Wanna show you a legend of Dianne Skoll.
One of my pains of switching to Linux is finding a civilized #calendar app. Thunderbird is too clumsy in general, Merkuro's UI fits less info on the screen than my mobile cal, and you can't even use 24h format (as if they had an attitude problem). For a few months I was even using Nextcloud's (ugh) cal as web widget (ugh) on KDE desktop - and that was pathetic, but still the best solution I found. Even looked at Morgen, which charges 30$/mo, - because there seems to be no decent competition.
Then I just stumbled on #remind. It is a heritage piece of command-line first calendar, on active development since 80s. It also has a GUI, which looks really retro, but in fact is quite customizable and neat in its own way. It seems to do everything I want, fast, and even has its own programming language for tricky schedules and time calculations. All of that is a persistent work of one person of more than three decades. Absolute legend. Check it out: https://dianne.skoll.ca/projects/remind/
One of my pains of switching to Linux is finding a civilized #calendar app. Thunderbird is too clumsy in general, Merkuro's UI fits less info on the screen than my mobile cal, and you can't even use 24h format (as if they had an attitude problem). For a few months I was even using Nextcloud's (ugh) cal as web widget (ugh) on KDE desktop - and that was pathetic, but still the best solution I found. Even looked at Morgen, which charges 30$/mo, - because there seems to be no decent competition.
Then I just stumbled on #remind. It is a heritage piece of command-line first calendar, on active development since 80s. It also has a GUI, which looks really retro, but in fact is quite customizable and neat in its own way. It seems to do everything I want, fast, and even has its own programming language for tricky schedules and time calculations. All of that is a persistent work of one person of more than three decades. Absolute legend. Check it out: https://dianne.skoll.ca/projects/remind/