“Are you guys coming?” “Yes?” “We’re ready to order.” “…I thought it was at 5:30 PM.” “No, 5:00 PM.” So, we frantically check the calendar. Yep, it says 5:30 PM. According to the calendar, we were right on time. But it just so happened our calendar was wrong. My first instinct was to blame it on some time-space continuum wormhole. Maybe we had entered into an alternate reality where all appointments had shifted a half-hour earlier. But I think I know what really happened. Whenever you get a paper invitation, there’s some light data entry involved as you convert the hard copy invitation into your paperless Calendar: Google Calendar, iCloud Calendar, Outlook Calendar, or whatever. You punch in the date and time and then toss the paper invite into the trash. Why bother with the clutter? Two months pass, and then all of a sudden, you’re 15 minutes late. Or maybe worse, you show up, and no one is there at all. All because, in your haste, you punched the wrong info into your calendar. This scenario has happened to me more times than I’m comfortable admitting. The obvious solution is to take your time and carefully enter and double-check the information you input. But I’m dense enough to screw that up, too, probably. So, here’s my new solution: Take a picture of the paper invite and attach it to the digital calendar event. It’s the best of both worlds. This solution is part tech tip and part workflow tweak. For me, if I don’t “bucket” something like an appointment right on the spot, I run the risk of forgetting it altogether. But if I try to plug it in when I’m out and about, I run the risk of a fat-finger data entry error. The quirky thing about this method is that Google Calendar and the stock iOS Calendar app don’t let you attach photos directly in the app. But they let you view images in the app if you get them in there some other way. What I do know is I take a picture of an invite when I get it.
And then, I email it to myself with a descriptive subject.
Then, when I get to my desktop, I save the picture to a temporary folder.
Then, I click More and choose Create event.
I choose the photo of the invite and attach it for reference, then fill in the rest of the details.
Then, if I ever have any doubts about the accuracy of my calendar event, I can always check the original invite, even if I’ve thrown it out.
On the Google Calendar mobile app, it shows up and opens in Google Drive.
See?
On the stock iOS Calendar app, it’s a little finicky. I got an error opening the file that I attached in Google Calendar. But if I create the event in iCloud Calendar, it works just fine in the native iOS Calendar app.
So what do you think? Will this save me from being late to my next appointment? Invite me to a party and find out! Leave your cordial invitation in the comments below. So pretty easy For those thinking it’s easier to just correct your typing and not need to photo anything, maybe so for the basics, but what if your event has a lot of detail information like specific entry details or location details not on maps. Or in my case just now medical reference numbers and such. Picture tells a thousand words and damn if I’m going to type a thousand words ! Comment
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