

- #Google calendar in ipad calendar app how to#
- #Google calendar in ipad calendar app upgrade#
- #Google calendar in ipad calendar app mac#
If you're going to mess around with any of the raw file system, please, please, please make a backup. I'm hoping the above blog data gets you a bit closer in sorting things out. I'd expected a YYYYMMDD, but have no idea what 020000 represented. In looking at the log messages and examining the CalDAV, the most suspicious entry was this: DTSTART:20070311T020000
#Google calendar in ipad calendar app mac#
If your Mac knows about the Apple cloud, then iCal will recreate files, even if you don't have an Apple cloud account configured in its preferences. To get anywhere, I had to use an outgoing firewall (LittleSnitch) and turn off connectivity to - things instantly sprang to life. line 1,1: expecting FREQUENCE, found 'INTERVAL' as token type 6 *** process 769 exceeded 500 log message per second limit - remaining messages this second discarded ***Ĥ/18/11 7:04:43 PM. line 1,1: expecting FREQUENCE, found 'INTERVAL' as token type 6Ĥ/18/11 7:04:42 PM. Meanwhile, Finder slows to a crawl and won't even handle right-click menus." 4/18/11 7:04:42 PM. The console log goes wild with 500 messages per second.
#Google calendar in ipad calendar app upgrade#
This lets iCal start, and during the upgrade process, there's barely enough time that if you're lucky you can open iCal preferences. (find the largest file size entry and remove it, for example)
#Google calendar in ipad calendar app how to#
"Completely unable to open iCal without the spinning pinwheel of death, I put on my developer hat and did the following (though I have no idea how a mortal user would know how to do this): $ cd ~/Library/Calendars On a Mac, the problem will eventually reach the point where iCal won't open. While I got my own problems sorted out, Apple's solution was pretty much (and I'm rephrasing here), "we're dumping Mobile Me soon, hopefully iCloud won't do it, and if it does, that's now another group's problem. My iPad produced warnings of horrific amounts (I have the screen shot around here somewhere), my Mac slowed to a crawl, eventually forcing me to have to disable the Cloud. Every time Apple synchronized, it seemed to add more calendar entries. It did not replicate calendars that didn't have these entries.
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In the end, I had to have them completely delete the account on the Cloud, create a new one, and re-push everything back, starting with an empty calendar.įrom my own experiments, the problem for me seemed to originate when a calendar event on Google spans more than one day (like over a weekend) is synchronized with Apple. In short, I don't think you're doing anything wrong. Note: To improve the search suggestions, your Calendar searches and browsing activity are saved in My Activity if Web & App Activity is turned on. I've had this problem since back during the days of Mobile Me, worked with Apple on it by sending copies of my calendar, and even managed to get the problem to happen at their end via their website and without having my computer or devices involved.Īpple initially tried to pawn the problem off as Google's, though disabling Apple's cloud and using Google alone works perfectly. On your iPhone or iPad, open the Google Calendar app.
