Busycal

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BusyCal 3.8.41 (384101) MacOS Full BusyCal. BusyCal is an updated version of the popular calendar, which is notable for its simplicity and convenience, but at the same time has great functionality. BusyCal is a program on Mac OS X that will help you plan and keep track of your business. The BusyCal 3 upgrade is free for those who purchased BusyCal on or after March 1, 2016. If you purchased BusyCal 2 direct from BusyMac on or after March 1, 2016, the registration code you received will work with BusyCal 3. If you installed BusyCal 3 over your BusyCal 2 installation, you won't have to re-enter your registration code.

Busycal


2021

BusyCal 3.12.6.1 (420604) Multilingual macOS

BusyCal is an award-winning desktop calendar that combines personal productivity features for individuals with powerful calendar sharing capabilities for families and workgroups. Its unique features include a non-modal Info Panel for easier data entry; To Dos that display in the calendar and auto-forward until completed; repeating To Dos; customizable calendar views including a List view and scrolling Month and Week views; adjustable font styles and sizes, live weather feeds, moon phases, graphics, sticky notes and more. And when you first launch BusyCal, all of your iCal data is instantly imported. BusyCal automatically syncs with iCal, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and other apps and devices that sync with MobileMe or Sync Services. If you later decide to switch back to iCal, all of your calendar data will be current.

BusyCal allows families and workgroups to share calendars with MobileMe, Google Calendar, iCal Server, and other CalDAV Servers. You can even share calendars with other BusyCal users on a local area network without the need of a server. And BusyCal syncs with iCal, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and other apps and devices that sync with MobileMe or Sync Services.

Features

  • View and edit event details in a non-modal info panel.
  • Create repeating To Dos that display in the calendar and carry-forward until completed.
  • Scrolling Month and Week Views.
  • Customizable list view lets you filter and sort events by date, calendar, and more.
  • View live weather forecasts, sunrise/sunset times, and moon phases right in your calendar.
  • Customizable event fonts, sizes, styles and colors.
  • Add graphics to your calendar.
  • Add virtual sticky notes to your calendar.
  • Sync with the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch via MobileMe, Google Calendar, or iTunes.
  • Sync with MobileMe Calendar and other computers/devices that sync with MobileMe.
  • Sync with Google Calendar and other computers/devices that sync with Google Calendar.
  • Sync with other BusyCal users on a local area network or over the internet.
  • Share calendars with others, with password-protection and SSL encryption.
  • iCal compatible

Compatibility: OS X 10.11 or later, 64-bit processor Homepage http://www.busymac.com/busycal/

Screenshots

At a glance

Cons

Busycal Manual

Our Verdict

If you rely on your calendar app to keep yourself focused and productive, you'll quickly run into the limitations of Apple's Calendar (known before its Mountain Lion incarnation as iCal). Many individuals and workgroups who need to share calendars turn to BusyMac's BusyCal. Sporting a face-lift and a slew of welcome new features, BusyCal 2 will be a worthwhile upgrade for most users, but will require workflow changes for some people. And if your organization is dependent on Microsoft Exchange, BusyCal is not, for now, an appropriate choice.

Syncing and sharing events and tasks

BusyCal 2 requires Mountain Lion (although it still supports BusyCal 1.6 clients running on previous versions of OS X). It supports Notification Center, synchronizing and sharing calendars between two or more people using the standard CalDAV protocol. The most common CalDAV services are iCloud and Google Calendar, but BusyCal works with many other CalDAV implementations; the program can also synchronize directly with other copies of BusyCal on a LAN. Unlike Apple's Calendar, which split tasks (called 'To Dos' in BusyCal) into the new Reminders app, BusyCal integrates events and To Dos into one program. BusyCal continues to boast superior features over Apple's programs for event and task creation and management, especially those that repeat. Entries you make in BusyCal are immediately pushed to the CalDAV server.

No iOS version of BusyCal exists, but any changes you make in any iOS calendar or task-management app (including the company's own BusyToDo) that sync to iCloud will automatically sync to BusyCal. Google Calendar doesn't support syncing of To Dos. BusyCal 2 drops support for Apple's deprecated Sync Services system framework, so it no longer synchronizes with iOS devices via iTunes.

Busycal Download

You can set up meetings in BusyCal on an iCloud or Google calendar, attaching one or more people from your Contacts, and the server will send the recipients' copy of BusyCal a meeting invitation in their Inbox in the toolbar. They can respond with Decline, Maybe, or Accept.

Because Google Calendar has a less robust set of features than iCloud does, the upgrade to BusyCal 2 will require some Google Calendar users to change the way they do things. For starters, you can't create calendars in BusyCal—you must create calendars (or, if you're an upgrader, re-create them) on Google and then subscribe to those calendars from BusyCal. In addition, several things that are supported on iCloud are not supported on Google Calendar, including To Dos, graphics on events or days, alarms with sound, room scheduling, and file attachments.

No Exchange

One big advantage of Apple's programs (Calendar, Mail, Reminders, and Contacts) is their support for Microsoft's Exchange Server. BusyCal's developers told me that they understand Exchange support is important, and that they plan to add direct support for Exchange in a future release. Outlook and Entourage also don't sync with BusyCal, since they relied on Sync Services.

View things your way

It's your calendar, and you should be able to display its information to best serve your needs. BusyCal has always added a useful List view to the expected Day, Week, Month, and Year views. Calendar doesn't allow much in the way of customized views, an area in which BusyCal shines. In BusyCal you can customize the number of weeks shown per month, or the number of days per week. If you are in Week or Month view, and you want to see the previous (or next) day or week without switching views, the handy Previous Incremental or Next Incremental buttons in the toolbar let you move your view forward or backward.

BusyCal previously displayed weather for the next ten days, and moon phases as icons; new to BusyCal 2 is a Graphics panel, which allows you to add icons to individual events and days. Icons come from OS X's Emoji character set and from Icon Finder; you can also drag your own graphics into the Favorites portion of the Graphics panel.

The new Smart Filters let you save custom views with a subset of your calendars, and you can direct the filter to show events that match the particular criteria you set. For instance, if you want to see just the meetings of your volunteer group in List view, you can create a Smart Filter for that. Smart Filters automatically appear in a Favorites bar at the top of the window.

A new Find window works independently of the current calendar view, and now lets you search through your entire calendar rather than just the current calendar display. This feature is great for things like digging up a particular doctor's appointment you had sometime last year, or finding all your appointments with a particular coworker.

Pricing

Fantastical

BusyCal 3.12.6.1 (420604) Multilingual macOS

BusyCal is an award-winning desktop calendar that combines personal productivity features for individuals with powerful calendar sharing capabilities for families and workgroups. Its unique features include a non-modal Info Panel for easier data entry; To Dos that display in the calendar and auto-forward until completed; repeating To Dos; customizable calendar views including a List view and scrolling Month and Week views; adjustable font styles and sizes, live weather feeds, moon phases, graphics, sticky notes and more. And when you first launch BusyCal, all of your iCal data is instantly imported. BusyCal automatically syncs with iCal, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and other apps and devices that sync with MobileMe or Sync Services. If you later decide to switch back to iCal, all of your calendar data will be current.

BusyCal allows families and workgroups to share calendars with MobileMe, Google Calendar, iCal Server, and other CalDAV Servers. You can even share calendars with other BusyCal users on a local area network without the need of a server. And BusyCal syncs with iCal, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and other apps and devices that sync with MobileMe or Sync Services.

Features

  • View and edit event details in a non-modal info panel.
  • Create repeating To Dos that display in the calendar and carry-forward until completed.
  • Scrolling Month and Week Views.
  • Customizable list view lets you filter and sort events by date, calendar, and more.
  • View live weather forecasts, sunrise/sunset times, and moon phases right in your calendar.
  • Customizable event fonts, sizes, styles and colors.
  • Add graphics to your calendar.
  • Add virtual sticky notes to your calendar.
  • Sync with the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch via MobileMe, Google Calendar, or iTunes.
  • Sync with MobileMe Calendar and other computers/devices that sync with MobileMe.
  • Sync with Google Calendar and other computers/devices that sync with Google Calendar.
  • Sync with other BusyCal users on a local area network or over the internet.
  • Share calendars with others, with password-protection and SSL encryption.
  • iCal compatible

Compatibility: OS X 10.11 or later, 64-bit processor Homepage http://www.busymac.com/busycal/

Screenshots

At a glance

Cons

Busycal Manual

Our Verdict

If you rely on your calendar app to keep yourself focused and productive, you'll quickly run into the limitations of Apple's Calendar (known before its Mountain Lion incarnation as iCal). Many individuals and workgroups who need to share calendars turn to BusyMac's BusyCal. Sporting a face-lift and a slew of welcome new features, BusyCal 2 will be a worthwhile upgrade for most users, but will require workflow changes for some people. And if your organization is dependent on Microsoft Exchange, BusyCal is not, for now, an appropriate choice.

Syncing and sharing events and tasks

BusyCal 2 requires Mountain Lion (although it still supports BusyCal 1.6 clients running on previous versions of OS X). It supports Notification Center, synchronizing and sharing calendars between two or more people using the standard CalDAV protocol. The most common CalDAV services are iCloud and Google Calendar, but BusyCal works with many other CalDAV implementations; the program can also synchronize directly with other copies of BusyCal on a LAN. Unlike Apple's Calendar, which split tasks (called 'To Dos' in BusyCal) into the new Reminders app, BusyCal integrates events and To Dos into one program. BusyCal continues to boast superior features over Apple's programs for event and task creation and management, especially those that repeat. Entries you make in BusyCal are immediately pushed to the CalDAV server.

No iOS version of BusyCal exists, but any changes you make in any iOS calendar or task-management app (including the company's own BusyToDo) that sync to iCloud will automatically sync to BusyCal. Google Calendar doesn't support syncing of To Dos. BusyCal 2 drops support for Apple's deprecated Sync Services system framework, so it no longer synchronizes with iOS devices via iTunes.

Busycal Download

You can set up meetings in BusyCal on an iCloud or Google calendar, attaching one or more people from your Contacts, and the server will send the recipients' copy of BusyCal a meeting invitation in their Inbox in the toolbar. They can respond with Decline, Maybe, or Accept.

Because Google Calendar has a less robust set of features than iCloud does, the upgrade to BusyCal 2 will require some Google Calendar users to change the way they do things. For starters, you can't create calendars in BusyCal—you must create calendars (or, if you're an upgrader, re-create them) on Google and then subscribe to those calendars from BusyCal. In addition, several things that are supported on iCloud are not supported on Google Calendar, including To Dos, graphics on events or days, alarms with sound, room scheduling, and file attachments.

No Exchange

One big advantage of Apple's programs (Calendar, Mail, Reminders, and Contacts) is their support for Microsoft's Exchange Server. BusyCal's developers told me that they understand Exchange support is important, and that they plan to add direct support for Exchange in a future release. Outlook and Entourage also don't sync with BusyCal, since they relied on Sync Services.

View things your way

It's your calendar, and you should be able to display its information to best serve your needs. BusyCal has always added a useful List view to the expected Day, Week, Month, and Year views. Calendar doesn't allow much in the way of customized views, an area in which BusyCal shines. In BusyCal you can customize the number of weeks shown per month, or the number of days per week. If you are in Week or Month view, and you want to see the previous (or next) day or week without switching views, the handy Previous Incremental or Next Incremental buttons in the toolbar let you move your view forward or backward.

BusyCal previously displayed weather for the next ten days, and moon phases as icons; new to BusyCal 2 is a Graphics panel, which allows you to add icons to individual events and days. Icons come from OS X's Emoji character set and from Icon Finder; you can also drag your own graphics into the Favorites portion of the Graphics panel.

The new Smart Filters let you save custom views with a subset of your calendars, and you can direct the filter to show events that match the particular criteria you set. For instance, if you want to see just the meetings of your volunteer group in List view, you can create a Smart Filter for that. Smart Filters automatically appear in a Favorites bar at the top of the window.

A new Find window works independently of the current calendar view, and now lets you search through your entire calendar rather than just the current calendar display. This feature is great for things like digging up a particular doctor's appointment you had sometime last year, or finding all your appointments with a particular coworker.

Pricing

Busycal 3

One of the big changes in BusyCal is how you buy it: The program is now available only through the Mac App Store. Accordingly, it benefits and suffers from the App Store's policies. Previous versions of BusyCal were priced at $50 per user, with an $80 family pack covering up to five users. The Mac App Store version of BusyCal 2 is priced at $30 until December 31, 2012, after which it will be $50. As with any app from the App Store, it can be installed on any computer that uses the same Apple ID. For larger workgroups, customers must buy additional seats using a different Apple ID, which will quickly become an administrative hassle. Previously, customers could purchase quantity-discounted licenses from BusyMac. I can't fault BusyMac because Apple still hasn't gotten around to offering volume licensing on the App Store; but if you manage larger workgroups, you need to be aware of what you're getting into.

Bottom line

If you're already a BusyCal user, you'll find the upgrade to be well worth the cost, especially if you purchase it before the end of the year. The new Smart Filters and Find window save time and effort. The Quick Entry app is useful for glancing at today's weather and agenda, as well as for adding new events and tasks. And since events and tasks go hand in hand for most people, BusyCal's integration of the two is far superior to Apple's separation into discrete Calendar and Reminders apps.





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