Managing your Schedule This chapter will show you how to use the Ximian Evolution Calendar to manage your schedule alone or in conjunction with peers. Ways of Looking at your Calendar The toolbar offers you four different views of your calendar: Day Work Week Week Month Press the calendar-shaped buttons on the right side of the toolbar to switch between views. You can also select a range of days— three days, ten days, or a fortnight if you want — in the small calendar at the upper right. To do this, simply click and drag on the days that you wish to view in your calendar. The Prev and Next buttons will move you forward and back in your calendar pages. If you're looking at only one day, you'll see tomorrow's page, or yesterday's. If you're looking at your calendar by week or month, you'll move around by just that much. To come back to today's listing, click the Today button in the toolbar. To visit a specific date's calendar entries, click Go To and select the date in the dialog box that appears. Scheduling With the Evolution Calendar Of course, you'll want to use the calendar to do more than find out what day it is. This section will tell you how to schedule appointments, set alarms, and determine appointment recurrence. Creating appointments To create a new appointment, select File New Appointment or click the New Appointment button on the left end of the toolbar. The New Appointment dialog will pop up with the menu bar, tool bar, and window full of choices for you. Shortcut If you don't need to enter more information than the date and time of the appointment, you just click in any blank space in the calendar and start typing. You can enter other information later with the appointment editor. Your appointment must have a starting and ending date — by default, today — but you can choose whether to give it starting and ending times or to mark it as an All day event. An All day event appears at the top of a day's appointment list, in the grey header under the date, rather than inside it. That makes it easy to have appointments that overlap and fit inside each other. For example, a conference might be an all day appointment, and the meetings at the conference would be timed appointments. Of course, appointments with specific starting and ending times can also overlap. When they do they're displayed as multiple columns in the day view of the calendar. Evolution supports the use of timezones. If you share calendar files with friends or co-workers, it is quite possible you will need to configure your timezone. To configure your timezone: Click Tools Calendar Settings Click the Globe button in the Time section, located in the General tab. Each red dot represents a major city. Click a dot and click OK to select your time zone. You can also configure timezone information specific to Start and End time in each appointment. To do that, simply create a new appointment and click on a globe to customize the timezone that the time exists in. Multiple Simultanious Appointments If you create calendar appointments that overlap, Evolution will display them side by side in your calendar. However, Evolution cannot help you do multiple things at once. You can have as many Alarms, any time prior to the appointment you've scheduled. You can have one alarm of each of the following types: Display: A window will pop up on your screen to remind you of your appointment. Audio: Choose this to have your computer deliver a sound alarm. Program: Select this if you would like to run a program as a reminder. You can enter its name in the text field, or find it with the Browse button. Classification only applies to calendars on a network. Public is the default category, and a public appointment can be viewed by anyone on the calendar sharing network. Private denotes one level of security, and Confidential an even higher level. Evolution can handle not only time that you're busy, but free time. This can be useful if you're on a network sharing calendar files. You can easily compare schedules with other people, allowing easy setup of a RSVP. To set your appointment to be free or busy, simply click the box in the Show Time As section in the Appointment Editor. Evolution lets you categorize your appointments, which can help if you lead a busy life. The bottom section of the Appointment tab is where your categorization is done. Adding a New Appointment Category You can add a new category to your category list by clicking on Edit Master Category List and single-clicking on Click here to add a category. The purpose of categories is to let you view all appointments which have similar activities. To do this, change Any field contains to Has category and enter your category at right. Clicking on the Categories button opens up the category list. To associate a category to an appointment, simply click the check box. Once you've selected your categories, click OK to assign these categories to the appointment. The categories you selected are now listed in the text box to the right of the Categories... button. The Recurrence tab lets you describe repetition in appointments ranging from once every day up to once every 100 years. You can then choose a time and date when the appointment will stop recurring, and, under Exceptions, pick individual days when the appointment will not recur. Make your selections from left to right, and you'll form a sentence: "Every two weeks on Monday and Friday until January 3, 2003" or "Every month on the first Friday for 12 occurrences." Once you're done with all those settings, click on the disk icon in the toolbar to save and close the appointment editor window. If you want, you can alter an appointment summary in the calendar view by clicking on it and typing. You can change other settings by right-clicking on the appointment then choosing Edit this Appointment. Sending an RSVP with the Calendar Evolution can be used to schedule group meetings and help you manage responses to meeting requests. When you create a meeting or group appointment, you can specify the attendees in several categories, such as "chair" or "required." When you save the appointment listing, each attendee will be sent an email with the appointment information and gives them the option to respond. To schedule a meeting: Select Actions Schedule Meeting . The Scheduling and Meeting tabs open. If you have multiple Evolution identities, choose the one you'll use by selecting an item in the Sent By field. Click the space labelled Click here to add an attendee to enter the names and email addresses of people you will invite, or click the Invite Others to select them from your addressbook. Save the Appointment. An email is now sent out to all the recipients, inviting them to your event. Replying to a Meeting Request Meeting requests are sent as iCal attachments. To view or respond to one, click on the attachment icon and view it inline in the mail window. All the details are shown about the event including time and dates. Then you can choose how to reply to the RSVP. Your choices are: Accept Tentatively Accept Decline Click OK and an email will be sent to the organizer with your answer. The event will also be added to your calendar if you accept. Getting Responses to Meeting Requests Once you get a reply to your meeting invitation, you'll need to view it inline in the email. Click the attachment and select View Inline. At the bottom, you can click OK to update your attendee list. The Task Pad The Task Pad, located in the lower right corner of the calendar, lets you keep a list of tasks separate from your calendar appointments. You can use the list in a larger window by choosing the Tasks button in the shortcut bar or in the folder tree. To record a new task, click the Add button in the toolbar. Evolution will pop up a small window with five items in it: Summary: The description you enter here will appear in the To Do list itself. Due Date: Decide when this item is due. You can either type in a date and time, or select one from the Calendar and time drop-down menus. Start Date: The date you intend to start working. Description: If you wish, you can keep a more detailed description of the item here. For example, you can note that a task is in progress, and display how close it is to completion. Classification: Sets who will see it if your calendar is shared. There are more options in the Details tab such as priority and progress settings. Once you've added a task to your to-do list, its summary appears in the Summary section of task list. To view or edit a detailed description of an item, double-click on it, or right click on it and select Open. You can delete items by selecting them and clicking on the Delete button. The list of tasks is sorted in a similar way to the list of email messages in Ximian Evolution Mail. Click once on the message headers to change the direction and type of sorting, or right-click to add or remove columns from the display. Folders for Your Tasks Like any other component in Evolution, you can create a folder to help organize your tasks. To do this: Open the Folders Bar. Click Tasks. Right click on Tasks. Click Create New Folder. Enter the folder name. Click OK Multiple Calendars Evolution permits you to have and maintain multiple calendars. This is useful if you maintain schedules for other people, if you are responsible for resource or room allocation, or if you have multiple personalities. Keeping Multiple Calendars Lucy, the office manager for a small company, has one calendar for her own schedule. She maintains one for the conference room, to schedule meetings. Next to that, she maintains a calendar that reflects when consultants are going to be on site, and another that keeps track of when the Cubs are playing. To create a new calendar, select File New Folder . You'll need to tell the New Folder dialog that the new folder should be of the calendar type. You can place the calendar in any calendar folder and access it from the folder view. Each calendar folder can hold only one calendar.