here are some options that Joel Spolsky said didn't fit his needs:• Trumba• Kiko• 30 Boxes• Yahoo! Calendar• Spongecelli'm really just looking to take my outlook calendar and make it mobile because i want to move away from having to copy a .pst file every time i want to take my stuff somewhere. i use outlook for e-mail and calendar stuff right now but i want to get to using imap on my mail server running with thunderbird and a web-based calendar that syncs to a desktop program.any opinions?
2/9/2006 12:36:00 AM
do you have an exchange server running? if so why dont you use web access? if no exchange server set one up http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLG,GGLG:2005-52,GGLG:en&q=mobile+outlook second link looks interesting[Edited on February 9, 2006 at 1:58 AM. Reason : ]
2/9/2006 1:56:41 AM
another one: http://www.airset.com/i guess i'll have to just try them all out next week
2/10/2006 2:07:55 AM
kiko has some cool stuff if you do a lot of daily appointments & meetings (cool drag and drop features). however, it does take a sec to start up. i use 30boxes to just keep my basic shyte straight, it has a pretty neat interface (the 1 box to input all your data). I like to keep it simple.
2/10/2006 11:15:29 AM
i like 30 boxes. it will be even better when they finish with all the features.
2/10/2006 10:13:20 PM
i think i'm set on airset30boxes is the best but it isn't finished so a lot of key features like sync are missing
2/15/2006 4:35:06 PM
30boxes released its APIhttp://30boxes.com/blog/index.php/2006/02/22/the-api-is-here/this could get entertaining
2/22/2006 3:21:20 PM
you can sync yahoo calendar and contacts and notes and tasks with outlook using intellisync for free
2/22/2006 3:47:59 PM
yeah i don't really like yahoo calendar.we'll see what is best after google's CL2 comes out to the public and the 30boxes API gets a chance to be used by other people.
2/27/2006 4:21:27 AM
From what I've seen, there are two things you are looking for:1) Mobile Calendar.2) Ability to locally store your inbox.If this isn't for work, I would recommend setting up Remote Desktop. Otherwise...The first can be accomplished with an Exchange Server, as synapse pointed out. If you have a laptop, you can alternatively setup a VPN connection to your workplace and go from there. Web Outlook works decently, but doesn't have nearly the navigation or speed as Outlook. I use it ONLY when I want to check inbox email and don't want to mess with the Calendar/Task List/Sorted email/etc.The second is a bit tricker. With a VPN connection, you shouldn't have to worry about this. You should be able to archive to network space and be done with it. Otherwise, I'd recommend getting a flash drive and manually backing up to that as needed. Autoarchiving on either option isn't a good idea ... it has a ton of problems.
2/27/2006 6:35:09 AM
http://brickyard.nscu.edubitch at people on campus to give you an account as 2006 started a long ass time ago
2/27/2006 11:09:45 AM
this is my fav - http://calendarhub.com/
2/27/2006 11:19:20 AM