![]() ![]() And if you so choose, you can simply drag Safari to the trash can and never use it again. Oh, and Safari isn't the Lincoln Tunnel of security holes that IE is either. * Browsers - Yeah, Safari needs some work, but you've got quite a few to choose from. * Guess you didn't spend much time looking for it, because you could have had Trillian for Mac OS X as well. * Address Book - not only is it integrated into mail, but it's integrated into OS X. * Why do you think Office 2004 sucks? Probably because it's made by Microsoft! Ever heard of OpenOffice? * No spyware or viruses - I don't even run anti-virus because there has NEVER been a virus for OS X. * Unix-based, and you have full control of Unix through the terminal. Just a few glaring omissions from your article: macgeek - Saturday, Janulink It is go glaringly obvious to any Mac user that you did understand half of what you were writing about.Look at it from a multi-user point of view. Plus, I can subscribe to a season calendar of the Yankees! So as I publish calendars for visiting artists, and I subscribe to one for entertainment. As changes occur, we would get them without a memo going out, and everyone updating their calendars. It would be great if he could generate a calander that we could subscribe to for each show. At my work place, we have 20 productions going on. ![]() In outlook, my boss can only have one (and view others). When I make a change to that calendar, they see those changes. For one thing, I can publish a calendar so that other users can subsribe to it. And it seems to be able to do things that XP Outlook can't. It is my FAV Apple app!! It is the most powerful, easy to use calendar I've come across. I thought it was very interesting you found nothing snazzy about iCal. I am a long time Mac user, with an XP machine at home and an iBook at work.
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