Archive for March, 2009

How to sync Outlook on your PC, iCal, Pocket Informant on the iPhone and still get alarms

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Pocket Informant is a wonderful tool on Windows Mobile, and an iPhone version was just released. It doesn’t have all the same bells and whistles (yet), and suffers from the heavy restrictions and lack of functionality in the iPhone OS version 2.

Two particularily annoying restrictions are the fact that it can’t sync with the iPhone’s calendar, which would’ve made it easy to sync with your desktop, and it can’t ring alarms if the app isn’t on. And to think that a decade ago, Pilot 1000s could ring even while the device was off…

To be able to sync my iPhone Pocket Informant to my work Calendar (Outlook) and home Calendar (iCal), and to retain alarms, I use this scheme:

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Here is what you will need to do, and in what order.

1. Open a Google Calendar account. It should be noted that this is stored on Google’s servers, so this solution may not be the best if you treat your calendar info as super private or if it contains confidential information. It might also be a very bad idea if you schedule crimes using your iPhone. Read the privacy policy.

2. Backup your iCal and Outlook calendars, or really any other application you will sync with Google Calendar. The calendar will get wiped from your iPhone so make sure that the info is already somewhere else.

3. Download and install the Google Calendar Sync tool. The options are very straightforward:

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Enter your Google credentials, and set the sync to 2 way. Test the synchronisation, verify that your Google Calendar now reflects what is in your Outlook calendar.

4. Download and install the Google Calaboration Utility to Configure Google Calendar as CalDAV Calendars in iCal . Again, the options are pretty straightforward, though the first sync will get the data from Google to your iCal in a new calendar. You will to create new appointments in the proper calendar. I’m no big iCal user, I barely use it in fact, so you may know a way of merging your calendars. Test creating an appointment, see if it got created on the Google Calendar, and then force a sync in Outlook and see if it made it there.

5. Buy, download and install Pocket Informant on your iPhone. Under Settings / Sync / Google Calendar, set the Sync to Active, enter your credentials, and force a sync. See if everything is now in Pocket Informant.

6. Disable calendar sync in iTunes. 

7. On  your iPhone, follow these instructions that explain how to setup your Google Calendar to sync over the ActiveSync (Exchange) protocol. This will wipe any calendar info from your iphone. Force a Sync, check if your iPhone calendar got updated. This will give you alarms !

8. Bonus option for jailbroken phones: Install Lock Calendar , available in Cydia, to display calendar info on the lock screen.

From Outlook..

From Google Calendar...

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You now have a decent calendaring solution for your iPhone, hopefully, some of these steps will be redundant with version 3 of the OS and future Pocket Informant release.

Known issues:

There is obviously a pretty long delay until all parts are up to date. I set the sync on my iPhone to 30minutes (I don’t use push), and to my outlook to 30 minutes, so if I’m not lucky it can take quite a while to be everywhere.

Items added from Pocket Informant with “Alerts” don’t seem to sync properly to Google, and therefore doesn’t get synched back into the iPhone calendar properly. So for now, until a workaround is found (there are quite a few different alert types in PI, maybe one of them works), you’re better off creating items that need alerts somewhere else.

Pocket Informant’s sync is not super reliable right now, should be improved soon.

ToDo:

You can use the same process with a ToodleDo account. I myself simply use Toodledo with the Firefox sidebar, and sync my Toodledo account to Pocket Informant and the Toodledo app for iPhone (Great value, by the way).


No more free Last.Fm in Canada

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According to a blog post by Richard Jones, the free Last.fm radio will remain free only in the USA, UK and Germany.

They will also kill the non-official mobile players, which is quite ridiculous. In any case, I’ve used last.fm for years and just started using it again recently, now that the 3g network in Montreal is stable enough to let me listen to it on the go.

 

I guess it’s time to delete my account.

 

Isn’t it sad that the iTunes store is better in the US, Amazon mp3 only exists in the US, and now free Last.Fm only exists in the US?


Interesting discussions about PIFTS.EXE

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** Update ** Official word from Symantec

 

My favorite quote from that paragraph is: “ Releasing a patch unsigned is an extremely rare occurrence that does not pose any security issues to our users”.

Wow, I guess Norton’s too good, they don’t even need to sign patches. Then why do they ever sign them, if they can push unsigned ones?

Why was that patch hidden, and why did they delete true messages concerning PIFTS before the "spam” appeared?

 

 

PIFTS.exe is generating quite a buzz as nobody seems to really know what it does, and Symantec seems to be putting more effort at moderating posts than explaining what it does."

 

SANS page about PIFTS

Blog post by a guy who thinks that Slashdot is a web 2.0 social networking site for techies:

Digg discussion about that page

Anubis report (who knows if that was done using the real file though):

Slashdot Discussion

Washington Post "Voices"

 

Great screenshot from the Symantec boards, the thread should be gone in a few minutes..

 

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And another one..

 

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Possibly a great 4chan prank? Who knows, you’d think Symantec would release an official statement if that was the case..