Thanks for your suggestions Dave, Jonathan and Allan. What I require would use only a very small subset of features for most of these calendar solutions. Essentially, all I need is a status for a whole day e.g. available, unavailable, perhaps some other statuses. No need for events or scheduling at a finer granularity. I need something similar to some of the booking scripts for the likes of holiday homes that I'm coming across online. Looking over some code now and figuring how much I'll have to rewrite and whether just to create something myself. Or perhaps it'll be possible to use a subset of features for one of the more fully featured calendar solutions suggested. I'll keep exploring options. Cheers
> On 06/02/11 21:39, Jonathan Hunt wrote: >> Google Calendar is an obvious choice, though not opensource. >> >> There's also http://www.davical.org/ from NZ. I haven't used it anger >> though. > > DAViCal is written by Andrew McMillan (based in Wgtn), and seems to be > the most complete implementation of the CalDAV standard. It's also > written in PHP. It does, however, depend on PostgreSQL, which might make > it tricky for some who've only dealt with MySQL to maintain. Here's a > recent list of some other calendaring servers which run on Linux: > > http://www.linux.com/learn/tutorials/402382-the-five-best-open-source-calendar-servers-for-linux > > Google Calendar is probably the easy option, but does require that users > are comfortable entrusting their data to Google. I suspect most will be > cheerfully oblivious. > > Cheers, > > Dave -- NZ PHP Users Group: http://groups.google.com/group/nzphpug To post, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected]
