This is a collection of calendar data tools and resources for the
Microsoft Outlook Calendar folder.
If you can't "see" 2007 or later holidays in your calendar, your holidays list may be outdated. See
Missing Holidays for more information and links to download the updated file.
To push a number of events out to users, see
Transmit
Holidays Form. This is a custom Outlook form that creates a
special mail message containing appointment details from a folder
that you specify. When the user receives the message, they can click
a button to add all the appointments -- holidays, company meetings,
etc. -- to their Calendar folder.
Schedules for holidays, major sports teams, moon phases, etc. for import into Outlook. Now has calendar updates for Catholic, Christian, and Jewish Holy Days.
Use CustomDays to display a person’s age on their birthday or year on anniversaries. The display can be changed individually using placeholders. You can also use this tool to delete birthday entries that are not associated with a contact. Automatically send a birthday email, or completely prevent the entry of birthdays in the calendar. Also available separately as CustomBirthday and CustomAnniversary.
Updated Outlook.txt file containing holidays from 2003 through 2007, for use with Outlook 2000. Some UK bank holidays are missing. This file adds the same holidays found in Outlook 2003 and is superseded by more recent versions.
The iCal add-in gives Outlook users the ability to subscribe to iCal calendar feeds. It supports the iCalendar open standard when receiving appointment and to-do information. Loaded with features including user-selectable update frequency on individual calendars, user-selectable Outlook folder location on a per calendar basis, and optional removal of Alarms and to-do items. Version 2.2.1. iCal for MS Outlook 2 runs on Windows 98SE, ME, 2000, XP, or 2003 and requires Microsoft Outlook 2000, XP (2002), 2003 or 2007.
International Holidays, Sports Schedules, Weather Forecasts and Personal Event Entries for your existing Palm Datebook, Outlook or Lotus Notes Calendar.
Not really an Outlook or Exchange application, but a utility to track phases of the moon. You can export them to a text or vCalendar file that Outlook can import.
With the Outlook iCal Subscriber from MarkThisDate you can subscribe calendars in Outlook 2000, XP and 2003, instead of downloading them. This means you’re always up to date with your favorite events because you can set automatic updates every 15 minutes, every day or even once a week.