Suggestions/comments?
I hope this thread:
1. Prompts discussion of how to find an appropriate Debian package.
2. Points me to an solution to my specific needs.
As to the first:
A. I find Synaptic's search function an excellent starting point.
Its problems include choosing a productive key word when searching
"Description and Name". A second problem often is no "homepage" or
a one with an inadequate description.
B. Effective use of web search engines appears to be an obtuse arcane
art. They appear to value hit quantity far above usefulness.
As to second, I'm a senior citizen needing an appointment calendar that:
A. runs well on a MATE desktop.
B. needs to handle a relatively light schedule of
1. three weekly or bi-weekly events.
2. appointments with medical providers.
Richard Owlett wrote:
...
Suggestions/comments?
yes, i use the package search page that Debian provides:
https://packages.debian.org/search
i used this for testing:
https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=appointment&searchon=all&suite=testing§ion=all
then from there i would use a further search engine to see
if the interface was going to work for me or not. i need a
way to make the text larger and clearer and many programs
seem to stick using smaller fonts and ignoring system settings
so they're not often useful to me.
good luck,
songbird
Richard Owlett wrote:
i may have made the previous link a bit more complicated
than it needed to be so this should be a more simple
version:
https://www.debian.org/distrib/packages
songbird
Richard Owlett <rowlett@access.net> writes:
I hope this thread:
1. Prompts discussion of how to find an appropriate Debian package.
2. Points me to an solution to my specific needs.
As to the first:
A. I find Synaptic's search function an excellent starting point.
Its problems include choosing a productive key word when searching
"Description and Name". A second problem often is no "homepage" or
a one with an inadequate description.
Is evaluating for yourself out of the question then?
B. Effective use of web search engines appears to be an obtuse arcane
art. They appear to value hit quantity far above usefulness.
For fringe stuff, sure. Linux on the desktop is fringe, especially for a desktop that's not the biggest. For example, I have no idea what runs
well on a MATE desktop in general or what that actually means to you.
As to second, I'm a senior citizen needing an appointment calendar that:
A. runs well on a MATE desktop.
B. needs to handle a relatively light schedule of
1. three weekly or bi-weekly events.
2. appointments with medical providers.
Generally speaking, look into what you use already? You seem to post
with some Mozilla thingy? Thunderbird has calendar integrated these
days, for Seamonkey it's apparently an add-on.
Personally, in Linux I don't have much need for a calendar, running ncal
-b -w -3 or calendar in Emacs is 99% of it. Very occasionally I put a
task in Thunderbird since that's setup to sync to my phones.
Over the years I've used also Evolution and Korganizer but I don't much
like either. From your list I tried xcal but it seemed
incomprehensible. At least xcal's a very small download so there's that.
I hope this thread:
1. Prompts discussion of how to find an appropriate Debian package.
2. Points me to an solution to my specific needs.
As to the first:
A. I find Synaptic's search function an excellent starting point.
Its problems include choosing a productive key word when
searching "Description and Name". A second problem often is no
"homepage" or
a one with an inadequate description.
B. Effective use of web search engines appears to be an obtuse
arcane
art. They appear to value hit quantity far above usefulness.
As to second, I'm a senior citizen needing an appointment calendar
that:
A. runs well on a MATE desktop.
B. needs to handle a relatively light schedule of
1. three weekly or bi-weekly events.
2. appointments with medical providers.
Synaptic and/or DuckDuckGo led me to:
xcal Synaptic hit without Screenshot OR homepage link.
Described as "graphical calendar with memos and reminder alarms".
xcal [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XCal]
Only description is "xCal represents iCalendar components,
properties and parameters as defined in iCalendar."
iCalendar [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICalendar]
A standard for representing calendar data.
remind Synaptic hit. Homepage, "could not be found" message
Described as "sophisticated calendar and alarm program".
gnome-calendar [https://packages.debian.org/sid/gnome-calendar]
No description. Links to [https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Calendar]
Calendar [https://apps.gnome.org/Calendar/]
There are marginally view-able images "Explore the interface" but
no description of of capabilities. Images suggest not appropriate.
On 01/19/2024 06:03 PM, songbird wrote:SNIP
Richard Owlett wrote:
...
-a-a i used this for testing:
https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=appointment&searchon=all&suite=testing§ion=all
I like that example!
It evidently does the same search as Synaptic but:
-a-a 1. presents in a better visual format.
-a-a 2. responds "only shows the best matches" when too many hits.
I've added it to MATE's Panel, appears I can add it to the System menu.> Time to review docs.
On 01/20/2024 06:29 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 01/19/2024 06:03 PM, songbird wrote:SNIP
Richard Owlett wrote:
...
-a-a i used this for testing:
https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=appointment&searchon=all&suite=testing§ion=all
I like that example!
It evidently does the same search as Synaptic but:
-a-a 1. presents in a better visual format.
-a-a 2. responds "only shows the best matches" when too many hits.
I've added it to MATE's Panel, appears I can add it to the System menu.
Time to review docs.
Successfully added it to the System menu.
As MATE's "Help" menus are *terse* {to say the least ;} I'll enumerate:
Right-click on "System"
Choose "Edit Menus"
"Main Menu" is displayed
Choose "Administration"
Click on "New Item"
Enter desired parameters in the "Create Launcher" menu.
On 01/19/2024 06:12 PM, songbird wrote:...
Richard Owlett wrote:
i may have made the previous link a bit more complicated
than it needed to be so this should be a more simple
version:
https://www.debian.org/distrib/packages
The "complication" made it a more effective demonstration.
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