Nope, that won't work either you can't delete your default calendar. Some users try to delete their calendar folder, thinking that will remove it from the server and they can just make a new calendar. You can't right click on the calendar and choose Stop Sharing. While Outlook 2007 has a Remove from Server command on the same menu used to share the calendar, Outlook 2010 does not. "Unsharing" it is not as obvious to many Outlook 2010 users. After it's closed you'll will need to publish it to another WebDAV server if you want to keep sharing it. The calendar server will be closed in April 2014. To share the calendar you simply right click on it, choose Publish to Internet (Outlook 2007) or Share (Outlook 2010) and follow the wizard to share it with other users. That's a small price to pay for such simplicity.Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010 have a cool feature that allows you to share your calendar with other users by publishing it to. The only pitfall is that you have to manually refresh the calendars in order to see changes. You will now be able to add/view entries on the calendar(s) on the server. NOTE: Both calendar types will be CalDAV. If the calendar you want to connect to already exists just check inside the user's (the user that starts the daemon on the target machine) ~/.config/radicale/ directory for this information.
Where ADDRESS_TO_CALSERV, USER, and CALENDAR are all unique to your system. When connecting to (or creating) a new calendar you will be using a Network calendar with the following addresses:Ĭaldav://ADDRESS_TO_CALSERV:5232/USER/CALENDAR It is very simple to create or connect to Radicale from both Evolution and Thunderbird (with the Lightning addon). From within GNOME you can do this by clicking System | Preferences | Startup Applications and adding the radicale command. You might want to set this to start up automatically. Once you have the configuration saved (or you need no configuration), all you have to do is start the Radicale daemon with the command radicale. Just make the changes that suit your needs and save the file. The above configuration should be fairly obvious. # Personal calendars only available for logged in users (if needed) # CalDAV server hostname, empty for all hostnamesĬertificate = /etc/apache2/ssl/server.crt The default configuration file looks like: To do this, the file ~/.config/radicale/config must be edited (or created, if it's not there). But more than likely you are going to want to set up some configuration options (such as authentication).
On my Ubuntu machine hosting the Radicale Server, no configuration was necessary. Step 2: Configurationīelieve it or not, this step is optional, as Radicale should work out of the box for you. You will want to make sure you have Python installed.
If you are installing in a non-Ubuntu distribution you might have to install from source.
You will need to enter your sudo password for the installation to complete. When the software is installed you can close out the Software Center and start working with Radicale. To install Radicale on Ubuntu simply open up the Ubuntu Software Center, search for radicale, and click Install. Let's take a look at how Radicale can be set up on a Ubuntu 10.10 machine Step 1: Installation
In my ever-continuing quest to bring Linux to business, I found one of the biggest missing pieces was the ability for Linux mail clients to easily share out calenders with other Linux users.