2 gui snippets

Accessing Google Calendar from Thunderbird/Lightning (Icedove/Iceowl)

Background Note: On Debian, Mozilla's email client Thunderbird is known as Icedove, and Mozilla's calendar client Lightning is known as Iceowl. This rebranding has something to do with the licensing requirements surrounding the "Mozilla" name. As I understand it, Firefox/Iceweasel, Thunderbird/Icedove and Sunbird/Lightning/Iceowl are identical save for the icons and naming.

Here's how to access Google Calendar using Lightning/Iceowl, whether as a standalone application or as a Thunderbird/Icedove add-on.

1. Install the application:

sudo aptitude install iceowl

Or the add-on (assuming you've already installed Thunderbird/Icedove):

sudo aptitude install iceowl-extension

You can install both, but note that they don't share a configuration so you'll need to set up your calendars in both Lightning/Iceowl and Thunderbird/Icedove.

2. Get the "private URL" for your calendar.

Go to the web-based Google Calendar.

On the left-side navigation bar, notice the My Calendars section (expand that if needed). Hover over one of your calendars and click on the little caret/down-arrow menu that appears. Select Calendar settings from that menu.

On the Calendar settings page, note the section labeled Private Addresses. Copy the URL that is linked to by the orange button labeled XML.

3. Create a new calendar in Lightning/Iceowl.

In the standalone app, that's File > New Calendar. Within Thunderbird/Icedove, that's File > New > Calendar.

Select On the Network (and click Next).

Select Google Calendar and paste the URL you copied in step 2 into the Location field. (Then click Next.)

Enter your Google username/password and tweak the settings as desired.

4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 for each calendar you want to integrate.

Published 26 Feb 2014
Tagged gui, debian and linux.

 

Ctrl-Back opens the referring page in a new tab in Chrome

In Chromium/Google Chrome, holding down the Ctrl button while clicking on the back button will open a new tab with the appropriate page (history.go(-1)) in a new tab.

I don't know how long this has been a feature, but I accidentally stumbled across this today. Very useful for me. I often open many links from a single page (a directory page or SERP for example). When I fail to Ctrl-click, I need to go back, and ctrl-click the link, which is tedious when it results in two spurious page loads (loading the new page, re-loading the list page and then re-loading the new page again).

Tagged gui.

 

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