The complete guide to the Windows Calendar - Part 3


In the third and last part of our Windows Calendar series, we will show you how to subscribe to online calendars and publish your own calendars to remote locations such as a web host.


Subscribing to a calendar

First, click the Subscribe button from the Windows Calendar toolbar and the Subscribe to a Calendar wizard will open.

Windows Calendar

You will need to type the address of the calendar you want to subscribe to. This address can be a network location (e.g. "\\servername\folder\calendar.ics") or a web location. For example, you can subscribe to your Google Calendar or to any other public calendar. Also, here you can find a list of online calendars that are available and work with Windows Calendar.

For this tutorial we chose CalendarData.com. CalendarData.com is a free site that allows you to find feeds of calendar events like holidays, sport teams schedules, school schedules and so on. Just go to the Browse Calendars section of the site and select the calendar you want to subscribe to.

In the details page of the selected calendar you can find the Subscribe: Windows Vista Calendar link. Click on it and you will see that its address is loaded in the Subscribe to a Calendar wizard.

In case you are using Internet Explorer 7, you might receive a security warning like the one shown below. Make the appropriate security confirmations and then Windows Calendar will pop-up.

Windows Calendar

If you are using Firefox or Opera you won't receive such warnings.

In the Subscribe to a Calendar window click on Next.

Windows Calendar

In the next window type the calendar name, choose the update interval and select if you want to include reminders or tasks.

Windows Calendar

Now click on Finish and the new calendar will appear in the Calendars section.

Windows Calendar


Publishing Calendars

You can publish your calendar to almost any remote location. Before you publish it, you should make sure you have the appropriate permissions. Otherwise, the publishing process will fail.

To publish a calendar, first select it from the Calendars section. Go to the Share menu and click on Publish.

Windows Calendar

The Publish Calendar window will open. Type the name of the calendar and enter the location where you want to publish it. You can enter a web host you have access to or you can browse to a shared network location and publish it there. Further information about where to publish your calendars can be found on the Windows Vista: Calendar Publishing page.

Windows Calendar

Choose the calendar details you want to include and click on the Publish button. Wait for the calendar to be published and press the Finish button.

NOTE: Many readers have reported having problems when publishing their calendar to an online location. Each time they received an error message saying that 'the network path cannot be found'. We tried to find solutions to this problem and unfortunately we have encountered the same issues. Searching on the internet has not helped at all. If you have a solution or a set of guidelines people can use to publish their calendars online, please share it with us and we will publish it.



Related articles:
The complete guide to the Windows Calendar - Part 1
The complete guide to the Windows Calendar - Part 2
Windows Mail
Windows Contacts



Comments

Calendar publishing

I know George L. I have asked this question in a couple different forums and no one seems to know the answers.

Can't Publish Calendar Problem

I read somewhere while researching this problem that the host server where you want to publish to must be a WebDAV server. Of course I need to search what WebDAV is next! Anyways, thought I'd pass along.

Can't Publish

I have spent so many hours on this Windows Calendar trying to publish and share a calender but everytime I feel like I get a link that is going to show me how to do it, it leads me to the same useless pathetic directions that Windows has provided. "Publish to Website" is a little vague when you've never done it before and when you try countless times, it fails everytime.

The release of this product was a mistake as Windows should have cleaned up their act.

windows calendar - editing Q?

Is there any way to share a joint calendar among family members so that edits can be made by anyone for that calendar? If my wife makes an entry on her calendar which I subscribe to and our plans change, I cannot make the edit to the calendar entry she originally made?

Plaxo

Try to use Plaxo.
I use it to sync my calendar between 4 computers.

Printing hard copy of a calendar

I have used the old calendar "On Time" which allowed me to print out on a sheet of paper either a daily, weekly or monthy calendar that I carried with me for a quick reference. The beauty of that program is that it would let me print out the weekly calendar starting on any day (usually Sunday) and runs for however many months I want. I usually print out a rolling 8-week calendar as anything longer than that was hard to read. "On Time" is now defunct and I have not found any other program that will allow me to print out the same way.
Am I correect that the Windows Calendar does not have this capability?
I know I can print out a monthly calendar but that is only printable for the entire month and not a running 4 or 8-week sequence. If I am wrong about this and I can printg out a rolling 8-week calendar please let me know how to do that.
Thank you. ... John

This isn't actually a

This isn't actually a *complete* guide to Windows Calendar. And it won't be until someone can explain how we can dismiss a reminder and have it actually stay dismissed.

How are we intended to communicate to Calendar the fact that the event it's reminding us if ALREADY HAPPENED and WE DID THAT ALREADY so it's NOT overdue. It's DONE. GONE. BYE-BYE. Don't effing bother me about it again!

I'm sure you're probably going to suggest that I delete the item off the calendar.

That's a non-optimal solution. That leaves no historical data we can use to go back and see what we did when, and also doesn't work for recurring reminders. Every single week, I get my weekly reminder along with an 'overdue' reminder for last week. And the week before. And the week before that. And the week before that. And so on until the beginning of time.

It's as if Windows Calendar is completely unaware of the user's having pressed the DISMISS button after it's happened. It apparently saves no history of that item being dismissed, but merely takes it off the screen. For now.

Simple List

Need simple list of appointments to carry with me to reference as needed. One or more pages of all appointment on calendar.

Printing Windows Calendar

Firstly. why is there not am option for printing a 6-week view of the calendar ? Most other calendar software has this facility.

Secondly, why is the PAGE SETUP button 'greyed out' so that it canot be used ? Ar present my calendars are printed slightly offset on the A4 page.

I think this calendar program is otherwise quite good, but improvements would be welcome

Publishing Windows Calendar

I have seen that several people have been having trouble publishing online from Windows Calendar. I have tried publshing it to multiple sites (my Cox personal webspace, as suggested by Microsoft, my website hosted by 1and1, my officelive website) and continue to get the error message that the network path cannot be found. Does anyone have a solution to this?

I can subscribe to a ics calendar file that I upload separately to my cox webspace, but I can't get windows calender to upload directly to it. HELP PLEASE!!!

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