Entourage for Apple Mac Laptops
I spent the better part of today exploring Entourage for Apple Mac laptops.
Currently, I use the trio Apple Mail, iCal, and Address Book for Mac. They all play very nice together. But what I am missing is a project management application and Entourage offers this.
Before I go on, let me say that I have tried OmniFocus for both my notebook and my iPod Touch. I have also given Bento a whirl on my computer. But what I really want is a native application that pulls it all together and also syncs with the iPhone or Touch. I know, what will I ask for next – an iMac that actually completes the project as well?
The bottom line is that Entourage looked promising. I recently purchased the Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac suite but never looked beyond Word and Excel. But now I faced the problem of having all my data sitting in the native Apple applications and me not willing to commit to switching before putting Microsoft through the paces.
Luckily, I discovered the option called Sync Services in the preferences menu. Using Sync Services, I could set Entourage to sync with address book and mobileme, ical and mobile me, and the Entourage notes could be set to sync with mobileme. I can even set one program’s data to override the other’s. Or set the sync preferences to combine the data. Perfect – now I could make changes in one application and they would automatically be reflected in the other. Problem solved! Or so I thought.
Ah what a tangled web we weave. My contacts synced just fine but not the groupings that I had set up in Address Book.
And my calendar was a different story. You see, Apple’s iCal supports multiple calendars – so I have a calendar set up for each family member plus a few other odd calendars for daily menus, soccer schedules and the like. But Entourage only supports one calendar and has multiple categories. In Entourage, I would have a main calendar and each event would be assigned a category – in my case each category would bear the name of each family member. And, you guessed it – iCal does not support categories.
When I set up Sync Services to sync my calendars what it basically did was create a new calendar in iCal called, oddly enough, “Entourage”. Anything that I enter on this calendar will sync with Microsoft Office on my Apple Mac laptops.
Lovely. (dripping with sarcasm)
So where does this leave me? I probably will leave the project management behind and continue on with the native Mac applications. Or I may use some convoluted combination of Microsoft Office, iCal, and Address Book. The problem with any productivity system is that if it becomes too complicated – well, I just don’t use it regularly enough to be effective.
And what about syncing with Mobile devices. I will explore this issue in a future post. But I have had enough frustration and learning for one day!
iPod Touch as PDA
Being the Apple fanatic that I am, I decided to use an iPod Touch as PDA.
But I came across a limitation this morning that I thought a reader at this site may be able to tackle. I wanted to email contact information from my address book to someone else (also in my address book) using my iPod Touch. Basically the equivalent of sending a vCard on the Mac. I thought this would be pretty straightforward but apparently it is not even possible. Unless I am missing something.
Does anyone know how to do this or am I just dreaming? Let me know if you have the answer to this vexing iPod Touch issue.
Obviously I don’t have an iPhone – because I have a contract with another carrier. But when that term comes up I would consider the iPhone. But while I love the product, I am not sure it is the best solution. I am also eying the Blackberry Curve – but does it play nice with a Mac? Any insights are welcome!