A desk calendar is a paper calendar that you can lay on top of your desk or workspace. Desktop calendars come in daily, weekly, and monthly formats. Desk calendars are available in 12 or 17 month options, so they can be purchased at any time during the year.
A paper desk calendar helps you stay organized throughout your day. Large desk calendar pads have plenty of space for notes on each day, so you can keep track of all your appointments and to do lists in one place. If you have limited office space, a small, upright-standing calendar can help you keep track of the date and take up very little desk real estate.
Get ready for the cutest year yet! Our 2024 desktop calendar is filled with photos of dogs, cats, puppies and kittens that will put a smile on your face and a warm, fuzzy feeling in your heart all 365 days of the coming year.
Every month, we post two wallpaper images that you can choose from to update your desktop wallpaper calendar. The images are entries in the annual Colors of Pinellas Art Show. The artist can be an employee, retiree, volunteer, intern or family member, and is noted in the top right of the calendar.
A custom desk calendar isn't the only way to spruce up your office or home decor. To add warmth and personality to your workspace, create personalized stationery with your favorite photos, colors, and designs. Unique office decor like monthly mousepad calendars, notepads, monthly planners, and desktop plaques are a wonderful way to display your most cherished pictures and memories. Take your boring office decor up a notch with custom wall art like photo tiles, canvas wall art, and more. Office visitors will love flipping through your photo calendar and personalized items designed by you.
So, I'm looking for a calendar with few dependencies (GTK is fine, most of my apps are GTK, but as little GNOME deps as possible) that can schedule events and show me the date, upcoming events, current events, tasks, etc. I want one that won't bug up every time I add an event, and one that will play like Conky and keep itself on the desktop and out of my Alt+Tab list. Preferably transparent-backgrounded (a la Conky!).
Thank you, but I prefer not to have more overhead to worry about simply for the calendar. I've seen something about conky having a calendar; I'm looking into that. Maybe if I start another instance of Conky in the top of the screen...
it's not realy an desktop solution... i realy like google's calendar and you could use xml feed to read out the agenda
and you can create multiply agenda's and even have pre-defined calendars for vecations and so.
hey, figured i would post this here, instead of a new thread. Ive been looking for a CLI calendar/datebook type program. I use cal now, but it just shows the month and day - i would want to be able to add a 'note' to a day and be able to view those notes. Any ideas, I imagine this has already been coded a million times, so no point in reinventing the wheel and doing it myself. thanks.
Xdiary is a simple X11 application that displays a one-month or full-year calendar, in association with a two-pane daily diary. The first pane shows the current day items, and the second pane shows the past and next items to come. The internal editor allows drag-n-drop, has a few emacs-like bindings, and is rather efficient in spite of a small memory footprint. Xdiary can print diaries and month/year calendars, and supports seven languages.
oh you can do it manually, but if you specify in an installer (regardless of installer or distro) that you want Swedish Keyboard and Locale but English language, you get this. Aka everything except the clock and calendar is in English.
I have synced my calendar (using sync to an external calendar option under share view) to my google calendar on my laptop. I see the events from that calendar there. On my phone, I have set up to see google calendars. When I look at a date that I know there is an event for, I do not see it. Any ideas as to why I would see it on the desktop calendar, but not on my phone?
Scott, I'm assuming the 12-24 hrs thing will still be an issue, which is fine, My issue was that none of the items were appearing on my phone and I had waited 48 hrs. Once I selected the calendar on the calendar sync page, the events appeared on the calendar on my phone.
I have a working PBIX file that looks at symptom data over time, and I was trying to do the whole thing inside of PowerBI Desktop, without using SQL Server (heresy, I know!), just to see if it could be done. The original data I received is in Excel (I have 2013), and I can do everything I need to except generate a calendar table. If I use SQL Server, I can just call a function that generates the Calendar for me... I just pass in the startDate and the number of Days I want the calendar to span and I'm off to the races.
No, I didn't install SSAS. I was just trying to see how much I could do in PowerPivot without using T-SQL. When I did the whole thing with T-SQL, I used (I think) a calendar table function from here, and since i could specify the start and end dates, I had no excess dates... Was just trying to get my head around M, but that might not be worth the hassle.
found an explanation for any other intrepid folks that might be trying to create a calendar using PowerQuery... (not sure why one would want to do that, since it's so easy to use a script here... but anyway. Maybe because you don't have access to one?)
that's basically what I did. (it's like a mini star schema, and Calendar is just a dimension table). Turns out, I used your calendar table-valued function. =) ... so I have a bunch of stuff in the table that's persisted so that it's easy to report on.
Another great way to use printed calendars is for lead generation. If you are in a business that relies on new clients, such as a law firm or real estate agency, printed calendars make a great marketing tool. You can put your contact details on the calendar and give them away to potential clients. By the time the new year comes around, your contact details will be in front of many more people, helping you to drum up new business.
Getting a desktop calendar professionally printed can be the perfect cost-effective solution to integrating your online and offline marketing campaigns, too. For example, you can add QR codes so colleagues and customers can easily link through to your website or blog from their smartphones, or you can advertise pre-set online sales at specific times of the year. You could even encourage further engagement by printing special offers and discount codes right onto the calendar.
People commonly used calendar desk pads in offices, but you can also find them in schools, homes, and other business premises. This type of printed calendar is ideal for businesses that need to keep track of a lot of dates and appointments. They can use it for anything, from marketing campaigns to staff meetings. Keep in mind that calendars are affordable promotional items that customers are genuinely happy to receive. They are useful items that people will see every day, so you get tons of brand exposure for a minor investment.
Make sure that your photographs are of high quality and original. Ideally, get a professional photographer to take them for you. Avoid clichéd shots of people in suits shaking hands, people standing in front of a computer, or shots that look like you took them from a free stock image site. The photos you choose for your business calendar should tell a story about your company or product. You can do this by including people, products, or places that are genuine and meaningful to you or your company.
The Desktop Calendar can be resized by clicking the "Move/Resize" button at the top of the window. This will result in a border appearing, which can be dragged to resize like a typical window. Areas of the Desktop Calendar can be pinned or undocked, which combined with the resizing capability, results in many potential layouts of the desktop calendar. For example, if you only want to see the Navigation Pane and Upcoming Events, the Tasks pane can be unpinned (click the pin button next to the "Tasks" label). Next, click the "Move/Resize" button and adjust the Desktop Calendar width so the Day/Week/Month tabs in the middle are hidden. Here's how it would look:
If you'd like to provide more space for the calendar, you can set the Navigation Pane to automatically hide by clicking the "pin" button at the top of the pane. You can also click and drag the "Navigation Pane" text to make the pane float outside of the Desktop Calendar (anywhere on the screen) or dock in a different location within the Desktop Calendar area.
If you'd like to provide more space for the calendar, you can set the Upcoming Events list to automatically hide by clicking the "pin" button at the top of the pane. You can also click and drag the "Upcoming Events" text to make the pane float outside of the Desktop Calendar (anywhere on the screen) or dock in a different location within the Desktop Calendar area.
I have added a new calendar on my Outlook desktop app installed on my laptop. However when I access my outlook wep app (OWA) I cannot see the new calendar created on my profile. I have tried to do the reverse but it did not work either.
760c119bf3