Nowadays, though, Google Calendar sharing gives the same level of ease-of-use and true, server-based, two-way calendar syncing, allowing you to edit you calendars from any computer (including iPhones). This is limited, I know, but at the time it was readily available and plenty of functionality for most people who just wanted a free option for calendar sharing from their main machine. The method used in the post you're about to read is a one-way share in which the publishing computer is the only one that can make changes, and all subscribing calendars have read-only access. I wanted to let folks know that the information in this post is pretty old, and these days there are better options for sharing calendars.
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