Thu Apr 13, 2006 6:35 AM BST 
Printer Friendly  |  Email Article  |  RSS      
 
By Eric Auchard

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc. is introducing on Thursday a free Web
calendar service for consumers to schedule events and share them with
others, opening a new level of competition with rivals such as Yahoo Inc.
and Microsoft Corp.

Google Calendar, available at www.google.com/calendar, offers a variety of
features to make using Web calendars as easy as desktop calendars such as
Outlook, allowing users to "drag and drop" events from one calendar to
another.

The new service takes advantage of slick Web programming tricks using
Javascript and XML along with RSS. But perhaps the biggest breakthrough is
the calendar's use of "natural language processing" technology that
simplifies how events are entered.

The feature allows users to type simple commands like "leave work today at 5
p.m." or "drinks Thursday with Elinor" that the system can interpret and
automatically insert into the calendar. Events can be private, shared with
friends, or made public on the Web, Google Calendar's product manager said.

"Google Calendar takes all the events in my life and keeps them in one
place," Carl Sjogreen said in a phone interview.

"We enable the user to create multiple calendars, share them with other
people and overlay Web calendars back on the user's own calendar," the
Google product manager said.

Users of Google's free e-mail service Gmail may find the Google Calendar
particularly useful. Google's software scours Gmail to recognize mentions of
events and then automatically offers the user to add the date information to
the calendar. 

PRESSING OTHERS TO INNOVATE

Details of the long-rumored calendar, complete with screenshots of features
and instruction guides, had leaked out in late February among Silicon Valley
technology enthusiasts.

The calendar poses a direct challenge to Yahoo Calendar, the No. 1 Web
calendar service in the United States, which was introduced in 1998 and has
changed little in substance in recent years. But Google said it plans to
"play nice" and allow users to share Google Calendar events with Yahoo
Calendar.

While Sjogreen is careful to say that Google Calendar is not designed to
replace corporate calendars, it could raise expectations among office
workers that its features should be part of corporate scheduling systems
like Microsoft's Outlook or IBM's Lotus Notes.

Sjogreen said Google is working to offer seamless connections to Microsoft
Outlook, the Palm Treo smartphone and to various other mobile phone
calendars in coming months.

The trial version of Google Calendar is being offered in English. Gmail
users will begin being offered the service within the next week. In coming
months, Google will translate the calendar into multiple languages, Sjogreen
said.

The Sunnyvale, California-based rival of Google said in a statement that the
company is working on updates to Yahoo Calendar, which it plans to release
in coming months.

Last year, Yahoo acquired Upcoming.org. (http://upcoming.org/), a social
event calendar that helps users manage events, share them with friends and
family, and post notifications to one's own or to other Web sites.

(Additional reporting by Tom Nguyen in New York)
 


Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to