Feb 18

For YEARS I’ve wanted something that allows me to see my work calendar, my home calendar, my wife’s calendar, my kid’s calendar and … well… the schedule of the Denver Broncos, on one screen. With the combination of Notes 8.5 and Apple’s Me.com (formerly MobileMe) service, I can.

Publish your me.com calendarFirst, open Apple’s iCal application and right-click on the calendar(s) you want to subscribe to. Select “Publish” and make note (either copy/paste or use the “email” option) of the locations of your published calendar.

When the calendar is published, you’ll se a “broadcast” icon appear letting you know its available. In the “Publish…” dialog box, you may also want to select some of the options available. A published iCal feed For example, I leave the defaults and select “Publish changes automatically” and “Publish To Do items” but do not “Publish alarms” (I don’t need to be alerted to when their appointments will occur, I just need to see them on the schedule).

Back in Lotus Notes, open your calendar and select “Show Calendars” from the navigation on the left. Use the “Add a Calendar…” feature to enter the location of your .ics feed. Give the calendar a name (can’t use hyphens for some reason) and select any custom icons or colors to make it stand out. I use the same color scheme as I’ve got set up in Apple’s iCal to keep the instant corellation of “who’s calendar is what color” straight in my head.

Adding an iCal feed in Notes

Show calendars in NotesThe new calendar will appear automatically on your Lotus Notes calendar. To toggle on/off, just use the appropriate check mark.

Pretty easy stuff and extremely handy!

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Jul 12

I probably don’t need to tell you that yesterday was the launch of the new 3G iPhone. If that’s a surprise, may I suggest moving on to your next random blog.

Ah, you’re still here. Great.

Yes, I did go to the AT&T store near me Friday morning. No, I didn’t wait in line (like I did last year). Infact, I got there about 30 minutes after the store opened and saw a line that was nearly twice the line I stood in when the original iPhone launched a year ago.

As I called various friends to catch up on their iPhone experiences, everyone had the same report: more people in line this time, the line moved slower and their store of choice ran out of phones sooner.

Sounds like a good launch for an Apple product. Plenty of interest. More people that expected. Taking orders for the next round of deliveries. All par for the course.

But blogs suggested another key point to this story: a tough day for Apple/AT&T. I lost track of the official answer to “does everyone need to have the phone registered in the store?” Some said yes, some said no, others said they did, but were told to just go home and do it themselves.

It wasn’t just the 3G iPhone, either. The 2.0 software was “found” ahead of its launch (by the way – its awesome – I already have found applications that are suddenly “must have’s” for my phone) and MobileMe has been plagued with startup problems. The brief bit I was able to get into MobileMe looked really impressive. I can certainly see the value of having all my contacts, calendars (home, work, subscription calendars, etc.), bookmarks, pictures, files, etc. all on-line.

And yet, access to MobileMe wasn’t given until I did an update in iTunes which allowed Safari to see the service. What?!?!

Regardless, it looks great but is clearly still having some difficulty. This morning, my RSS reader showed that there’s already an update required on my Mac for the service. Its been very un-Apple thus far.

Now, I’m chalking all this up to the fact that they’ve got a lot launching right now. But, as I reflect on the level of which I’m usually critical of Lotus/IBM for similar “growing pains” I felt compelled to take a moment and recognize the 3G iPhone and MobileMe situation for what it really has been in the last 24 hours: promising, but troubled through the early launch.

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