
At the time of this writing, it's being offered for half price at $9.99 in the Mac App Store. Fantasticalįantastical is the paid app of the group here. Of the two free, read-only calendars, I prefer Itsycal and its clean, simple design.
#Islamic calendar for mac os x plus#
There is a paid version - Calendar Plus - that lets you connect to Google Calendar and Facebook for birthdays, and it offers weather and different themes among other features. I found that the Calendar app would freeze occasionally, and there were a few oddities with the design, such as not enough room given for the name of the month at the top and and white ghost letters cluttering the look when skipping from month to month. It hooks in the OS X Calendar app, but you can only view your scheduled events and not add or edit events. The calendar it displays is larger and more colorful than Itsycal's, and you can resize it. It's free in the Mac App Store and adds a button to your menu bar. The Calendar app from Qbix, not to be confused with OS X's native Calendar app, is very similar in operation to Itsycal.
#Islamic calendar for mac os x for free#
You can download it for free directly from the developer's site, Mowglii. You won't find Itsycal in the Mac App Store. You can't use Itsycal to add new entries or change existing appointments, but there is a button that opens the OS X Calendar app, where you can adjust your schedule. Your appointments are marked with dots and you can choose to list up to 7 days' worth of appointments below the calendar. Click on the hamburger button on the right edge to open settings, where you can link Itsycal to OS X's Calendar app (nee iCal). Click on the button to show the calendar. It installs a button in the menu bar that displays the current date. I have three to recommend, two of which are free and a paid app that does more. Thankfully, there are a few apps that can add a calendar to your Mac's menu bar. The closest thing you get from OS X is a calendar widget you can add to the Dashboard, but it can't connect to a calendar app to show your appointments. With Windows, you can take a quick peek at a calendar by clicking on the time/date in the system tray. Unlike Windows, OS X does not provide an easily accessed calendar on the desktop.
