It's an Apple bug— Apple Sync Services is sending existing events as
"added" without doing a refresh sync, and that will result in
duplicates. But if you contact us at [email protected] we'll do
what we can to quickly eradicate the duplicates.
--
Larry Hendricks
[email protected]
http://spanningsync.com

On Apr 2, 12:08 am, Bart Braem <[email protected]> wrote:
> Unfortunately, in my case combining this with a synced iPhone results
> in lots and lots of duplicates. And I do not see an immediate
> solution...
> The question however: is this a spanning sync bug or an apple sync
> bug?
>
> Bart
>
> On Mar 30, 8:40 pm, Larry Hendricks <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi,
>
> > We've been testing Apple's Mac OS X 10.6.3 update which was released
> > yesterday and wanted to let you know that Spanning Sync and the update
> > are getting along nicely.
>
> > One interesting thing that we did notice is that on each machine that
> > was updated, Apple Sync Services sent a large number (all?) of
> > existing iCal events as "new" even though it didn't ask Spanning Sync
> > to do a "refresh" sync. With most sync software this would have
> > resulted in a large number of duplicates. However, thanks to our
> > active duplicate prevention system, no duplicates actually appeared in
> > Google Calendar. But be aware that the same thing could happen with
> > other sync software or services such as Mobile Me (which doesn't have
> > the same duplicate protection), and that the first sync after updating
> > will take longer than normal.
>
> > Thanks
> > --
> > Larry Hendricks
> > [email protected]http://spanningsync.com

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