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xCal is an XML representation of the iCalendar standard. xCal is not an alternative nor next generation of iCalendar. xCal represents iCalendar components, properties and parameters as defined in iCalendar. This format was selected to ease its translation back to the iCalendar format using an XSLT transform.
iCalendar components and their properties. iCalendar was created in 1998 [3] by the Calendaring and Scheduling Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force, chaired by Anik Ganguly of Open Text Corporation, and was authored by Frank Dawson of Lotus Development Corporation and Derik Stenerson of Microsoft Corporation. iCalendar data files are plain text files with the extension.ics or ...
5. Under the 'Web and iCal Access' section, click a radio button to make your calendar Private or Public. 6. Click Email This Link under HTML (to share as a web page) or ICAL (if you want to share with other iCal applications). 7. In the email window that appears, enter the email address of the person you want to share your calendar with. 8 ...
hCalendar (short for HTML iCalendar) is a microformat standard for displaying a semantic (X)HTML representation of iCalendar-format calendar information about an event, on web pages, using HTML classes and rel attributes.
Web Calendar Access Protocol (WCAP) is a protocol for remote client-server calendar access and scheduling based on the XML, HTTP, iCalendar, and vCard Internet standards. WCAP was created for use with the product that eventually became Sun Java System Calendar Server. WCAP uses simple HTTP GET commands for accessing iCalendar, Freebusy, TODO ...
the iCalendar file format; Swatch Internet Time This page was last edited on 28 December 2019, at 20:33 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
xCal: the XML-compliant representation of the iCalendar standard; XCES: an XML based standard to codify text corpus; XDI: sharing, linking, and synchronizing data using machine-readable structured documents that use an RDF vocabulary based on XRI structured identifiers; XDuce: an XML transformation language; XDXF: for monolingual and bilingual ...
The International Fixed Calendar (also known as the Cotsworth plan, the Cotsworth calendar, the Eastman plan or the Yearal) [1] was a proposed reform of the Gregorian calendar designed by Moses B. Cotsworth, first presented in 1902. [2]