon cycles that are each 28 days in length. Which also happens to be the cycle which most females who are 'regular' have their menstruation periods by. This was the calendar system of the Mayans and happens to be the only system which acurately measures the procession of the Equinoxes - which has a much larger periodicity than most people think about....
-shpoffo
Re:Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:2)
Re:Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:2)
Course, if you do believe that I'll gladly sell you a pencil that will take care of all of your problems and let you obtain a perfect state of zen. Say hi to Xenu for me, too.
Re:Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:2)
We do not know how events will unfold in the next few years, but we had already set a goal, summer 2004, as the final opportunity for establishing the Thirteen Moon Calendar Change Peace Plan. The strategy to accomplish this plan has also been prepared - the Campaign for the New Time. Through this Campaign we must now mobilize for the New Time of Peace.
While I share the view that alternative calendars should be supported, this is some of the stupidest claptrap I've seen! Thirteen Moon Calendar Change Peace Plan? Change to it, and we will forever rid the world of war? That must be one of the most escapist solutions I've seen! Apart from that whole "kiss your freedoms good-bye" stuff.
Re:Alternative Calendar Systems (Score:2)
A new calendar will make all the evil people in the world go away? Are we all going to hold hands, stand in a circle and sing hippie campfire songs too? I hope they plan on sedating the rest of the planet with whatever mind altering drugs they are on, because that's probably the only way their fantasy would have a slightest chance of ever getting off the ground. Peace and freedom are usually things that one has to fight for. Or as Mr. Jefferson put it "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants".
No, but thanks for playing (Score:2)
Would that be the 27.3 day sidereal Lunar month or the 29.5 day synodic Lunar month that you've got the length wrong for?
The ratio of the lunar month (either way you measure) to the year is an irrational number that changes as the moon's orbit recedes. Any calendar that makes a real attempt to follow both cycles won't be good for much except driving people nuts.
Re:No, but thanks for playing (Score:2)
That being said, there are potentially legitimate calendars that we ought not to fully ignore that are not the Gregorian. But there are more legitimate ways of pointing that out.
The planet *doesn't* have a 13 lunar month year (Score:3, Insightful)
There aren't 13 lunar "months" in a solar year. Indeed there is no resonance between the two at all.
However from the linked site you seem only tenously acquainted with reality, apparently not enough to ever actually look at a lunar calendar.
Score: -3 (troll with pseudo-science & bad math!)
Excellent news (Score:1, Troll)
With Java being removed from Windows XP, and AOL poised to start including a Mozilla-based browser in their next version of Internet software, Mozilla could very well become the cross-platform development environment of choice. Keep an eye out for more Mozilla-based projects like this to come.
Re:Excellent news (Score:2, Interesting)
Mozilla on the other hand is:
1. A cross platform framework.
2. A browser application written on TOP of that framework.
Composer is an editor written on top of the framework
Messenger is a mailer written on top of the framework
Chatzilla is an IRC app written on top of the framework
This Calendaring is another app written on top of the framework.
You don't want one? then don't build it (or don't install it)
Each of these apps is a seperate beasie, that can run alone (without the others). Each is intended to do one thing, and do it well (Browsing, Web Editing, Mail, and PIM). But, in the unix style of things - they all talk to each other very effectivly. This is useful, as the apps working together creates a package that is more then the sum of the parts.
Mozilla is my favorite browser, Messanger is my favorite Mailer. I can take or leave the current incarnation of Composer.
As other apps start working well in the Mozilla environment, I will pick and choose those which I choose to use - but the fact they all work well together makes the suite more effective.
Don't front on people's ability to try and work on tools that they want. Mozilla is gonna be released for 1.0 when it is released, and this will likely not change that date by so much as a week. I want (as many people) a suite of internet tools that function well with each other, and make my working life easier, instead of having to spend the time finding the bloody setting that lets my e-mail program launch links to my preferred browser, or dealing with any of the other annoyances of trying to get two packages to work well together that were not designed from the beginning to do so....
Finish your fucking browser first! (Score:1)
Excellent! (Score:2)
Why?
We need the coordination ability of Outlook. I haven't seen anything for UNIX that compares. The ability to schedule meetings, observe schedules, and otherwise coordinate things is extremely useful. I would love to replace the Exchange Server and backend infrastructure with Free Solutions, but they aren't there yet.
I use IE and Mozilla as my browsers (IE 6 is pretty flaky), but I am stuck on a Windows 2000 desktop (albeit with 3-4 SSH sessions going) because of collaboration tools, accounting tools, and office tools.
This is a step in the right direction for those looking to build Free solutions.
Alex
Re:Excellent! (Score:1)
There really aren't many alternatives to Exchange right now. There's Notes, which is massive bloatware for most people - yes, it does more than just email/scheduling/calendaring, but most companies aren't interested in the "and more!" bit. Notes is pretty platform neutral though. There's also the Netscape/Sun iPlanet, which I'm unimpressed with from what I've seen.
Until there is a viable alternative to Exchange a lot of companies won't even bother looking at non-MS solutions. Because they're going to need the Exchange servers in place for what they currently use them for. Which means that you're stuck on an MS desktop. And a lot of CEO's and CIO's will question the value of moving servers off Windows as long as you still have to have some Windows servers.
Yes, these are all issues that can be worked around, but no matter what advocates might think, the reality is that this kind of thought process occurs daily and it's what keeps entrenhed companies entrenched. I know a lot of people will just say "well then they're stupid! Let them suffer for their own stupidity!" but realize that there are FAR more of "them" then there are of "us". You're living in the world of the unwashed masses, not vica versa.
It's not going to delay 1.0, it's going to bring something vitally needed to the table (eventually). It should be properly segmented out so as to avoid code bloat. This is a Good Thing.
Re:Excellent! (Score:1)
We need the coordination ability of Outlook. I haven't seen anything for UNIX that compares.
Okay, this doesn't completely compare to Outlook (yet), but keep an eye on the Horde Project [horde.org]. We've used IMP [horde.org] as our primary email system at my company for two years now. The horde project provides the framework for a system with integrated e-mail, a calendar, contacts management, and much more. Only a couple of modules are in active development, but the framework is pretty nice.. Should you want to lend a hand it's pretty easy to get involved.
I'm not affiliated with them in anyway, I just enjoy the fruits of their labor.
Shayne
Re:Excellent! (Score:2)
But times are tight. We had to cut back on our lunches, our perks, our benefits. But some bozo in another division thinks we all need to use Outlook Mail and Calendar instead of Netscape Mail and Calendar. So when we don't even have enough budget to authorize a lunch meeting with a client, we are going to rip out our Netscape servers and replace them with Outlook servers, and give everyone a new Dell/W2K box so sit alongside their Ultrasparcs.
This is so stupid even the M$ lackeys in IT are up in arms over it.
Oh well, since IT isn't going to "police" these machines, it's time to repartition.
Mac OS X (Score:2)
We had each programmer with a Linux box and Win2K box. Now it is hit or miss. If you need/want a dedicated server, its yours. Otherwise, you use a development server.
Mac OS X offers some interesting possibilities. One system, with a full BSD subsystem (adequate for us), as well as an Outlook Client and MS Office (coming to native OS X, "Real Soon Now"). When those are released, we're really going to consider Powerbooks instead of the Compaq Armada's with docking stations.
Giving everyone a full Unix desktop (complete with CVS client) as well as Office Productivity apps would be great.
VirtualPC would probably even be sufficient for the few Windows only apps that we need. (Test the site on IE/Windows, Quickbooks for my accounting, etc.).
I realize that if you are doing real Unix coding, you need the Sparcs. But for those of us that just need a Unix-like environment, it is a sufficient development solution.
Alex
Sigh... (Score:1)
Why should my web browser start an entire application platform? I just want to view web pages.
I think the term bloat is very soon to be replaced by 'mozilla'. Their next idea is probably a new desktop envirement... like we need another one (/kde/gnome/windowmaker)
However this the great about open source. Other can use one good part from one project (gecko) and make other things better and more integrated (galeon).
Does it mean the beast get bigger & slower? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:calendaring server (Score:2)
Step 1: Build Server
Step 2: Build clients which work with the server
Hey you forgot:
Step 3: Profit!
Re:BLATANT ADD but informative (Re:calendaring ser (Score:2)
But, make yourself heard. For starters, i'm not aware of vCal (or iCal and vCal) bugs. These are routed to the Core dev team here. (I'm on the Mac dev team)
The Motif 5.0 client is currently nearing ship date. The newly rebuilt team has been very hard at work, catching back with the Mac and Windows features. Previous CEO, here, had killed the Motif client a couple of years ago. He got replaced with a saner one that put the motif client back on track. Surely enough, because of the 1 year (or so) set back, they have been playing catch up for many months.
It's interesting to note that the Mac client 5.2 is pretty much the same as versionn 5.1, except it runs nativelly in Mac OS X (aka, carbonized). So, by now, the motif client really isn't that far behind.
(I'm not sure I should be saying all that, but I don't this this as armful).
The new Linux client (still Motif) is a hell of a lot better than it used to. Really. It brings it on par with version 5.0 of the mac client, plus some stuff from the 5.2.1 client. This includes the new connection manager stuff etc.
The web site doesn't comment on unreleased products, unless they publicly go beta. That's why there's no mention of the upcoming Linux client.
As for the vCal/iCal stuff, there's been much improvements in those core libs since the 4.x Motif client.
I beleive the Motif client will ship around december. And (get this!) there will be a public beta next tuesday! (I just learnt that myself).
By the way, please DO voice your concerns through the appropriate channels (see the web site).
I wont be much use in this regard, being on the mac dev team, as opposed to marketing or lord know what.
Why? (Score:1)
Nobody is going to force you to use it, or even download it, even if you do choose to use Mozilla as your browser. This component, like the mail/news, and all other components, will be optional.
while (software == free)
{
bitch();
moan();
}
Palm Conduits (Score:2, Interesting)
However this means, that an Palm conduit for pilot-link to synchronize the calendar and the address book of Mozilla would be essential.
Anyway, an conduit for the Mozilla address book would be great to have now. Does anyone know if there are plans to provide such an conduit?
How about a server? (Score:2, Informative)
Finally! (Score:1)
And no, Bill Gates was NOT born on Christmas!
Re:Finally! (Score:2)
Anyone know why they use Windows 3000 as a prison guard? It always locks up -- heh..
generous? (Score:2)
The week starts on monday! (Score:1)
I hope it's configureable.
(I want the week numbers displayed too!)
Do people read the articles anymore? (Score:3, Insightful)
What are all these complaints about bloat and never-will-be-released 1.0?
Free software is about freedom and choice. Stop discouraging side projects just because you don't like it.
*ducks* (Score:1)
In my office, we use both Win products and Linux/Unix. Windows basically owns most of the desktops in here, while *nix is on many of our servers. I use Linux for my workstation, and many of my coworkers are interested in trying it as well. The big stumbling block? Getting their mail into Evolution [ximian.com]/Kmail [kde.org]/Nutscrape/Mozilla as well as all their calendar items.
Outlook Express can export into a format that Evolution will read, but not if it's working from a
Projects like OEone or KOrganizer [kde.org] are great, but it's more difficult to get anyone to try them if it means losing all their old/current data.
Client side calendar, email, becoming useless (Score:2)
Calendaring server is what we need (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:2)
Not because I actually want that, but because we use a couple of proprietary programs (OSS versions are in development, but are still a year or two off, and we need software now) that link into MS Exchange.
I'm sure we're not the only ones.
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:2)
Visions appearing of redfaced Exchange administrators yelling "Your Lin-ux crap crashed my server!!" (What? You assumed the Exchange RPC server is robust?)
To my knowledge, all data in Exchange can be accessed through IMAP, LDAP, and HTTP (with some possible slight MS twists), and that would seem like the more fruitful approach (although it might not solve your particular problems).
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:2)
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:5, Informative)
These documents describe the iCalendar protocol, supported by Outlook and Palm Desktop, if I remember correctly.
Open source servers:
ReefKnot [reefknot.org] - still pre-alpha, developing a Perl iCal library and server implementation, looks like it has promise for the future.
WorldPilot [worldpilot.nl] - a Zope product, looks like it mostly works well, I'm looking forward to playing around with it. Anyone know of any others?
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:2)
Y'know what the really key piece is, that no one seems to be able to do? The ability to look at one of your peers' free/busy times, and find free slots to schedule events. Exchange does this by publishing, at the user's option, a version of the user's calendar that has the actual appointment data removed - you only see the blocks that are marked "busy" (and the blocks that are marked "tentative".
Regrettably, the RFC's for calendaring don't contain any standard protocol for doing this. There is an RFC for the data format, and the RFC for sending invites, RSVP's, etc... but we need one more RFC for a calendar access protocol.
I, for one, am happy to see that Mozilla will be gaining a calendar client. It will allow those of us working on the Citadel project to work with the Mozilla calendar client on all platforms, without having to reverse-engineer Microsoft's protocol.
Re:Calendaring server is what we need (Score:2)
iCal 3.5
A very dynamic calendar utility that allows you to post dates on your Intra/Internet. November 3rd, 2000 Shareware 1.5MB win32
http://www.brownbearsw.com/ical/icalpage.html [brownbearsw.com]
ICal 2.2
ICal is a popular X-based calendar and scheduler application. September 28th, 1998 256.6K
http://wwwinfo.cern.ch/pdp/ose/asis/products/TCL/
JetSync 1.0
Synchronizes your email, calendar (ical), memos and addresses and enables conduits for other types of data. February 22nd, 2000 GPL 213.3K
(I could not find the webpage but palm links to it)
http://mega.ist.utl.pt/~frias/jetsync/ [ist.utl.pt]
Syncal 0.5
Syncal reads a current ical calendar file, an archived ical calendar file, and a Palm(TM) device DateBook database. April 12th, 1999 GPL 26.1K
http://hopf.math.nwu.edu/syncal/ [nwu.edu]
lib ICAL 0.23
Lib ICAL is an open source implementation of the IETF's iCAL Calendaring and Scheduling protocols. March 28th, 2001 MPL 567.9K
http://hopf.math.nwu.edu/syncal/ [nwu.edu]
yes I think that there is a lack of servers you can build yourself
companys often want to run servers on their intranet and dont want to far it out to a outside source (palm sells alot of their enterprise servers which do syncing)
personally the only app that runs this well and gets messaging right has been Lotus Notes Domino
frankly it rocks and I am surprised that Ximian have not picked up on this they have a client but no server and the server is where the money is !!
regards
john jones
domino? (Score:2)
Open Source Calendar -- Finally! (Score:2)
Just in time, as I was sick of MicrosoftMonday(tm) also starting late. Further, their new licensing requires me to upgrade to MS2002 by Jan 1, 2002 at the latest.
Now, I can upgrade when I feel like it (I won't need 2002 until sometime late 2005). And since I'll have the source, I can add an extra hour to all my days, an extra day to all my months, and find a work-around to my birthday (so it only happens once every 3 years).
Open Source Rules!
:)
Open Source Calendar? (Score:2)
Yum! I want one for my wall!
-Kasreyn
P.S. YES, THAT WAS A JOKE, YOU SICK FREAKS.
Screenshots mirror (Score:2)
calendar.jpg [mac.com]
calendar_add_event.jpg [mac.com]
calendar_day_view.jpg [mac.com]
calendar_week_view.jpg [mac.com]
wordp.jpg [mac.com]
Calendar -- How...appropriate... (Score:2)
Shades of grey (Score:2)
Readers: Yay! Go open-source! We like calendars in web browsers!
Slashdot: Microsoft has announced they'll be putting a calendar app in Internet Explorer!
Readers: Boo! Fuck Microsoft, fuck them up their stupid asses! Browsers shouldn't have calendars! Browsers should browse! If everything was open-source, this wouldn't have happened!
Re:Nice... (Score:1, Redundant)
Remember, they chose the mozilla icon as a representation of its memory footprint, not because it's an industry dominator.
John
no challenge points for spotting the troll here... :-)
Re:Bacillus MicrosoftWordis (Score:2)
Re:Could someone please explain. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)