On Fri, 09 Jul 2010 09:57:48 +0900, Torsten Wagner
wrote:
>
> Just by reading and without the possibility to test it. Why you multiply the
> hour with 36 instead of 3600 to get seconds?
Because the value returned by the %z format for the date command is in
"hundred hours" form so that, for ins
Torsten Wagner wrote:
> Just by reading and without the possibility to test it. Why you multiply the
> hour with 36 instead of 3600 to get seconds?
>
> > ...
> ># this next command yields hours from UTC, + or -, times 100
^
There's
Just by reading and without the possibility to test it. Why you multiply the
hour with 36 instead of 3600 to get seconds?
Grettings
Torsten
Eric S Fraga wrote:
>On Wed, 7 Jul 2010 17:38:45 -0300, Daniel Martins wrote:
>>
>> Eric,
>>
>> Your awk seems to get timed appts in GMT
>>
>> How c
On Wed, 7 Jul 2010 17:38:45 -0300, Daniel Martins wrote:
>
> Eric,
>
> Your awk seems to get timed appts in GMT
>
> How can I adapt it to GMT-3
>
> Daniel
Okay! I think I've got this working for any time zone (as well as
adding some more functionality -- read the prologue in the script for
i
OK Eric
Thank you!
Linux solution is fine!
I think we share the same "addiction" at moment.
Linux-Emacs-OrgMode-Android and due to Android the need of Google
calendar syncing!
I tried using
gcaldaemon (there is a .deb file in
http://blog.philippheckel.com/2008/09/30/gcaldaemon-deb-package-f
On Wed, 7 Jul 2010 17:38:45 -0300, Daniel Martins wrote:
>
> Eric,
>
> Your awk seems to get timed appts in GMT
>
> How can I adapt it to GMT-3
>
> Daniel
Daniel,
yes, thanks for pointing this out. The script indeed does not
translate the times to the local time zone. Google outputs (in the
Eric,
Your awk seems to get timed appts in GMT
How can I adapt it to GMT-3
Daniel
2010/6/29 Eric S Fraga :
> Hello,
>
> I finally got myself an Android phone (and am loving it, especially
> with an "all you can eat" data plan :-). I have tried mobileorg for
> Android but it's obviously early d
Hello,
I finally got myself an Android phone (and am loving it, especially
with an "all you can eat" data plan :-). I have tried mobileorg for
Android but it's obviously early days and it's actually not really
what I want.
However, I am very happy with the Google syncing provided by the
phone, b
Friedrich Delgado Friedrichs writes:
> Hi!
>
> Richard Riley schrieb:
>> Friedrich Delgado Friedrichs writes:
>> > You could also put the ics file on a public webserver and have google
>> > calendar read the ics file via http, if you don't mind that the whole
>> > world sees your appointments (u
Hi!
Richard Riley schrieb:
> Friedrich Delgado Friedrichs writes:
> > You could also put the ics file on a public webserver and have google
> > calendar read the ics file via http, if you don't mind that the whole
> > world sees your appointments (unfortunately I do mind, so that's no
> > solutio
Friedrich Delgado Friedrichs writes:
> Richard Riley schrieb:
>> I'd like to get something going between my blackberry and org-mode. I
>> guess the best way is probably via Google calendar. Anyone currently
>> linking org-mode to Google calendar and if so what process are you
>> using?
> ---Zitat
Friedrich Delgado Friedrichs writes:
> Richard Riley schrieb:
>> I'd like to get something going between my blackberry and org-mode. I
>> guess the best way is probably via Google calendar. Anyone currently
>> linking org-mode to Google calendar and if so what process are you
>> using?
> ---Zitat
Richard Riley schrieb:
> I'd like to get something going between my blackberry and org-mode. I
> guess the best way is probably via Google calendar. Anyone currently
> linking org-mode to Google calendar and if so what process are you
> using?
---Zitatende---
I'm using org-export-icalendar-combine
I'd like to get something going between my blackberry and org-mode. I
guess the best way is probably via Google calendar. Anyone currently
linking org-mode to Google calendar and if so what process are you
using?
Thanks for any pointers,
r.
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