Pomoc přepytać

Hladajće so wobšudstwa pomocy. Njenamołwimy was ženje, telefonowe čisło zawołać, SMS pósłać abo wosobinske informacije přeradźić. Prošu zdźělće podhladnu aktiwitu z pomocu nastajenja „Znjewužiwanje zdźělić“.

Dalše informacije

Need easy way to sync calendar on home network devices without programming skills or internet access.

  • 2 wotmołwje
  • 1 ma tutón problem
  • 13 napohladow
  • Poslednja wotmołwa wot Justnoone

more options

Using Thunderbird with built in calendar on desktop and laptop, and only Thunderbird on android cell phone (because calendar (Lightning not available for Android). LG G2 cell phone has a built in no-name calendar. At present, using gmail for email and cell phone syncs to google calendar, but I want to get away from google as much as possible. If I can get a way to sync all calendars only on home network, I will get a new email and say goodbye to google.

Using Thunderbird with built in calendar on desktop and laptop, and only Thunderbird on android cell phone (because calendar (Lightning not available for Android). LG G2 cell phone has a built in no-name calendar. At present, using gmail for email and cell phone syncs to google calendar, but I want to get away from google as much as possible. If I can get a way to sync all calendars only on home network, I will get a new email and say goodbye to google.

Wšě wotmołwy (2)

more options

You have Thunderbird on an Android device? Really?

You can share a Lightning calendar by saving it as an ics file and then setting up a network calendar that links to the ics file. This is a share rather then synchronisation, because only one machine can "own" and access the file at any time. If two machines make their own copy and edit it, the second one will overwrite changes made by the first. Thunderbird's design assumes it is the sole user of a profile and the contents thereof, so locks its profile to ensure this. So there is no provision for managing concurrent changes made to a file by a third party

Store your ics file on a shared drive on your network, or use a tool such as Dropbox or Sharepoint to allow a device to grab its own copy of the shared file.

I run for myself, as an ongoing experiment, two non-google shared calendars. One is operated by an email provider, gmx, and connects to Lightning via caldav, and the other is an ics file on Dropbox. The latter works for me as I have computers in two locations (home and work) which never operate simultaneously.

more options

OOPS! My bad.

I use email on my cell phone so rarely, I forgot that T-Bird wouldn't run on android. The email is a built in app (I'm assuming, as it doesn't id itself.) I just check the 'notify' to see what emails are waiting for me when I get back to my computer. (I hate smart phones because they are smarter than me, lol.)

I mainly want to sync my calendar, reminders, & contact's info on all 3 devices. If I copy the pertinent files from 1 device to a 2nd, I would lose the info already entered on the 2nd device. I want to merge data on all devices without duplicates or losing any info.

I think your idea of a shared folder with the appropriate files would work fine for the computers, but the cell phone is another thing. I really need to see my appointments and reminders on it when traveling, but I don't want to manually enter them because I might miss something or they might get changed. I also want to find a good mileage app for business trips.

FYI, cell phone is using 'Marshmellow', desktop is Vista HP 64bit, laptop is Win7 Pro 64 bit. I don't know anything about Linux, but some people have recommended 'Mint' to me, and I've been told that upgrading to 'Lollipop' would be a big mistake.

Am I stuck with google?