You can try Ontime, www.ontime.com. I've used it in Windows environments and it works fairly well. I could not find on their site what O/Ses are supported, but they state they support "mulitiple networking environments". It might be worth an email to find out.
Mike --- Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Here on campus where I work we've managed to stay away from > MS-Exchange by running the older MS-Schedule+. Now that W2K > is upon us, with it's integrated Outlook that breaks > MS-Schedule, the campus will have to find an alternative or > install an MS-Exchange server and allow the Evil Empire to > gain an even stronger grip on the campus. > > What this boils down to is: Is there a program for Linux > that will do essentially the same thing as Schedule+? > > For those of you unfamiliar with Schedule+: I need a > calendar program that is networked. For example, I can open > my Schedule+ file, and then specify that John Doe has Read > access to it over the network and Jane Doe has Change access > to it over the network and Everyone else has no access to > it. > > What I'd really like is a cross-platform calendar, like if > Star Office's StarSchedule-thingy would work like this. Then > I can gradually influence campus away from > MS-Office/Windows. > > Hopefully someone knows of exactly the right thing. > > ===== "If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it." - Ronald Reagan explaining the bureaucrat's and lawmaker's mind-set. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com