It just occurred to me that a possible solution may be to write the
ical file to your public HTML directory and *subscribe* iCal to it. I
don't know the correct syntax, but there must be a way to specify a url
on the local computer. Maybe it does not even have to be in the public
HTML folder,
On Aug 24, 2006, at 0:45, Philipp Raschdorff wrote:
Carsten, Piotr and Pete,
thanks for the replies so far - great to hear that it's possible to do
plain ascii editing and still have the same data ready for syncing.
I tried to play with the ideas you mentioned, but I found out that I
have
Carsten, Piotr and Pete,thanks for the replies so far - great to hear that it's possible to do plain ascii editing and still have the same data ready for syncing. I tried to play with the ideas you mentioned, but I found out that I have no .ics-files in ~/Library/Calendars. I knew I had my iCal fil
Hi Philipp
> "Philipp" == Philipp Raschdorff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Philipp> realized that there is one thing missing for me:
Philipp> synchronizing emacs-todos / appointments to iCal (Mac OS X
Philipp> 10.4)
Philipp> To make it easier: I really would like to have it one
Hi Phil,
Not directly relevant, but here's what I use to synchronize the
calendar information in the other direction: from iCalendar calendars
to emacs org-mode. The whole setup is rather hacky and complicated (I
didn't really have time to make it more presentable) but it might be
still useful t
Hi Phillip,
have you read this?
http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/org/org.html#iCalendar-export
If yes, can you be more specific about what you are missing?
- Carsten
On Aug 23, 2006, at 22:46, Philipp Raschdorff wrote:
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Hi,
I'm using
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Hi,
I'm using emacs +org-mode mainly for organizing todos and for
brainstorming in project planing and organizing tasks etc. So it's
mainly a (very powerfull) outliner.
I playes arround with the DUE & DEADLINE features and realized that
there