![]() ![]() Other product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. ĬompanionLink is a registered trademark of CompanionLink Software, Inc. For over 15 years, CompanionLink has helped mobilize information across devices, computers, applications, and web-based services. They also develop a business-class CRM app called DejaOffice® for Android™, iPhone®, iPad®, Windows Phone®, and BlackBerry® devices. Using the Google Calendar API v3, CompanionLink no longer polls Google® for updates, which required CPU and disk resources. is a pioneering developer of data synchronization solutions for mobile phones and CRM software and services. One license of CompanionLink for Google allows installation on up to three computers and is available for a one-time cost of $49.95. CompanionLink has over 1.2 million downloads and is well-reviewed on Wall Street Journal,, and by prominent productivity gurus like Tim Ferriss (4-hour Workweek). To submit a tech question, e-mail Rob at Follow him on Twitter at /robpegoraro.On CompanionLink’s order form, enter Affinity Code SUNSET for a $10 discount available until October 1, 2014. Rob Pegoraro is a tech writer based out of Washington, D.C. 'Years ago, Google provided a free tool called Google Calendar Sync which would move data from your PC to Google Calendar. It's free but requires an iPhone 4S or newer. ![]() (See a collection of these on this Google Maps page.)Īt first that was reserved to Nexus phones running a standard version of Android, then Google shipped a standalone Camera app other Android users could install, and last week it delivered a Photo Sphere Camera app for iOS. It's a neat bit of homemade VR you can create in a couple of minutes by pointing a phone where the camera app's interface tells you, one shot at a time. One of my favorite Android features is the "Photo Sphere": the option in Google's camera app to take an interactive 3-D panorama that you can pan around in not just left and right but up and down. TIP: GOOGLE BRINGS 'PHOTO SPHERES' TO iOS But try to get that pledge in writing from all the companies involved first. Moral of the story: Life is easiest if both the Web services you use and the desktop apps you run both promise to speak the same open standards. I suggested he instead consider installing one of the many plug-ins for Outlook that can talk to Google Calendar under Google's new rules.Īmong these options, I'd look at the $50 CompanionLink (its developers have been doing Google sync tools since the days of Palm handhelds, and other software from the company can sync directly from Outlook to Android) and the $20 gSyncit (you can try it for free with limited features, and the Wall Street Journal's Joanna Stern gave it a favorable writeup last month). And if he'd shared any calendars with friends, he'd have to recreate those settings, too. He could move all of his calendars over to Microsoft's free service, but then he'd have a separate account to manage and he'd need to redo a round of settings on all his mobile devices, including installing a separate app on any Android phones or tablets. But he said he didn't want to give up a Gmail address that he's used for years, and you can't move a Gmail address to a Google Apps account. GO Contact Sync Mod, Outlook Google Calendar Sync (beta), Competitor A, Competitor B. This reader could pay $50 a year for a Google Apps account that, in addition to letting him use a personal domain name and have ad-free Web mail, would include Outlook calendar sync. So the automatic sync and resync time are what is most important. ![]()
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