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Can anyone suggest or recommend a great online/hosted calendar system that is, hopefully, free, but if not then less than $10 per month? Anything other than Google? Must be accessible via any web browser.

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I'm with EpochWolf here- Google Calendar is a pretty clear and compelling choice, can you explain why it doesn't work for you? – Tim Howland Sep 19 '08 at 3:29
Perhaps this is someone in Microsoft's strategy department and they are planning to buy an online calendar vendor; obviously Google can't sell Calendar to them but the runner up (the one voted highest on StackOverflow) would be the best purchase option. SO goes above and beyond. :-) – Jared Updike Jul 8 at 22:46
Actually Jared, this is not 'someone at Microsoft'. But, thanks, as I do like a good conspiracy theory as much as the next guy. :-) Tim (and others who have asked): At the time I think Google's calendar was beta and my client didnt wish to get involved with beta and also didnt wish to get involved with Google (or Microsoft) or any large software dev that "changes things almost daily" as they put it to me. So I wrote them a custom app. – Optimal Solutions Jul 9 at 12:42

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Windows Vista, OSX, and Ubuntu all come with calendar applications. And for more features, there is always Outlook and it's open-source clones.

I only mention this because you aren't very specific about the kind of calendar application you are looking for. How about listing features that are required and features that would be nice? The better your question is the better the answers you will get. (Generally)

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Hosted. Online (accessible from any browser). Sorry! I edited the question. – Optimal Solutions Sep 19 '08 at 2:49
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No problem. Just trying to be helpful. :) – epochwolf Sep 19 '08 at 2:53
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Chandler Hub — an instance of Chandler Server a.k.a. Cosmo, hosted by the Internet Systems Consortium.

Chandler Hub is a public service of the Open Source Applications Foundation.

If you're interested in the architecture, see http://chandlerproject.org/Developers/WebHome in particular http://chandlerproject.org/Projects/CosmoArchitecture.

Chandler Server CalDAV service includes support for VTODO. When I last checked, this was missing from Google Calendar.

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You can setup a standard WebDAV server and it will synchronize with Office Vista, Mozilla Sunbird, Mac OS X iCal, and many Linux applications. Most 3rd party web hosts offer WebDAV support, too--so you aren't locked into any particular vendor (ala Google Calendar, et all).

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I personally like Google Calendar and I love it about 10x more than I previously did because they enabled CalDAV support. CalDAV is a read/write protocol that Apple's iCal supports, which means I can do two-way sync's natively from iCal and the Web and anything else that supports CalDAV (there are plugins for most major calendar clients).

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http://www.30boxes.com/

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The hover text for the giant '30' (bottom right corner) declares today as the day before the epoch. I know my history, nothing existed before then. Conclusion: 30boxes lies to me. – nilamo Jul 8 at 22:30
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Google Calendars. I use it tons.

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Thanks, but not Google. I corrected my question to reflect that. – Optimal Solutions Sep 19 '08 at 1:51
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I like Google Calendar, calendar.google.com. Free, fast and pretty good usability.

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You beat my answer by 11 seconds. Over thousands of miles (unless you are in hawaii), our brains are in sync minus some latency. Maybe our brains share protons that are linked at the quantum level. Spooky. – scubabbl Sep 19 '08 at 1:49
Thanks, but not Google. I corrected my question to reflect that. – Optimal Solutions Sep 19 '08 at 1:50
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If you don't mind me asking, why not google? – scubabbl Sep 19 '08 at 1:52

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