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Entourage X has the best calendar I've
seen.
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technofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and
commentaries, continuously available online since
1983
T h e R o a
d L e s s T r a v e l e
d
Calendar and scheduling programs for OS X: iCal, Entourage
and Now Up to Date
April 9, 2003
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, The Post-Standard
Good personal information managers are
hard to find, especially for Mac OS X. Like it or not, OS X
is the "baby" among modern operating systems, and
many programmers simply haven't had much time to come
up with Mac OS X calendar and scheduling software.
But you have at least three good ones to
choose from, including one that's totally free. I
should warn you, however, that the free personal
information manager, Apple's iCal, might turn out to be
unusable if you're like me and have trouble reading
calendar data because of the pastel colors used. These
color schemes make the entries barely readable.
iCal (www.apple.com) is a wonderful
program, very easy to use and perfectly integrated into the
way modern Macs work. One-time events are a simple matter
and recurring events such as birthdays and anniversaries
could hardly be easier to enter. Notification is easy, too,
and iCal can send an e-mail notice to your home or office
e-mail address, too.
Another plus: You can add someone
else's iCal calendar to yours with a few clicks. Check
http://icalshare.com for
more than 1,000 shareable calendars of sports schedules, TV
listings, holidays and more.
Until iCal gets fixed, you might want to
consider either Entourage X or Now Up to Date.
Entourage X is Microsoft's powerful
e-mail/calendar program for OS X. You can get it as part of
Office X (when I last checked, it was $300 at student
discount, which applies for a student of any age in the
family) or as a separate program for about $90. (Site:
www.microsoft.com/mac.)
Entourage X has the best calendar
I've seen, whether for Mac OS X, Windows or Linux.
It's fairly easy to link calendar items to messages and
other PIM items -- you click a toolbar button and choose
what kind of link you want to make, then follow the
prompts.
Notifications work well, too. In both
iCal and Entourage X, you are notified of events and
appointments even when the main program isn't running.
Entourage has no direct way to send notifications by
e-mail.
The third personal information manager I
tried, Now Up to Date & Contact from PowerOn Software
(www.poweronsoftware.com),
is a heavy-duty calendar and scheduling system that adds a
superb contact manager. It's available for Macs and
Windows PCs. (The Mac version runs on both the discontinued
Mac OS and the new Mac OS X.) The program costs $120 for
the downloadable version and up to $150 for a boxed
version.
The software is ultimately
disappointing. I found no way to integrate Now Up to Date
with either Mac OS X Mail or Entourage, the two e-mail
applications I use on my Mac. This is not a major flaw if
you don't need an integrated PIM, but it keeps the
otherwise excellent Now Up to Date program out of the
running for anyone whose life runs on e-mail.
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