Latest news with #calendar

ABC News
6 days ago
- General
- ABC News
Trabel pait bagarapim edukesen blong ol yangpla pipol
Wed 4 Jun 2025 at 7:30am Wednesday 4 Jun 2025 at 7:30am Wed 4 Jun 2025 at 7:30am

ABC News
29-05-2025
- Politics
- ABC News
Bougainville Constituent Assembly i lukluk long draft Independence Constitution
Thu 29 May 2025 at 7:30am Thursday 29 May 2025 at 7:30am Thu 29 May 2025 at 7:30am


Gizmodo
22-05-2025
- Gizmodo
Forget Tablets, This Hackable E-Ink Display Runs for Months and Syncs With 100+ Apps, Now Available to Order
This e-ink tablet has everything you need to keep you on task and working at a good clip. If you've ever found yourself picking up your phone to check your calendar and somehow ended up scrolling through social media twenty minutes later, you're not alone. It's so easy to forget what you're doing when you've always got something to do. And distraction really is a thing. Sometimes, all you really want is a simple way to keep track of your day without getting pulled in ten different directions. That's where TRMNL steps in. See at TRMNL For just $129, this compact e-ink dashboard helps you stay focused by showing only the information you actually need and nothing you don't. That means it has all the info you might need to keep abreast of your schedule or what needs to get done, but nothing to ruin your productivity in ways that will keep you from being successful. Productivity on your terms TRMNL is an always-on display designed to blend into your space and serve up essential details like your calendar, the weather, task lists, or reminders, all in one glance. It connects with over 100 different apps and services, meaning you can plug it into your existing digital life without having to overhaul your setup. You can place it on your desk, mount it on a wall, or pop it on the kitchen counter, and once it's up and running, you barely need to touch it again. Because it uses e-ink, TRMNL consumes very little power and can go for months on a single charge. That means no tangled cords, no daily charging, and no bright screen lighting up your space at night. It's a clean, paper-like display that quietly does its job in the background with no pings, pop-ups, or distractions. And if you want to do these types of things, you'll be glad to know it's hackable, with over 2,700 custom plugins already created by developers and hobbyists. If you want to build a completely custom layout that pulls in specific data, you can. But for everyday users, the plug-and-play setup is more than enough to get started quickly. Families use it to display shared calendars and reminders. Developers and remote workers use it to track tasks or sprint goals. Whatever your needs, TRMNL adapts to your workflow, not the other way around. At $129, it's a smart buy for anyone looking to cut back on screen fatigue while still staying on top of things. Simple, focused, and quietly powerful, TRMNL is what you need for a digital detox and then some. And these days, that's super rare. See at TRMNL


Forbes
21-05-2025
- General
- Forbes
The Goal-Setting Mistake Blocking Real Success
The goal-setting mistake that's keeping you from real success It's May and you're looking at those goals you set at the start of the year. You've made progress, but not as much as you'd hoped. That familiar disappointment sinks in as you label yourself a partial failure, despite significant achievements. You've been here before. Set ambitious targets, make good progress, but still feel like you're falling short. What if the problem isn't you? What if it's the arbitrary timeline you've created? I've watched entrepreneurs, coaches, and business owners make the same mistake repeatedly. They cram ambitious projects into 12-month containers, then wonder why they consistently feel like they're underperforming. We approach goal-setting by forcing our biggest dreams into neat calendar boxes. We treat the year as the natural timeframe for achievement, then feel inadequate when we don't hit our targets within that period. The calendar is just a tool for measuring time, not an optimal framework for human accomplishment. Meaningful achievements follow their own timeline. They don't care what month it is. Stop setting yearly goals and do this instead. Your daily practices create inevitable success, regardless of the month. The entrepreneur who writes for 30 minutes every morning builds a thought leadership platform that attracts opportunities without forcing it. The coach who adds five new connections to their network daily creates a powerful referral engine. These small, consistent actions accumulate quietly, building momentum that eventually becomes unstoppable. When you establish these non-negotiable daily practices, the timeline for achieving your bigger goals becomes almost irrelevant. Success transforms from a question of if to a question of when. At the opposite end from daily habits are your lifetime achievements. These are the dreams that define who you want to become. Building a profitable company. Creating generational wealth. Publishing books that transform readers. Teaching thousands of people your methods. With lifetime goals, you remove the artificial pressure that leads to cutting corners or making poor decisions. You evaluate opportunities based on your long-term vision rather than short-term metrics. This perspective changes your fundamental questions from "Can we hit our targets this year?" to "Does this move us toward our ultimate destination?" Between daily practices and lifetime aspirations, create strategic milestones that feel exciting but achievable. These become your stepping stones toward bigger dreams. A milestone might be your first $10,000 month, your first 100 client testimonials, or adding a key team member. These milestones should live right at the edge of your comfort zone. You don't know exactly how you'll reach them, but you know there's a path forward. They're challenging enough to require your best effort but attainable enough to maintain motivation when reached. The timeline for hitting these milestones remains flexible, determined by your progress rather than the calendar. Everyone works at different speeds and encounters different obstacles. Some founders build rapidly in bursts of creativity, while others create slowly but sustainably. By setting your own time horizons, you work with your natural rhythm instead of fighting against it. Create timeframes that match your specific situation, resources, and working style. Perhaps your business requires an 18-month development cycle instead of 12 months. Maybe your content strategy needs 9 months to gain traction. Your personal productivity peaks might align with seasons rather than quarters. When you design your life around freedom and impact, you give yourself permission to establish timelines that actually work. Stop forcing your biggest ambitions into neat calendar boxes that were never designed for optimal human achievement. Get comfortable with polarity. Focus on daily practices and lifetime aspirations while setting milestone targets that stretch without breaking you. Know what you want to achieve eventually, and what you need to do today. Daily actions, lifetime aspirations, milestone targets, and personal timelines form your complete achievement system. Break free from arbitrary deadlines and stop feeling inadequate when you haven't achieved everything by some random date. The world won't remember whether your breakthrough came in spring or summer. But it will remember what you built over a lifetime of consistent action. Your greatest achievements are already in motion. They're just operating on their own schedule.


Android Authority
20-05-2025
- Android Authority
Gemini can now help with your schedule right in Gmail on your phone
Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority TL;DR Google added Gemini features on Gmail's web interface that allowed for some calendar management capabilities late last year. The mobile Gmail app can now use Gemini for creating, deleting, or editing Calendar events, and give users a daily schedule summary. This feature is available for Google Workspace users on both Android and iOS, with a gradual rollout beginning May 19. While email is quite an older form of communication compared to other more modern methods, it's still one of the most important and accessible options for many. And a lot of people use Google's Gmail, or Google Workspace email accounts. Email is a great way to communicate with people to get meetings set up, but then what about adding those meetings to your calendar? Well, now Gemini in Gmail can take care of all of that for you. Google is announcing new calendar management features with Gemini coming to the Gmail mobile app on Android and iOS. This comes several months after Google originally rolled out Gemini into Gmail on the web with calendar management features. So now those who use the Gmail app on their smartphone can also make use of Gemini for calendar-related tasks. The calendar integration with Gemini in Gmail can be used to create a new event, delete an existing event, or edit an event on your calendar. The event information can be edited in Gmail without leaving the app. But if you tap the event, then it opens up the Calendar app. Gemini can even give users a recap of the daily schedule. C. Scott Brown / Android Authority It feels like just the basics, but it's pretty much all you need when it comes to calendar management when you're in the Gmail app. The expansion of these Gemini features in Gmail mobile is to help make it easier to create or manage calendar events without having to switch between apps, regardless of platform. This feature is available for all Google Workspace users, those who are on Google One AI Premium, or those who have Gemini Education accounts. It's in a gradual rollout phase beginning May 19, and can take up to 15 days for it to show up for eligible users. Google Calendar with Gemini in Gmail is available in 28 languages. Once the feature is available to you, it's very easy to access. Just open the Gmail app on your phone, and then select the 'Ask Gemini' icon. Got a tip? Talk to us! Email our staff at Email our staff at news@ . You can stay anonymous or get credit for the info, it's your choice.