Wednesday, May 25, 2011

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's Labs [Google Calendar Labs]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5805460/8-great-experimental-features-to-enable-in-google-calendars-labs

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsWe've highlighted plenty of Labs features for Gmail, but Calendar has some pretty great Labs offerings, too. Since it's been nearly two years since Labs were added to Calendar, we thought it was about time they got a bit more attention. Here are eight of the most useful experimental features available for Google Calendar that you can start using right now.

Next Meeting (a.k.a., the One New Calendar Labs Feature You Should Definitely Enable)

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsNext Meeting is probably the single most useful experimental feature in Calendar, because it shows you exactly what event is coming up next, along with a clearly readable countdown timer so you don't miss it. It shows up as a widget in the sidebar, and the event displayed in the widget is highlighted the same color as the calendar set that it came from.


Jump to Date

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsThis feature allows you to quickly jump straight to any date in the past or future, without a flux capacitor. Not only is it great for jumping back to check what events happened on past dates, but enabling it along with the Year View feature (below) is a great way to get a handle on long-term planning.


World Clock

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsThis feature adds a simple, minimal world clock to the sidebar, and you get to pick and choose which cities to include in the list. It's especially useful for people trying to schedule events with co-workers who are located globally, and even better, it displays cities with dark backgrounds if it happens to be night time in their time zones.


Year View

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsThe ability to view the entire year is something that most would agree should be included in any calendar service, but that's not the case in Calendar if you don't have this feature enabled. It's quick to use, unobtrusive, and extremely useful for planning events several months ahead of time.


Dim Future Repeating Events

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsThis feature only applies to events that are slated for a specific time period, not a whole day. If there are recurring events scheduled for the same day as a one-off item, they'll dim slightly to make the slightly more important event stand out. Pretty useful if you've got a packed schedule and you're trying to skim through it for appointments.


Gentle Reminders

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsGentle Reminders was one of the first experiments to hit Calendar's Labs. When enabled, event reminders will flash in the browser tab and play a soft alarm sound, which is less obtrusive than a pop-up window. If you're using Chrome, a new option allows desktop notifications as well.


Automatically Declining Events

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsCalendar already offers an option to list yourself as busy during events, but that won't stop people from inviting you to anything and everything while you're gone. This feature handles those invites for you by simply declining each and every one if you tell it to do so.


Event Attachments

8 Great Experimental Features to Enable in Google Calendar's LabsSharing calendars with friends or co-workers is great, but it only shares the events. This feature allows you to upload attachments to any event you want, and even grabs items from other Google services. The only catch is that if you're sharing something from Docs, you'll still have to actually set the doc itself to share, too.



There are a few more experimental features in Google Calendar's Labs settings, so be sure to check them out for yourself to see if any suit your workflow.