Sunbird 0.5 available for download
Sunbird 0.5 available for download. Mozilla-style ease-of-use for your calendar. Sunbird™ lets you manage your schedule easily, and store it where you want to.
Sunbird 0.5 available for download. Mozilla-style ease-of-use for your calendar. Sunbird™ lets you manage your schedule easily, and store it where you want to.
This extension allows Sunbird and Lightning to read and write events to a Google Calendar.
The Mozilla Calendar Project today released the latest versions of their flagship software, Mozilla Sunbird and Lightning 0.3.1. This is a maintenance release containing the recent changes to Daylight Savings Time in various countries around the world, and is recommended for users of all previous Mozilla Calendar software.
GCALDaemon is an OS-independent Java program that offers two-way synchronization between Google Calendar and various iCalalendar compatible calendar applications. GCALDaemon is primarily designed as a calendar synchronizer but it can also be used as a Gmail notifier, Gmail contact importer and RSS feed converter.
What Sunbird says about itself:
The Sunbird Project is a cross platform standalone calendar application based on Mozilla’s XUL user interface language.
Hello everyone
Today I made some research around new Google Calendar. Calendaring is a nice thing and I use it every day to write down my work hours and things I need to do. I have been using Mozilla Calendar extension, Sunbird and Lightening, too. They are all same in its basics.
When I was trying to import calendar from Google, I found some noticable things. But first-things-first. How to import? This way:
Mozilla Corp. is preparing to release updates to its calendar applications for Sunbird and Lightning early next month. Before then, developers hope to get “lots of eyeballs” on it by inviting users to participate in Calendar Community Test Day on Tuesday, August 22. The event will get under way at 12:00 UTC, with at least four moderators available on the #calendar-qa channel on irc.mozilla.org throughout the day to answer questions. Testing will fall into three main categories:
* Bugzilla testing to ensure that fixed bugs are indeed fixed
* Litmus testing to test basic functionality in Sunbird and Lightning
* Usability testing to be sure the final product meets Mozilla Calendar’s goals and standards.