Re: Evolution with exchange
Many thanks, Matt. I'll give this a try. There aren't 2 PDA objects configured. But I'll try the one time action of copying the data to PDA. Hadn't thought of that. Best, Jamie -Original Message- From: Matt Davey [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Evolution with exchange Date: Thu, 02 Oct 2008 09:40:38 +0100 Hi Jamie, On Wed, 2008-10-01 at 22:00 +0100, Jamie Dow wrote: Hi, I'm using Evolution as my PIM client at work, and instead of (what most other users have) Outlook. [...] My question is whether it is possible to get the exchange conduits for Calendar, Address, Task, etc. to point to the exchange based calendar, addressbook, and so on. [...] When I configure the conduits to point to the correct calendar / addressbook / etc., I sync and - hey presto! - the conduits have magically changed to point to a different calendar / address book.. Anyone know why this is happening, and whether it is possible to sync successfully with the exchange data that evolution-exchange enables me to access via evolution? I have never used Evolution with Exchange, but I'm surprised by the symptoms you describe. Any chance you have two PDA objects configured, and you changed the conduit settings on the wrong one? If that's not the case, it sounds like a bug in the conduit. It might be worth trying a one time action of copy to PDA to see if that works (assuming you don't mind wiping the calendar/addressbook data on your PDA. Matt Matt Davey By doing just a little every day, I can gradually let the [EMAIL PROTECTED] task completely overwhelm me. -- Ashleigh Brilliant ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list
Re: Starting gnome-pilot minimised to tray / getting usb: sync to work first time
OK, I think that my original question was confused, and you've shed light on what was really required. I've found that with syncing via usb: when I initially try and sync, it doesn't work. Then if I run the configuration applet, the sync does work. I'm guessing that the key thing that's making the difference is that running the applet ALSO serves to start the daemon. So, what in fact I need to do is get the daemon to be initiated on startup. And I assume that I can do that just by sticking a script into my autostart folder with the command gpilotd. Cheers Jamie -Original Message- From: Matt Davey [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Starting gnome-pilot minimised to tray Date: Thu, 02 Oct 2008 09:43:40 +0100 Hi again, On Wed, 2008-10-01 at 22:03 +0100, Jamie Dow wrote: Hi, Second question: is it possible (what would be the options from the command line) to start the gnome-pilot (gpilotd-control-applet) minimised to the system tray? This relates in teh first instance to my Kubuntu 8.04 (KDE 3.9) system. But I'd also be interested in how it might work for my work Fedora 9 (Gnome) system. On gnome, what you should do is add the gnome-pilot 'applet' to the panel (right click on a blank area, select 'add to panel...' and search for 'pilot applet' which should have a sync icon). This will then be added to your gnome session and will start automatically. You can click on the icon to launch the configuration applet ('gpilotd-control-applet'). The communication daemon (gpilotd) runs in the background. Matt Matt Davey Did you hear about the new corduroy pillow? [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's making headlines all over town. ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list
Re: Starting gnome-pilot minimised to tray / getting usb: sync to work first time
Hi Jamie, On Thu, 2008-10-02 at 21:09 +0100, Jamie Dow wrote: OK, I think that my original question was confused, and you've shed light on what was really required. I don't think I shed quite enough light yet :) I've found that with syncing via usb: when I initially try and sync, it doesn't work. Then if I run the configuration applet, the sync does work. I'm guessing that the key thing that's making the difference is that running the applet ALSO serves to start the daemon. So, what in fact I need to do is get the daemon to be initiated on startup. And I assume that I can do that just by sticking a script into my autostart folder with the command gpilotd. There are three components to gnome-pilot: o gpilotd: the daemon o configuration applet: the GUI for changing settings. This can be launched from Evolution under Edit-Synchronization Options... o panel applet: This shows status on the panel when you are synchronizing and a progress window. Adding this to the panel, as described in my last mail, should mean gpilotd starts when you start your gnome-session. Matt Cheers Jamie -Original Message- From: Matt Davey [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org To: The PalmOS(tm) integration package gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Starting gnome-pilot minimised to tray Date: Thu, 02 Oct 2008 09:43:40 +0100 Hi again, On Wed, 2008-10-01 at 22:03 +0100, Jamie Dow wrote: Hi, Second question: is it possible (what would be the options from the command line) to start the gnome-pilot (gpilotd-control-applet) minimised to the system tray? This relates in teh first instance to my Kubuntu 8.04 (KDE 3.9) system. But I'd also be interested in how it might work for my work Fedora 9 (Gnome) system. On gnome, what you should do is add the gnome-pilot 'applet' to the panel (right click on a blank area, select 'add to panel...' and search for 'pilot applet' which should have a sync icon). This will then be added to your gnome session and will start automatically. You can click on the icon to launch the configuration applet ('gpilotd-control-applet'). The communication daemon (gpilotd) runs in the background. Matt Matt DaveyDid you hear about the new corduroy pillow? [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's making headlines all over town. ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list Matt Davey You can't have everything. Where would you put it? [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Steve Wright ___ gnome-pilot-list mailing list gnome-pilot-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-pilot-list