On Mon, 14 Jan 2008, Martin Bochnig wrote:

> And admit it, /usr/bin/cal is more powerful, than many would expect: It 
> begins in year 1 (2007 years ago) and masters all the years until 9999. So 
> you can use it for a while to come, isn't this investment protection ... And 
> you can conveniently access it when you don't run X11 from time to time.
>
> And as for a more graphical personal time planner running on whatever toolkit 
> on X11 I would recommend old StartOffice 5.2 (which I still like) or KDE's 
> tools (get KDE pkgadd Solaris packages from one of the misc. repositories).

In case it was not clear, a major function of today's calendar 
interfaces is to provide reliable notifications of scheduled events 
(such as a meeting).  I don't personally need a task management 
facility.

Bob
======================================
Bob Friesenhahn
bfriesen at simple.dallas.tx.us, http://www.simplesystems.org/users/bfriesen/
GraphicsMagick Maintainer,    http://www.GraphicsMagick.org/


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