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Old January 19th 18, 12:58 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Paul[_32_]
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Posts: 11,873
Default OT W10 interactive calendar?

wrote:
On Thu, 18 Jan 2018 12:48:46 +0100, Lutz E. Cerning
wrote:

Bill Bradshaw schrieb :

You might take a look at
www.essentialpim.com. This is what I use.
They have a free portable version.

++1
I use the pro....


It looks good, but much more detailed for what I need.
I was looking for some sort of simple weekly or monthly template onto
which I can enter my appointments and other scheduled stuff.

Thanx anyway tho.
Peter


You can try some parachute-ware.

This package is imported from Vista. When you do such a thing,
the EXE files usually have to be hex-edited, as there's some
kind of identifier that says what OSes it is valid for. Things
like older versions of Solitaire have been brought into later
OSes that way. So if you compare the checksum of the EXE
in a package like this, it won't exactly match the copy you
might have access to in Vista. The file size should be the
same as the original copy - it's just three or four particular
byte values needed to be changed before they ZIPped up this kit.
The new byte values might differ between parachuting into W7
versus W10. I've not seen a recipe for doing this (what the
bytes represent), as otherwise I'd be giving a recipe for
DIY for this if I had the info. And you wouldn't be able to
get away with this, if the files were signed. When files
aren't signed, more things are possible.

"Install Windows Calendar in Windows 10/7"

http://www.intowindows.com/windows-c...for-windows-7/

*******

If you happen to own a copy of Outlook (not Outlook Express),
you could check and see if it has a calendar included. If you
don't have Outlook already, then a calendar application is
probably cheaper on its own.

https://www.slipstick.com/images/Out...20Calendar.jpg

Paul



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