this post was submitted on 01 Sep 2023
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I'm looking for a google calendar replacement that isn't nextcloud, has a descent mobile app with widgets, and authentication built in. I've seen plenty of recommendations via search but i'd like to hear what you personally use and what you like about it.

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[–] Treczoks@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

I use "radicale" as calendar server for the family. Thunderbird can talk to it directly, on Androidd, I use DAVX5 to sync them.

[–] tiwenty@jlai.lu 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I use Baikal, but it seems Nextcloud is a popular solution.

[–] observantTrapezium@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

Baikal is lean and great. I use it and sync to my Thunderbird (using the TbSync extension) and Android phone (using DAVx⁵).

[–] Anafroj@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm going to pass for the crazy person around, but so be it : cron.

Cron can be easily configured to send mails (MAILTO variable when using standard cron), provided sendmail is available on the system. If a command called by cron outputs anything, it will send a mail with the content, which is useful by itself to warn when something goes wrong with a cron task, but also allows to do things like this:

0 9 28 9 * echo birthday John

It's really easy to get used to the syntax, it's just going from more precise to less precise, so it's "minute, hour, day, month, *". The last one can usually be ignored (it's the day of the week, I must have used it twice in my life). So here, "0 9 28 9", you read it backward and it gives : September, 28th, 9:00. Piece of cake when you get a bit of practice. And cron is everywhere, so no need to install anything. Although, since I run it on my laptop, I use fcron, which has a nice feature to run ASAP tasks which should have ran if the computer was not shut down. This way, I never miss an alert.

I use it for recurring notes (like birthday, paperwork, house cleaning tasks, holidays, etc), but also as reminders of specific dates when I expect a delivery, have a meeting, etc. For the most important messages, I make it use a script that will make a destkop notification (with notify-send) and have a voice read the message (with mimic). And of course, I also use it to actually launch programs. :)