Skip to main content

Learn to keep your Calendar organized with our best Google-fu

Google Calendar is must-have for those looking to organize their life. Some people find it intimidating, sure, but others find it calming. Below are few tips for making the most of Google Calendar, whether you’re a newbie or a die-hard patron. After all, no one wants to miss a beat.

Tip 1: Google Calendar’s biggest draw is its ability to manage multiple calendars. You can have one calendar for work appointments and another for your personal life. To start a new calendar other than the default, click the arrow beside “My Calendars.” Then, choose Create New Calendar and name it. The new calendar will now be visible in your master list.

Recommended Videos

Tip 2: Next, color code them so you can visually identify where you’re needed and for what. If you want to change the color, hover over the calendar name, click the drop-down arrow, and choose the color you want.

Tip 3: Try sharing your calendar with someone so you don’t have to wonder where they are or if they’re available. Hover of the calendar name, click the drop-down arrow, and select Share This Calendar. Put in the recipient’s email address and choose how much access you want to give them.

Tip 4: Want full control over the way your calendar is displayed? You can choose to show the day, week, or month. Or, if you want to go a little custom, click and drag the dates you want to see in the month box in the upper-left corner. This is especially useful for showing the last week of a month and the first week of the next month. There’s no way to overlap months like that with their default choices.

Tip 5: When you’re adding an event, you can click inside the box of the day you want to add something to, then type in the necessary event information (ex: “2:30 p.m. Dinner with David”). Then, choose the calendar you want it on, or click the arrow beside Create in the upper-left corner and use real language. “Dinner with David at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Joe’s,” for instance. Use the same language you would if you were telling your secretary and Google will add the event. You can’t choose the calendar it’s assigned to though, so you’ll want to use that for your default calendar only.

Tip 6: Activate the Lab! Google likes to include Lab features in its services that are hidden until you find and activate them. These can be really useful, so it’s worth checking them out. Click the Gear icon, then choose Labs. Look through the list and see if any interest you. Then, choose Enable and click Save. They’ll show up on the right side of your calendar.

Tip 7: Scheduling can be difficult, can’t it? Once you create an event, go into the details. Click the “Find a time” tab and add any guests who you want to include. They’ll need to make sure they share their calendar with you, then you’ll see their appointments right alongside yours and you can choose the time that works for everyone.

Tip 8: When it comes time for an appointment, everyone can join the meeting using Google Hangout if they want. Each person just needs to click the Hangout button inside the event.

Tip 9: If you travel a lot, you’re going to want to make sure you can access your Calendar while disconnected from the Internet, so make sure offline mode is enabled! Click the gear in the top-right corner and choose Offline. You’ll need to install the Chrome app, which only works in Chrome. Once you make changes offline, however, everything will be synced when you get back online!

Tip 10: With Google, you can also embed your calendar on your website so people can see when you’re available and when you’re not. To do so, go into Calendar Settings, copy the embed code, and paste into your website.

Tip 11: Use keyboard shortcuts! They save quite a bit of time, and are easy to utilize if you know them. Check them out here.

Topics
Luria Petrucci
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Luria Petrucci is a pioneer in the podcasting world. She has 2 million social media followers, and has been producing and…
Razer lets you stream your PC games on mobile, and you can try it out right now
Razer PC Remote Play visual.

Originally announced at CES in January, Razer's new PC Remote Play platform has now officially launched. Designed to let you borrow the processing power of your desktop PC while playing on a separate device, the service is compatible with smartphones, tablets, Windows PC gaming handhelds, laptops, and even other desktop PCs.

In terms of operating systems, you'll need Windows 10 or 11 on your PCs or on mobile, iOS 18 or Android 14 and up. You can also pair your device with any iOS or Android-compatible controller, or with any mouse and keyboard. If you use one of Razer's own Kishi Ultra controllers, you'll also benefit from some fancy haptic feedback.

Read more
ChatGPT can now remember more details from your past conversations
ChatGPT on a laptop

OpenAI has just announced that ChatGPT received a major upgrade to its memory features. The chatbot will now be able to remember a lot more about you, making it easier to personalize each conversation and adapt its responses. However, the feature won't be available to everyone, and there are a few things to note about the way memory will work now.

The company showed off the new update in a post on X (Twitter), giving a brief demo of how much ChatGPT can remember now. According to OpenAI, ChatGPT can now "reference all of your past chats to provide more personalized responses." Previously, only certain things were saved in memory, but now, ChatGPT can check out every single chat to reference what it knows about you in future conversations.

Read more
Harnessing AI: make Bitrix24’s your sales and marketing MVP
people in a meeting discussing

You’re about halfway through Q2 and your campaigns aren’t landing. Your team is tired. You’re staring down an end-of-quarter push with CRM fields still half-filled, a pile of call recordings no one wanted to transcribe, and one shared doc titled “Q2 Ideas (Pls Delete?).” It’s not that you’re not trying, you’re just tapped.

Enter CoPilot. No fanfare, no flashy onboarding webinars. It’s just there one morning, a new button inside Bitrix24. And somehow, it feels like the only teammate who hasn’t taken a vacation in the past year.
The unexpected power of AI that doesn’t shout “AI”
There’s a lot of hype in the sales and marketing tech world, AI this…neural that…but CoPilot doesn’t posture. It integrates quietly into the Bitrix24 ecosystem: CRM, chat, tasks, feeds, even site-building. It doesn’t try to reinvent your process, it shows up ready to assist with the one you already have.

Read more