{"id":89,"date":"2017-02-20T19:26:00","date_gmt":"2017-02-20T19:26:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2019-02-22T15:29:16","modified_gmt":"2019-02-22T15:29:16","slug":"losing-activesync-how-to-use-outlooks-publish-calendar-function-with-free-services","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/192.168.68.73\/2017\/02\/losing-activesync-how-to-use-outlooks-publish-calendar-function-with-free-services\/","title":{"rendered":"Losing Activesync? How to use Outlook’s Publish Calendar Function with Free Services [Updated]"},"content":{"rendered":"

tl:dr: By using Outlook’s Publish Calendar function, Box.com’s webdav service and Google Calendar, I have been able to publish, store and subscribed to my calendar automatically.<\/p>\n

Once Upon a Time in Some Office, Somewhere…<\/p>\n

So, the powers that be at my job have decided to drop the use of activesync for corporate email and security, if so implemented, for some proprietary service\/app combo because why not spend money unnecessarily on an additional service when not needed; but I digress.  Things are what they are and I will be losing one of the biggest tools I need to do my job and balance it with my personal life, a simple way to put all my calendars together into a single view so I know what’s going on and when I have to be where.<\/p>\n

My current setup is pretty nice and does the job, and more.  I tested probably 8+ android apps looking for one that met the needs I had.  The clear winner for me is Nine <\/a>by 9Folders<\/a>.  The setup was no different than any other client but their implementation was. On top of all the features I liked, like per folder syncing and notifications, finger print unlock among others, the biggest advantage to using Nine was the way it handled the option by your activesync admin to wipe your device to save company information.  While most other clients seemed to implement it so that the company has to have device administration access, which, in my opinion, was unnecessary. Nine adheres to the requirement by almost containerizing the application; that way if your company needs to preform the remote wipe in case you loose your device or whatever, you only use the emails “they own” while not affecting the rest of your device.  Because of the use of the activesync protocol, I was also able to add my work calendar as a data source within the calendar app so I could see my entire agenda in a single view.<\/p>\n

With the loss of activesync, means the loss of the merged calendar on my phone… or so I thought.<\/p>\n

Let me be honest – I can be called cheap, but in this case, I cannot see why I need to pay, even if there were an option to recreate this feature, just to have calendar information accessible as a quick glance with the other items in my life.  After much research (Google searches and reading) I came across a option that is working for me without a problem, at least so far.<\/p>\n

To accomplish this, I needed a few things:<\/p>\n