Pogoplug/Linux would seem the PERFECT server for a family calender - births and deaths alone something family members can access and see the birthdays and last days of our loved ones..
I'm showing a preference to the Linux calender Maya as it seems light and good looking, easy to make a forever loop and exportable. I'd be wise to check if there's a Windows/OSX calender you can import Maya database if necessary, but for now...
I know it's a good idea especially with the most efficient little home server, but not sure how to implement. You'd have to port forward your router for relatives to access, right? Maybe install a group in Linux called Relatives, allow group access to Maya.
-update- Maya was made known to me evaluating a bunch of unfamiliar live Linux distributions today using a USB stick, and as alternativeto.net says:
"Maya is a slim, lightweight, GCal-syncing GTK+ Calendar application written in Vala, specifically for Small elementary OS iconelementary OS . Also looks and works great on other GTK+ desktops."
Me too, I love the look and want to keep family details safe from malicious entities.
Any interest?
I'm showing a preference to the Linux calender Maya as it seems light and good looking, easy to make a forever loop and exportable. I'd be wise to check if there's a Windows/OSX calender you can import Maya database if necessary, but for now...
I know it's a good idea especially with the most efficient little home server, but not sure how to implement. You'd have to port forward your router for relatives to access, right? Maybe install a group in Linux called Relatives, allow group access to Maya.
-update- Maya was made known to me evaluating a bunch of unfamiliar live Linux distributions today using a USB stick, and as alternativeto.net says:
"Maya is a slim, lightweight, GCal-syncing GTK+ Calendar application written in Vala, specifically for Small elementary OS iconelementary OS . Also looks and works great on other GTK+ desktops."
Me too, I love the look and want to keep family details safe from malicious entities.
Any interest?