Google Calendar may be the best time mangement and online scheduling tool available

In the mobile world filled with hotspots and wireless, you will be stuck if you continue to use an old fashioned calendar. I stopped using them years ago. Maybe I’ve been lazy and I just never got into the whole “writing things down” habit. In the past I relied heavily on Microsoft Outlook’s awesome calendaring and appointment scheduling functionality. In those years I was forced to rely on Microsoft products because the companies I worked for rolled it out as the company standard.

These days I’m a convert to Open Source software models because I believe in the principles underlying this movement. So for my desktops operating systems I’ve switched to Ubuntu Linux, for my office and productivity applications I’ve switched to OpenOffice, which runs brilliantly across Windows, Linux and Mac OS X (my current primary desktop OS)!

Since moving my email to Mozilla Thunderbird I’ve had to let go of an integrated email and calendaring solution. And after experimenting with the awful standalone Mozilla calendar project called Sunbird, I decided to continue looking for alternatives. Any Outlook user will understand the exceptional flexibility of having integrated email and calendar software. So for a while I even relied on my cellphone calendar, and this again was so tedious to keep updating. And of course I didn’t have a way to schedule recurring appointments – this is a key requirement for anyone focussed on increasing their productivity. I do a Tai Chi class every Monday and Wednesday, 6-7pm and I have other routines I’ve built into my weekly and monthly schedule, like Toastmasters, which is important for me to reflect in my diary.

And so I found what may be one of the best tools available, as with most Google tools, also free: Google Calendar. This calendar is based on the iCal web standard for data exchange. This enhances interoperability with other calendaring applications. If you are using GMail it synchronizes with your contact list. The sharing is also extremely flexible and you can assign other Google users various levels of access to your calendar. I’ve had my personal assist be able to schedule new appointments directly in my calendar for a while now and it works perfectly.

The one thing that really stands out about Google Calendar, being a user from South Africa, is the ability for reminders to be sent to you via SMS. This is a big deal because you’re not always at your laptop or always online. And whenever you are away from your computer this function can be a real life saver. Again the best part about this is the fact that the SMS messages does not cost you a cent. It’s been a real life save for me, allowing me to automate certain aspects of my life. I highly recommend you consider this amazing free tool as you preferred scheduling tool and appointment tool.

How to use Skype and make VOIP calls for beginners in South Africa


My statusSkype allows users to make telephone calls from their computer to other Skype users free of charge, or to landlines and cell phones for a fee.

Unlike most other VOIP (Voice-over-Internet) software, Skype uses a peer-to-peer model, which is the most efficient way for transferring large amounts of data over the Internet, in a distributed method. An d so when a Skype user calls another for a voice call or video conference there no extra costs. Additional features include instant messaging, file transfer, SMS, video conferencing and its ability to circumvent firewalls.

Niklas Zennstrom Janus Friis Skype foundersEntrepreneurs Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis created Skype in 2002 with a vision of liberating consumers and businesses from the need to pay for talking to each other across the globe.

It’s easy because the user interface is intuitive i.e. easy to navigate and operates like a normal phone just on a computer screen.Skype is free to download and use from www.skype.com – you only pay if you want to call landlines and cellphones. You have to purchase Skype credits to make calls to landlines and cellphones. View this detailed comparison on Hellkom.

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Microsoft makes claim on Linux code

Microsoft is one of the companies that you love to hate. They are like the JR Ewing of the Computer industry. The big bully that everyone is afraid to upset. Besides the fact that Microsoft has a dominant market share in desktop operating systems and productivity applications, they also have a very huge cash pile in their bank account. The most recent news articles claim that Microsoft has EUR 25 billion in reserves. That’s roughly R231 billion!!! And this is what is the most frighting thing about them because there is no way in hell that anyone can take them on in a legal battle. They laughed when the European Union fined them almost EUR 500 in 2004. Anyway what all this means is that when Microsoft makes threats on Linux code I we should all be concerned. But we should be proactive and ensure that they cannot lay claim on intellectual property within Linux. Mark Shuttleworth’s Ubuntu project is a personal favourite of mine and it is making Linux Desktops easier to install and use then ever before. Linus Torvald, creator of Linux would be proud.

Read the full article about Microsoft’s claim to Linux code here. Let us hope this turns out to be as redicilous as the one by SCO vs. IBM. When most of the Internet is being run on Linux based systems all Internet users must tell Microsoft where to shove it. I certainly plan to do so.

New version ClamWin Free Antivirus

I’ve been using ClamWin, an open-source and free antivirus program for about two years now. Its is absolutely the best open source product I’ve ever used (next to Mozilla Firefox). When my original Norton Antivirus expired and they wanted me to pay in excess of US$50 to renew, I decided to look elsewhere. And to me, this product, ClamWin, proves the open source model works, and the quality of the products either match or exceed their counterparts. So I highly recommend this software which integrates with Microsoft Outlook, and runs on WindowsXP like a bomb! Download ClamWin 0.88.5 here.

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