Google Calendar adds free/busy scheduling

Just stumbled across the button “Check guest and resource availability” when adding a new appointment in Google Calendar. Sure enough, when clicked, a nice little window pops up that allows you to find slots of free time in common across invitees. Not sure if this is available across all of Google Calendar or if this is a Google Apps Premium feature (I’ve had imurdock.com in GAFYD for a while now and upgraded over the weekend). One problem is immediately apparent though: It only appears to be checking the main calendar (I actually have several calendars—work, home, travel, etc.). This is a problem with the SMS interface too, which only appears to operate on the main calendar.

26 comments on “Google Calendar adds free/busy scheduling

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  2. Ian Murdock Post author

    Alas, my video card doesn’t seem up to it. Xgl/Compiz is so slow that it’s unusable. AIGLX/Beryl is much better, but still too pokey to be usable beyond experimenting. Avant Window Navigator looks interesting, but it dumps core when I try to run it. (I have an IBM ThinkPad X31 with a video card lspci reports as “ATI Technologies Inc Radeon Mobility M6 LY”. The ATI driver doesn’t seem to support this particular chipset, so I’m using the open source driver, and I assume that’s the source of my problems. But that’s just a guess. Prove me wrong by showing me how to get this to work! :-) -ian

  3. aias

    aiglx and compiz are working fine here.

    i have the same video card and use the open source driver, too.

    instead of xgl or beryl, compiz with aiglx is “quite fast” on my laptop.

    here is my xorg.conf:

    Section “ServerLayout”
    Identifier “X.org Configured”
    Screen 0 “Screen0” 0 0
    InputDevice “Mouse0” “CorePointer”
    InputDevice “Keyboard0” “CoreKeyboard”
    Option “AIGLX” “true”
    EndSection

    Section “Files”
    RgbPath “/usr/share/X11/rgb”
    ModulePath “/usr/lib/xorg/modules”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/misc/”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/TTF/”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/Type1/”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/CID/”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/75dpi/”
    FontPath “/usr/share/fonts/100dpi/”
    EndSection

    Section “Module”
    Load “record”
    Load “extmod”
    Load “dbe”
    Load “dri”
    Load “glx”
    Load “xtrap”
    Load “freetype”
    Load “type1”
    EndSection

    Section “InputDevice”
    Identifier “Keyboard0”
    Driver “kbd”
    Option “XkbLayout” “de”
    Option “XkbRules” “xorg”
    Option “XkbModel” “pc105”
    Option “XkbVariant” “nodeadkeys”
    EndSection

    Section “InputDevice”
    Identifier “Mouse0”
    Driver “mouse”
    Option “Protocol” “IMPS/2”
    Option “Device” “/dev/misc/psaux”
    Option “ZAxisMapping” “4 5 6 7”
    EndSection

    Section “Monitor”
    Identifier “Monitor0”
    VendorName “Monitor Vendor”
    ModelName “Monitor Model”
    EndSection

    Section “Device”

    Option “XAANoOffscreenPixmaps” “true”
    Option “DRI” “true”
    Option “AGPMode” “2”
    Option “EnablePageFlip” “true”
    Option “AGPFastWrite” “false”

    Identifier “Card0”
    Driver “radeon”
    VendorName “ATI Technologies Inc”
    EndSection

    Section “Screen”
    Identifier “Screen0”
    Device “Card0”
    Monitor “Monitor0”
    DefaultDepth 24
    SubSection “Display”
    Viewport 0 0
    Depth 24
    Modes “1024×860”
    EndSubSection
    EndSection

    Section “Extensions”
    Option “Composite” “Enable”
    EndSection

    Section “DRI”
    Group 0
    Mode 0666
    EndSection

    ————————————————————————————————-

    i am using xorg-7.2 and xf86-video-ati-6.6.3.

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  5. Placid

    Is it me, or are these usual ‘feature stumbles’ that users of Google software frequently experience purely just that – a sumble, or is there more to it?

    A theory I have is that Google software products are designed to let you have more, at a certain time (whether it be after a time period of use, or frequency of use) – GMail is a classic example with its invite feature when it was closed beta.

    Interesting post however, thanks :)

  6. Albert Bicchi

    We must be willing to get rid of the life we’ve planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
    –Joseph Campbell

    This quote should not be taken as a defeat, but to always look back at the wonderful accomplishments that Debian has achieved at what it does best.

  7. cyberfra

    If the Debian father uses Ubuntu, does it mean the the beginning of the end for debian? Many clouds apparing to the sky, for me debian isnt only a distro, it is a idea

  8. Pietro

    Avant Window Navigator requires a composite manager, as is written in the install documentation, so probably the problem is you not having Beryl/Compiz, not the opensource drivers :)

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  13. Xoxe

    The Google Calendar is an excellent tool and as much or more than the ical of .mac with the gratuitous and very safe difference of to be as well as the text messages to mobile for remember an appointment is an excellent application.

    Ian Murdock uses Ubuntu! That horror! The world will finish! Oh, please, stop the demagoguery, until guru of the users of linux has his partition in Windows to play his counter strike, that is bad? perhaps to be the founder and creator of a distribution linux the cruifixer and forces to him to use always this distribution? We are criticizing just like what we tried to be conceited, the freedom of election. Oh… I congratulate Ian not to close itself in band nor to be a intolerant linux user, thing that is to be thankful and to admire.

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  15. Artemis3

    Some Debian users and developers are immature and stupidly childish. Ubuntu is a good distro, and has done in months what they failed to do in years. Those f*** u t-shirts and rabid anti ubuntu stance only makes them look worse. Its not like they are being forced to use it or anything, they might even ignore the changes and bug fixes. To each their own.

    I see many distros now using ubuntu instead of debian as a base. Clearly something is being done right in canonical; not to mention distrowatch; and the outstanding support in forums, chats and pages where you are not treated to the typical RTFM attitude of “certain” communities.

    I use Debian at work, and Ubuntu at home. Have used Debian since potato, one thing is clear: It will not conquer the desktop, Ubuntu will. Debian is perfectly fine in a server, but for end users, its so absurd, that it makes using a distro like slackware or gentoo look much simpler in comparison.

    So if you change your video card, do you do dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg and answer 20 unrelated questions or simply edit a single word in a single line at /etc/X11/xorg.conf ? Come on Debian fanatics, get a clue; this is not supposed to be a cult. Ubuntu / Canonical are helping the community a lot maintaining 2000+ packages with full time paid developers, What is this childish jealously?

    I congratulate Ian for staying true to his ideals and being of true help to the community. We are finally getting there.

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