Google has launched a new Web-based calendar service that will let users add meetings and events using their own words. Dubbed Google Calendar, a beta version of the service went live late Tuesday.In development for “several months,” the service initially will be integrated with Google’s Gmail e-mail service, according to Carl Sjogereen, a Google product manager.Bloggers have been speculating about Google’s possible entry into the calendar space for more than a year, and some believe that the search engine giant’s involvement could spur a flurry of Web calendar development. “I sure as hell hope they do it,” wrote Yahoo engineer Jeremy Zawodny in a February blog posting last year. “There’s been so little innovation in the world of on-line calendars these last few years. Perhaps Google getting into the act would finally change that.” SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe Google’s Sjogereen was circumspect in discussing the company’s plans for Google calendar. He declined to say what, if any, connection the project might have with the OpenOffice.org office productivity suite that Google has backed, but he hinted that Google Calendar could be integrated with things like Google’s personalized homepages. “Gmail is the main integration point for now, but you can imagine integration with a number of other Google properties,” he said. Last October, Google and OpenOffice.org’s sponsor, Sun Microsystems, “agreed to explore opportunities to promote and enhance” various technologies, including OpenOffice.org, which is an open-source alternative to Microsoft Office.Gmail will take advantage of one of the most interesting features of Google Calendar: its ability to understand language and to quickly create calendar entries. “We do our best to determine whether you’re talking about an event that’s being added to your calendar,” Sjogereen said. Google Calendar users will be able to create new events directly out of their Gmail messages, or they can also use a feature called QuickAdd in order to add appointments using natural language, typing “lunch with pat noon Friday,” to create a new calendar entry, for example.Once events are created, Google Calendar can send out e-mail invitations to other participants and send event reminders and change notifications to the Google user.But setting up a personal calendar is only part of the picture. Google Calendar will allow users to search for and then subscribe to publicly available calendars—the schedule of a local baseball team, for example—and then integrate that information into their own calendars.Google Calendar, which will support the iCal data exchange standard used by a number of groupware products, will also let users share their calendars with others using the RSS syndication technology.Check out the Google Calendar.-Robert McMillan, IDG News Service For related news coverage, read Google CEO Defends Co.’s China Censorship and Google, EarthLink Plan Additional Wi-Fi Bid.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content news CIO Announces the CIO 100 UK and shares Industry Recognition Awards in flagship evening celebrations By Romy Tuin Sep 28, 2023 4 mins CIO 100 IDG Events Events feature 12 ‘best practices’ IT should avoid at all costs From telling everyone they’re your customer to establishing SLAs, to stamping out ‘shadow IT,’ these ‘industry best practices’ are sure to sink your chances of IT success. By Bob Lewis Sep 28, 2023 9 mins CIO IT Strategy Careers interview Qualcomm’s Cisco Sanchez on structuring IT for business growth The SVP and CIO takes a business model first approach to establishing an IT strategy capable of fueling Qualcomm’s ambitious growth agenda. By Dan Roberts Sep 28, 2023 13 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership feature Gen AI success starts with an effective pilot strategy To harness the promise of generative AI, IT leaders must develop processes for identifying use cases, educate employees, and get the tech (safely) into their hands. By Bob Violino Sep 27, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Innovation Emerging Technology Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe