![]() I then created a Baïkal address book for myself, set up macOS and an iPhone to use that, and created a pseudo person’s entry on the Mac and another on iOS, and experimented a bit with how long it takes either side to sync, etc. ![]() Anyway, I got the data imported and our small family was back in sync. ![]() The calendar migration was easy enough but produced a litre or two of adrenalin when I watched one calendar after the other disappear from iCal. Before looking at using it for CardDAV I thought I’d put it on my little FreeBSD system in a BastilleBSD jail. How could I have forgotten about CardDAV?īaïkal has served us well for many years (the modification timestamp on the configuration reads August 2013). I slapped my forehead: I’ve been using CalDAV for years, for synchronizing two calendars across devices: my own calendar across two Macs, an iPad, and an iPhone, and the family calendar across the family’s devices. I was spilling my sorrows on Christoph who simply said he avoids all those issues by using CardDAV. This started sometime after I wrote about setting up macOS to “dial” a number using a shell script, but it cannot be related. All the swearing and threatening of moving to a different operating system aren’t really helping. I’ve gone through all the steps Apple recommends, done the upgrades and the reboots, but there’s nothing doing. I can no longer sync iOS’ Contacts with my macOS Catalina’s Finder (the iOS sync portion of iTunes is now built into the Finder in macOS Catalina) the OS insists I’ve iCloud configured for Contacts which I do not. ![]()
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