Talk:CalDAV

Latest comment: 7 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

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Can we expand on "using standard HTTP and DAV semantics to detect conflicting changes"? How does the system actually identify when a datum has been changed and needs to be synced? Does it use hashing like rsync, or deltas like VCS, or what?

--User:Mcandre

CalDAV is now RFC 4791.

See http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4791.txt --anon

How about a list of CalDAV clients and servers?

Even better would be a comparison (in a table format) of calendar software clients and servers according to major protocols (caldav, webdav, groupdav, exchange). --andrewz 9/4/2006

That would be best suited for another article like Comparison of calendar protocols or something similar. -Matt 17:57, 26 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree with the original idea. I think it would be very useful to see a list of servers with their compliance levels, and a separate list of clients. Speaking of servers, don't forget DAViCal Adam Di Carlo 19:33, 8 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
Sounds like this would have the tendency to fall into the original research trap as most "comparison of" articles. Don't add content just because it would be useful, but keep in mind Wikipedia's policies. If the content cannot satisfy Wikipedia's policies, you are encouraged to post it on some other wiki (a Wikimedia project or otherwise). -- intgr [talk] 23:15, 8 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I've added Bedework to the list of CalDAV servers and clients; it's an open-source early implementer of CalDAV (version 3.0 was released in April 2006 with much CalDAV support). Please note: I am a Bedework developer - but I'm not sure who else might add it. The listing seemed biased towards commercial software, and the inclusion of Bedework seems a valid way to rectify that. Arlen Johnson 00:14, 31 January 2009

Google Calendar

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  • "Google Calendar supports CalDAV using iCal 3.x [8] and Mozilla Sunbird 0.8+[9]."

This is sort of misleading. Google Calendar supports any client that uses the CalDAV protocol which includes iPhones OS 3.0+ devices (iPhone + iPod Touch) for example.

-- nyenyec  00:13, 7 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

"While other calendar applications support CalDAV, Google Calendar only supports CalDAV using Apple iCal or Mozilla Sunbird." (http://support.google.com/calendar/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=99357) --24.87.152.127 (talk) 22:00, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Merge GroupDAV into this article

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GroupDAV has been marked as little notable over a year ago, and, according to the official website itself, it isn't developed any further, as CalDAV seemed to pick up some of it's ideas and got standardized.

Mergeing GroupDAV into the History section of this article would be the best choice IMO, it gets rid of an insufficiently notable article, help contribute to this one, and avoids the effort that's been put into that one going to waste. HuGo_87 (talk) 03:58, 10 May 2012 (UTC)Reply

"Not developed any further" is only one developer's opinion. The owner of the groupdav.org domain changed their strategy but there is still significant use of GroupDAV. It is not dead, not by far.
If there is to be a merge, it would be more appropriate to merge this article into WebDAV rather than CalDAV because GroupDAV does more than just calendars. Art Cancro (talk) 19:53, 11 May 2012 (UTC)Reply
I don't see why this needs to be merged. Yes, GroupDAV isn't going any further, but it is historically relevant and referred to from other material. As mentioned by Art it is not a subset of CalDAV, but covers other formats (e.g. CardDAV) too. You could make it a section on WebDAV, but this would obfuscate WebDAV with historic stuff. I'd rather keep it on its own page. Helge. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Helgemd (talkcontribs) 05:27, 1 June 2012 (UTC)Reply
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