The best calender software for iPhone:CalenGoo (sync with Google Calendar™) Review
filed in Calendar Software, Ecosystem iOS, Getting Things Done, Mobile Productivity on Nov.14, 2009
Introduction
I gotta give a shout out to Dominique from CalenGoo for facilitating this review. I would say out of all the intriguing software on the app store CalenGoo interest me the most.
I am big on planning and scheduling in a Getting Things Done kind of way and i make use of Google Calendar as my main calendar so it is natural that i would make it a criteria in choosing my GTD device.
In this review i would break down why this would rock more than the native Google Calendar sync and where it will not be that good in.
Why you would want to sync your calendar to google
Ubiquitous Calendar Assess
A good reason other than Appigo ToDo that sways me to the iPod Touch 2G was due to its ability to sync google calendars and contacts via exchange protocol from Google to my iPod Touch.This means that you can assess to your events and schedule offline, you don’t need a constant internet connection.

What this means also is that you make your google calendar your base where you house your events and schedule. If you are using an iPhone your calendar synchronize with it. If you are using an Android phone your Android phone calendar gets synchronize with it.
When you get home or in the office and want a better view of your calendar, you can view the same events and schedule from your desktop internet browser.
Auto-Backup of Calendar via web synchronization aka Offline Mode
Remember those windows mobile days where you need to put your windows mobile phone into a cradle and sync your contacts and calendars to your desktop through ActiveSync? Well in web 2.0 you don’t have to rely on that any more.

Offline mode for iPhone,Android and Adobe Air for desktop allows you to assess your calendars when you do not have an internet connection and automatically or manually synchronize your events and schedules when you have one.
In each device the application will make use of the local database in your iPhone. If there is an internet connection, the application will invoke a sync request to sync your data with the web database. What this means is that should you lose your phone, you will still have assess to your data as it is last sync this morning to the web.
Thus for this concept to work well your software must periodically poll to see if you have an internet connection, if it has, it will sync it.
Through iPhone Exchange services you are able to sync your calendar to google and will periodically update. It works very well and i am satisfied with it.
Continue after the break for review of CalenGoo with screenshots










