Hello Rainer,

I have to agree with you on this bug report. I have been subscribed to
this for well over a year and as an end user I have not seen any
progress. I advocate Ubuntu to a lot of people and generally I am happy
in the direction Ubuntu is taking. However I feel that this shows a lack
of commitment to detail.

I would not expect to find something like this in OSX or Microsoft
Windows. It is the little details that make the overall experience.
Defaulting a calendar to open Gedit is simply not good practise. A
calendar is a very basic item to have built in to your desktop and I was
astounded when it was removed in Ubuntu and even more so that it is
given such prominence in the touch edition of Ubuntu. Can any developer
explain this disparity?

It was stated that Thunderbird would provide the same level of
functionality as Evolution did when the switch was first mooted and that
Thunderbird would ship with a calendar. This is cleary an example of a
regression in Ubuntu when a feature is removed and not replaced with an
equivalent.

Let me just ask, why is it essential for my phone that a calendar be a
default application but not my desktop which I probably spend 10 times
longer using in a day? Surely you would want to link your calendar
across both devices in order to be productive.

I think it is time that Canonical take a holistic approach to the
totality of their computing experience and provide a consitent
experience.

Best regards,


J Mills

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/841409

Title:
  GEdit is the only choice as Calendar application in Default
  Applications dialog

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/gnome-control-center/+bug/841409/+subscriptions

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