Please let me know if I can help further – feel free to email me back. Consequently, my appointments are typically quite innocuous making sure that the information is relatively valueless to anyone. The downside of course is that my calendar events are now in the cloud, with the attendant security and privacy issues. It costs $20 US – there is a free trial before you need to activate. The one that IĬurrently use is gSyncit ( ) which is a Outlook add-in that will synchronize calendars, contacts, notes and tasks. You can search google “outlook google calendar sync” for various solutions. Consequently, a third party plug-in is required. Until recently, Google did provide an Outlook solution but that has been closed. Obviously, the native android calendar can easily be set up to sync with Google calendar, leaving Outlook as the issue. The Mac calendar simply synchronizes to the private folder URL that you can generate from within Google calendar settings. I use Google calendar as a “hub” (containing all of my appointments), and then sync all three platforms/machines to it. This is what I do since my personal situation is further complicated by the fact that I need to additionally synchronize a MacBook calendar to android and Microsoft Outlook. You can also try syncing your calendar to Google calendar and then syncing your android phone to Google. I have not used this application either but I believe that there is a free trial that you can try out. The third that I can refer you to is Android-sync ( ). I have not personally used that solution. It has a mix of write-ups – good and bad. CompanionLink for android is another option ( and has a 14 date evaluation trial. In the past, I have used missing sync for android ( I did get it to work but it was “flaky” on install and initial setup. If you are trying to synchronize with your desktop Microsoft Outlook program, the best solution is probably one of the paid desktop solutions. I have never had to use it but I hear that it works. It has been around for quite a while and is frequently updated to address problems and developments. For example, try TouchDown for Smartphones available from the Google Play App Store (the full version costs about $21). If this happens, you can also try third-party software which will often get you around the issues. Given the wide range of setting options on exchange, sometimes you just cannot get the above to work. Test the sync by creating new contact/appointment information from your phone. You may also have to tweak your Account Options for settings like frequency and period for syncing and whether to sync email/contacts/calendar/tasks (I have had problems syncing tasks in particular in the past).ĥ. If the above works, you will see an activation screen if the instructions are acceptable to you, click okay.Ĥ. Make sure that you have all of the appropriate settings from the administrator of your Microsoft exchange server (such as the name of your domain and your server address).ģ. I am assuming that since the people who approached me on this was experiencing problems, the device did not automatically detect the exchange settings, so select “Manual Setup” or if the automatic configuration did not work, select ” edit details”. Make sure that you select the proper type of account – do not select either POP or IMAP but rather “Exchange ActiveSync”.Ģ. Add your exchange email address to your device. If your calendar/email/contacts are on a Microsoft Exchange server, you can set up current Android phones to sync over the air without further software.ġ. As these questions appear quite common, I thought it would be helpful to share Mike’s answer with a wider audience. In response my co-speaker Mike Seto prepared the following. At the “Smartphones and Tablets: What’s Right For You” session at the Law Society of Upper Canada’s Solo and Small Firm Conference last week (archived webcast is available for purchase), there were a number of questions on syncing Android devices with MS Exchange/Outlook.
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