Rainlendar Pro 2.8 Build 97 Beta | 6.47 MB
Rainlendar is a full of features calendar tool which is quite simple to use and doesn't take much space on your desktop. The application is platform independent so you can run it both on Windows and on Linux. The appearance can be customized with skins and you can even mix different skins together.
It is possible to use Rainlendar with other calendar applications too. Rainlendar uses the standard iCalendar format to store its events and tasks so you can easily transfer them between applications.
You can also subscribe to online calendars and see your Outlook appointments directly in Rainlendar.
Rainlendar is an unicode application that supports localization so you can use it on your own language.
Key features of "Rainlendar Pro":
· Platform independent
· To do list
· Localized
· Standards Compatible
· Alarms
· Recurrence
· Scripting
· Backups
· Printing
· Search
· Shared calendars
· Outlook support
· Look'n'feel
· Highly Customizable
· Multiple Calendars
· Import & Export
What's new in Rainlendar Pro 2.8 Build 97 Beta:
· Month items were not aligned correctly due to the changes made in the previous build. Fixed.
· Moved the buttons to the left in the options dialog to make it more netbook friendly.
· Added the missing "linkcolor" attribute for text items.
· Added timezone and label support for the analog clock in the Chromophore skin.
· Recurring events with until date could not always be updated to Google Calendar. Fixed.
· The FREE layout in calendar can now show also weekdays.
· Lua scripts can be run on window initialization and redraw (see Rainlendar_SetEventHandler).
· Mouse events didn't work with FREE calendar layout. The must now define width and height which contains all the day positions for this to work.
· Fixed a crash which happened if the skin didn't have a tooltip and todo list was set to custom sort order.
· Calendar file monitoring now checks also changes in the file modification date.
· Added a small delay before the components are reloaded after changes are detected so that sequential updates cause just one operation.
· The mouse cursor changes to a hand when it is over a button.

