Good replacement for Google Calendar?
from Inkstainthebat@pawb.social to degoogle@lemmy.ml on 22 Apr 00:16
https://pawb.social/post/23306555
from Inkstainthebat@pawb.social to degoogle@lemmy.ml on 22 Apr 00:16
https://pawb.social/post/23306555
I’d like to hear of an alternative to google calendar. I just need a calendar-based event tracker that is able to sync between at least my phone (android) and PC (Linux). Are there any alternative services? (other than Outlook)
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Proton has a good calendar service but if you want to change color labels you need to be on the more expensive tier - and they don’t really tell you that ahead of time. Which p’ed me off so much I moved my calendar to a Nextcloud server instead, which works great. It also got me off Keep, Drive, and I’m working on Gmail.
I have the Tuta calendar.
tuta indeef
Same (till today) but then the only way you can access your calendar is in the Tuta apps, and then you can’t share appointments with others, invite them, and so on. Bit of a limited option, unless your calendar security/privacy is really important to you.
seems like you can only share calendars, not events and only with other tuta users
it works for me but i can see how inconvenient it may be for others
Radical on the server, Davx5 on the phone to sync, Thunderbird on your desktop. The combination has worked for me over many years.
Man, I’ve read this like so many times. So… I just set it up and it’s working a treat. I installed radicale via radicale-docker, got it confogured with my user, set it up in Thunderbird and install/configured Davx5 and Fossify calendar (via F-Droid) on my android phone. <phew>
Docker for radicale (which is unofficial but they don’t offer one, so…)
github.com/tomsquest/docker-radicale?tab=readme-o…
The only thing I might have to get used to is the sync delay with davx5. How often do you have yours setup to sync, if you don’t mind me asking?
I don’t know, it was always quick enough for me so I never went looking for a setting.
It is also delayed for me, I just trigger a manual sync every time I made a change…
Nextcloud, self hosted. But it is maybe overkill, unless you need it otherwise, for family photo album, docs or such. Davx5 also needed on android. Thunderbird for desktop calendar client. Can recommend etar for android calendar app.
I self-host baikal and use davX5 on android with whatever calendar app i want, and on desktop i use betterbird but you can use any calendar app you want.
I recently went through the process of separating from Google as much as possible here.
As others have said, Nextcloud or Radical or Baikal are all good calendar server options to self-host
On your Android phone, DAVx5 for syncing CalDAV and CardDAV (which the servers listed above use), ICSx5 for any public Google calendars you want to subscribe to (you can almost always get an ICS calendar file link for those), and Etar to interact with said calendars on your phone.
On your computer, Thunderbird is the easiest way to go. There is also the web interface for whatever server you decide to host. There are other options, too. On Linux, I use pimsync + khal/khard.
Caveats:
Tutanota calender app. Works offline. Encrypted. Sync with tutanota login so very easy to setup.
Use tutanota webb to view calender on pc. Might work as well with their desktop app(not tried)
Nextcloud is my best pick. Of course, it does much more than calendars, so if you’re looking for a calendar service that does only that it may be a bit overblown.
Big pros:
Native WebDAV integration out-of-the-box - which means that you can easily export your calendars through WebDAV URLs in any supported app
Support for importing external calendars
If you also use other Nextcloud products (like mail, contacts or office) the integration betweren them is quite well designed
On Android then I use DAVx5 to synchronize calendars and contacts from Nextcloud with my phone, and Etar as a multi-provider calendar app.
What I use covers not only calender functionality but also address books:
Server: I recommend Baïkal. It’s based on the same calendar and contacts library that comes with Nextcloud. Reliable and powerful. This of course means you have to host this PHP app somewhere. If you prefer to have it as a service, a small rented Nextcloud instance may be easier to get because of it’s popularity.
Android: As already mentioned DAVx5 covers the sync function very well. As for the Calender app I like aCalendar+ but many others (maybe even stock calendar, but I’ve never tried it) should work. For contacts the stock app works here, as do others. One thing to look out for: You now have multiple calendars/address books. Make sure you store your data in the DAVx5 based ones. Check if your apps allow you to actually select them, or even better to make them the default. Otherwise it may look like sync is broken.
Linux: I use Thunderbird which supports CalDAV and CardDAV natively.
I use these for years without problems.
As others have said Nextcloud has a calendar, viewable via the webam or thubderbird (can also use the tasks) and any floss calendar app really on android or even the one installed by default probably.
There are a few orgs that permit creating an account so you can avoid selfhosting. Some like from Framasoft are donation funded.