Google Calendar was the first truly great web-based calendar, and is the default calendar of millions of people to this day. But if you’re a Mac user, you probably don’t want to manage your calendar in a web browser, using an ugly user interface, like some kind of digital peasant. RELATED: No, if you’re a Mac user, you want to use the beautiful calendar that comes with macOS, so you can get native Mac notifications for appointments and other integrations.
Google Launches Chrome Apps for Mac Wednesday December 11, 2013 11:31 am PST by Juli Clover Google today announced that it is bringing Chrome Apps to the Mac, following a beta period that began in.
As it turns out, you can easily add your Google Calendar to macOS’ Calendar app, so it will sync almost instantly. If you’ve already, you should absolutely set it up to sync with your Mac too, so all of your appointments show up everywhere. First, open System Preferences, and head to “Internet Accounts.” There’s a chance your Google account is already here; check the accounts in the left panel and see.
If not, click “Google” to add a new Google account. A pop-up will allow you to sign into your Google account, just like you would in your browser. Is supported, which is essential. Once your signed in, you’ll be asked which services you want to connect to your Google account.
In my case, I only want the Calendar enabled, but feel free to check or uncheck other things if you’d like. Now, let’s head to the Calendar application! You should see your new account in the sidebar, and if you head to Calendar Preferences in the menu bar, you can configure how often your new account refreshes. There’s a chance things aren’t quite working at this point, so here are a few troubleshooting tips:.
If your account shows up but your calendars do not, I recommend restarting your Mac. I’m sure there’s a more targeted way to solve the issue, but restarting is what worked for me. If you’ve, or need to see calendars other users have shared with you, make sure you head to the Delegations tab.
That’s where you can enable those calendar. If some of your calendars aren’t showing up in the Delegations tab, head to in your browser and enable all the calendars you want to use. You should now see your Google Calendar in your Mac’s Calendar app. Test it by adding some appointments and seeing if they sync.
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Am new to iOS development please help me to understand. I've got a Mac Mini Late 2009 Core 2 Duo. It's running EL Capitan, and as far as my knowledge concern it can not be updated to Sierra. Please correct me if am wrong.
If I can not update the OS, then can I build apps for iOS 8 & that app should also work on iOS 10. Because on EL Capital I can run only Xcode 7.3 as far as my knowledge concern. But I guess apps which are already there in market targeted for iOS 7 or 8, at-least not all apps but 80% of them also run on iOS 9 or 10. Please forgive me if asking the wrong question but please don't ban me. I think your question was answered here: Based on that, the summary is that it might or it might not work. Apple says: But it's important to understand that using an older SDK is a temporary workaround, not a solution.
Issues preventing your app from using the latest SDK should be fixed as soon as possible. It will be much easier to fix these issues while the older build system is still supported. And also guide you to verify if your Xcode configuration is accepted: To determine if an older Xcode configuration is currently accepted by the App Store, you can choose 'Archive' under the 'Product' menu to make an archived build, then use the Validate feature, to test if that build meets minimum requirements for submission to the App Store.
More info about it here: I hope this helps:).
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