Tag Archive for 'personal organization'

Spanning Sync’s new trick

I’ve written before about what a great piece of software I think Spanning Sync is. They recently upgraded their code base to version 2.0 (which is free for all Spanning Sync owners/subscribers) and gave it a new trick.

Spanning Sync 2.0 Main Screen

Spanning Sync 2.0 Main Screen

Spanning Sync now uses the Google Contacts API to sync your Mac Address Book contacts with the Gmail Contacts section. This not only allows you to back up your contacts to Google, but provides easy access to those vital contacts from Gmail when you are on the go.

Now making this transition wasn’t as easy as the Calendar was, mostly because of the way Gmail deals with contacts, and some base restrictions they have. You aren’t permitted to have two contacts with matching e-mail addresses. Names? No problem. But e-mail addresses are a fatal error. Now I never really used the Google Contacts interface for much before, except for Google Talk. However, as I soon found out, Gmail adds a “suggested contact” for everyone you e-mail from Gmail who isn’t already in your address book. These suggested contacts cause Spanning Sync to spit some Google error goodness at your if you don’t wipe them out first. You will also quickly find your Gtalk contact list a mess too when you try to sync and Spanning Sync tries to figure out which direction to overwrite each contact.

Now this is a great feature, but you should probably take the following steps before starting contact syncing with Spanning Sync:

  1. Stop right now, and back up your contacts. Go. Do it. File>Export>Address Book Archive. If I didn’t do this when I first started playing around with the software, I’d be crying in my soup at all my screwed up contacts. Before going any further, do this.
  2. In your Spanning Sync preferences, switch your sync frequency to Manually. This allows you to safely make all your settings changes without Spanning Sync getting trigger happy. Once you’ve made it past your first sync, it’s safe to set this back to the frequency that works for you.
  3. Remove all your “suggested contacts” and other duplicate entries between your Mac Address Book and Google Contacts, with the exception of your Google Talk contact entries
  4. For your Google Talk contacts, do the opposite. Manually move the information over from your Mac Address Book to Google Contacts, and then wipe the entry out of your Mac Address Book. This ensures the special contact flags that exist on the Google side of things to denote a “Google Talk capable” contact are retained.
  5. If you really want to keep things segregated during that initial sync, go into your Mac Address Book and create two groups: a “Mac Contacts” group, and a “Gmail Contacts” group. Move all your Mac Address Book contacts into the Mac Contacts group, and set the Gmail Contacts group as the destination group in your Spanning Sync preferences. This will allow you to see what is going in what direction. Once you make it through that first sync, it’s easiest to set it back to All Contacts, move the contacts out of those groups, and remove the groups.
    Contact Groups screen in SS 2.0

    Contact Groups screen in SS 2.0

  6. Before hitting that sync button for the first time, you may wish to go back to the Advanced tab in the Spanning Sync preferences and hit Open Log Window. This will let you watch what the software is doing in real time, as well as show you any error messages.
  7. Okay, when you think you’re ready, hold your breath, maybe take ONE MORE backup and hide it away on a USB key, then hit the Sync button. If all goes according to plan, you will shortly have all your contacts in two places.

It’s really cool to have all your vital information available at your fingertips, where ever you are. Hopefully with a little luck, some good backups, and some of my tips here, you’ll be able to fix up your mess of contacts, as I did mine. If you are a Mac user, have contact (or calendar) information, and think it would be nice to have that information while on the go, look no farther than Spanning Sync. It’s a very well written piece of software, and is at a fair price (which is pretty much the polar opposite of some other Mac software *cough*Office2008*cough*). And you can *still* get $5 off on Spanning Sync by clicking this link: http://spanningsync.com/?r=SAUHNN.

The godsend of Spanning Sync

So upon moving from my Windows Platform over to my Mac, I had to figure out a new way to do e-mail and calendar. I have had a Google account for some time, and have used the Google Calendar on and off for the last 6 months. The big issue was always synchronization. I like having a good web client, which Google has, but need to have mobile and desktop access to it as well. Between my Mac and my new Blackberry, my calendaring problems are solved!

On the Mac side of things, I’m using iCal and Spanning Sync. Spanning Sync was the first ever application I bought for my Mac, and I don’t regret it in the slightest. I bought the lifetime subscription for it for a mere $65 and it has already done so much for me. It was very simple to install (as most MacOS applications, it was a simple integrated installer), and all it required me to do is sign in with my Google account information and choose the local calendar it should sync the remote calendar down to. Done!
SpanningSync screenshot

It pulled down my whole Google Calendar with no sync issues. All the funky repeat events, exceptions, everything. I have been using it for about two months now and only had one sync issue, related to the 10.5.2 upgrade, but by the time I had installed it, Spanning Sync already had instructions on what to do to correct the issue and remove the duplicate events.

It is a solid shareware application, and has very good support from the developers. They have been gaining steady support and have steadily developed a repore with Apple in getting iCal bugs reported and resolved.

Honestly, this piece of software is a bargain at the $25/year price, and a STEAL at $65 for lifetime updates. It keeps the lovely web client in sync with the beautiful Apple desktop client. And right now, you can get a $5 discount by clicking this special link: http://spanningsync.com/?r=SAUHNN or using discount coupon code “SAUHNN”. It’s just that easy.

Now I could have stopped there, or used the data now in Apple Sync Services to manually sync stuff over USB, but Google had a better idea. They have developed an application called “Google Sync for Mobile” which is an application built for the BlackBerry. This application enables over-the-air (OTA) syncing of your Google Calendar down to your Blackberry calendar. It’s the next best thing to having a BES server. It runs in the background and syncs your Blackberry’s calendar to your Google Calendar at a defined interval.

So now I have the total solution — a calendar that stays in sync with my online web client, by offline desktop client, and my semi-online mobile client. It’s pretty sweet. If only the rest of my life was so perfectly organized!

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