- •Contents
- •Practice №1 The study of cloud services Google. Gmail.
- •1.1 About Gmail
- •1.2 Why choose Gmail
- •1.3 Creating an account
- •1.4 Gmail as a Google Account
- •2. Gmail’s Interface
- •2.1 Inbox
- •2.2 Compose Mail
- •2.3 Drafts
- •2.4 Sent Mail
- •2.5 More
- •2.6 Report Spam
- •2.7 Delete
- •2.8 Keyboard Shortcuts
- •3. Organizing your Gmail
- •3.1 Contacts
- •3.2 Stars
- •3.3 Labels
- •4. Advanced Settings
- •4.1 General Settings
- •4.2 Accounts and Import
- •4.3 Filters
- •4.4 Forwarding and Pop/imap
- •4.5 Offline
- •5. The Fun Stuff
- •5.1 Buzz
- •5.2 Chat
- •5.3 Web Clips
- •5.4 Labs
- •5.5 Themes
- •5.6 Gmail Mobile
- •5.7 Google Docs
- •5.8 Google Calendar
- •5.9 Tasks
- •6. Conclusion
- •Practice №2 The study of cloud services Google Talk.
- •2.1 Use the native Gmail Talk option
- •2.2 Installing the voice/video chat plugin
- •Practice №3 The study of cloud services Google Calendar
- •3.1 Interface
- •3.2 Create an event
- •3.3 Add location
- •3.4 Invite people
- •3.5 Share meeting materials
- •3.6 Meet online
- •Invite guests, add attachments, and meet online.
- •3.7 New committee? New (shared) calendar.
- •Practice №4 Editing of electronic documents Google Apps
- •4.1 Creating new files
- •4.2 Using templates
- •Practice №5 The study of functions Google App Engine
- •5.1 Google App Engine Docs
- •5.2 Download the App Engine sdk for php
- •5.3 Creating the Configuration File
- •Practice №6 Creating a data warehouse environment Google App Engine
- •6.1 Setting up Objectify
- •6.2 Creating the data model classes
- •6.3 Adding the greetings and the form to the jsp template
- •6.4 Creating the form handling servlet
- •6.5 Testing the app
- •6.6 Creating required indexes
- •Practice №7 The study of cloud services Google Apps
- •7.1 Gmail
- •Google Drive
- •Google Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Forms
- •7.4 Google Sites
- •7.5 Google Calendar
- •7.6 Google Hangouts
- •7.8 Google Apps Vault
- •7.9 Usage
- •Practice №8 Microsoft Office Live Workspace
- •8.1 Setting up Microsoft Live Workspace
- •8.2 Features Available with Office Live Workspace
- •Practice №9 The study of cloud services Microsoft SkyDrive
- •9.1 Creating a Microsoft account
- •9.2 Getting to know OneDrive
- •9.3 Installing the Microsoft OneDrive app
- •9.4 OneDrive for mobile devices
- •Practice №10 Network services for the mobile user. Wi-Fi technology
- •10.1 What is Wi-Fi ?
- •Practice №11 Search engines in Internet
- •Veronica & Jughead:
- •Improve Your Searching Skills:
- •Infoseek:
- •Inktomi:
- •Vertical Search
- •Verticals Galore!
- •Information Retrieval as a Game of Mind Control
- •Increasing The Rate of Algorithmic Change
- •Practice №12 Search graphic information in Internet. Comparative analysis of search engines. Internet image search
- •Study Guide
- •3 55029, Stavropol, Pushkina, 1
3.3 Add location
Add location details to make it easier to navigate to meetings. This can be especially helpful if you've invited guests. Auto-complete makes this easy: start typing and Google will suggest locations. As of February 2014, this works on the desktop and the Android Google Calendar app.
Once you've added an address, a map to the location is just a tap (or click) away. On the desktop, open the event, then select Map to open the location on a Google Map. On Android, open the event, then tap the address to open the location in your default map app.
Google's Waze navigation app can access Calendar information, as well. Upcoming calendar events will display in the list of options when you tap Navigate in Waze (Figure 3.3). This feature currently works in Android and is expected soon for iOS. (To enable this feature on Android: open Waze, tap the Waze icon in the lower left corner, tap the sprocket to open Settings, tap Advanced, then select the slider to Allow access to calendar.)
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Figure 3.3 – Add location |
Add an address for efficient navigation.
3.4 Invite people
If your organization uses Google Apps, stop sending emails to schedule meetings; send a calendar invitation instead. When someone accepts a calendar invitation, the event automatically gets added to their Google Calendar. This saves them the step of adding the event manually.
Open the calendar event to edit details, then add the email addresses of invitees. You can add individuals or invite all members of a Google Group (e.g., staff@yourdomain.com). Thanks to a recent update, events will automatically update as Google Group membership changes.
3.5 Share meeting materials
If you have a desktop or laptop, you can attach support documents to a meeting, but you'll need to enable a Google Labs feature first. (To do this: Open Google Calendar in your desktop browser. Click the Sprocket in the upper right corner, choose Labs, then select the checkbox next to the Event attachments feature.)
When enabled, you can attach files to calendar events. Invitees will receive a link to native Google Drive files (i.e., Docs, Sheets, and Slides) and will receive other files as attachments (e.g., PDFs).
Important: As of February 2014, this feature has limited use on mobile devices. Recipients can access the files only from a link in the invitation email. The attachments aren't visible to either the event creator or invitees in mobile Calendar apps.
3.6 Meet online
Another option for desktops and laptops is to Add video call to a calendar event. When your meeting starts, click on the link to join a Google+ Hangout with other meeting invitees. Of course, you'll need a Hangouts-enabled Google+ account. Use this feature to make sure people can participate in meetings (Figure 3.4), even when they're not in the room!
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Figure 3.4 – Meet online |
Invite guests, add attachments, and meet online.
3.7 New committee? New (shared) calendar.
If you have a new committee, consider creating a new shared calendar for the group. A shared calendar lets team members schedule meetings, coordinate activities, and track deadlines from any connected device.
To create a new shared calendar, open Google Calendar on your desktop/laptop. Then, click the small triangle to the right of My Calendar. Choose Create new calendar, name the calendar, and choose your sharing options (Figure 3.5).
And, if you also create a Google Group for the committee, you'll have a single group email address. Share documents, email updates, and invite the group to calendar events with that address. See my earlier post, "How to send email to groups efficiently with Google Groups," for details.
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Figure 3.5 – New (shared) calendar |
A shared calendar may be the only project management tool a committee needs.
Manage your calendar to manage commitments
Google's improvements to Calendar make it much easier to create, locate, and conduct meetings. The tips above should help you use your Google Calendar more efficiently.
However, you still have to decide which events go on your calendar. You – and the people you work with – must choose to manage your calendars effectively.
