45 projects tagged "Scheduling"
Calcurse is a text-based calendar and scheduling application. It helps keep track of events, appointments, and everyday tasks. A configurable notification system reminds the user of upcoming deadlines, and the curses based interface can be customized to suit user needs. All of the commands are documented within an online help system.
Wyrd is a curses front-end for Remind, a powerful calendar and alarm application. The display features a scrollable time table suitable for visualizing your schedule at a glance. Wyrd integrates with an external editor of your choice to make editing of reminder files more efficient, and provides hotkeys to quickly access the most common Remind options. Other features include extensive configurability, Mutt-like interface design, and minimal resource requirements.
Connect Daily is a Web calendar and resource management application. Features include unlimited users, email reminders, public and private calendars, AJAX support, RSS, CSV import/export, and iCal support. Planner views and approvals prevent double-booking resources and make managing your facility a snap. A powerful security system provides flexible permission control. Authentication via LDAP or Active Directory is supported.
BORG is a calendar and task tracking system written entirely in Java. The calendar is an appointment organizer that provides a nice month view, month printing, email reminders, popup reminders, and a to do list. The task tracker tracks issues and tasks through various user-defined states.
actiTIME is a Web-based time-tracking program with additional functionality for effective project management and accurate accounting. It allows you to enter time with comments, assign project teams, plan the time spent on each task, evaluate team performance, generate powerful reports, analyze project costs, bill customers, and more. actiTIME is free for small to mid-sized companies. It can be downloaded and installed on your own server or it can be hosted on a server provided by actiTIME's producers.
iBeans aims to make integration for Web applications much easier than it is today. It does this by focusing on simplicity and task-based integration and avoids technical jargon and new concepts wherever possible. It offers easy to use integration for doing things like publishing and subscribing to JMS queues and topics, sending and receiving email, polling resources such as databases and ATOM feeds, task scheduling, creating HTTP/Rest services, consuming external services such as Amazon EC2 and S3, Twitter, Flickr, Google, and much more. It proves a Tomcat distribution that drops straight into Tomcat, with no need to mess with your project dependencies, and works with developer tooling for Tomcat or Tcat. It has a very simple API using annotations. This means iBeans can be plugged into your existing Web apps easily. It includes easy unit and mock testing using JUnit. IBeans Central offers a great place to discover and try new iBeans in your applications.