Windows Vista: The Complete Reference (Complete Reference Series)

Probably the Windows Calendar task you will perform the most is creating new appointments. Appointments appear in the Calendar view. They are called appointments, but they can also be meetings, tasks that have specific deadlines and that may involve other people, or blocks of time you want to designate as Busy Time so you can limit disruptions and get important work done or make phone calls.

Creating Appointments

To create a new appointment, double-click the time on the calendar at which you want the appointment to begin. You also can click a time and choose the New Appointment button on the Windows Calendar menu. Or, choose File Appointment when you have a time selected.

The block of time for the appointment (by default 1 hour ) changes color to your calendar color (such as light green) and displays the words New Appointment. Type a name for the appointment, such as District Manager Review Meeting, and press ENTER. Windows Calendar displays the new appointment, with its details displayed in the Details pane.

You can move an appointment by dragging-and-dropping it to a different time. If you need to increase or decrease the time of an appointment, simply click-and-drag the top or bottom edge of the appointment to resize the appointment box. Appointments can be shown in half-hour increments on the calendar. You can get more granular on an appointment's time by defining it in the Details pane.

Showing Details in Windows Calendar

To add details to an appointment, such as the location of the meeting, insert them in the Details pane. Here's a look at the settings there:

Figure 7-5 shows an appointment with several details shown. One thing to notice about the appointment is that after you add attendees, make the appointment a recurring one, add notes, and specify a reminder time, icons appear on the appointment in the calendar to show that these details are included.

Figure 7-5: Appointments can include details.

Note  

Windows Calendar uses the Internet Calendar file format for sharing calendars and for inviting others to an appointment. The file format is ICS (Acs file extension) and is a standard for many calendaring and scheduling programs that work under Windows, Apple Macintosh, and Linux. For example, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 enables you to import multi-event ICS files.

You can click outside the appointment to hide the appointment's details.

To remove an appointment, simply click it and press DELETE. When you do this, Windows Calendar does not ask if you are sure you want to remove the appointment. It simply deletes it, and you cannot undo the deletion.

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