I’m having a party on Friday night and I want all my friends to come. There’s also a business meeting every Tuesday morning that everyone in my department should attend, and a series of fundraising events the other members of my community group need to remember. If you, too, are responsible for planning events that other people need to know about, you’ll want a way to broadcast those events so that the relevant people can see them on their own calendars.
One way to broadcast events is to publish an entire calendar, to which interested parties can then subscribe. When you do this, changes to your published calendar will appear (sometimes after a significant delay) on subscribers’ devices, but they’re free to ignore any or all of the calendar events. Publishing is appropriate for events that are entirely optional for attendees.
Another approach is to invite specific people to an event (such as a meeting or appointment). In the process of adding the event to their own calendars, invitees are asked—though not required—to respond with “Yes,” “No,” or “Maybe” so that you, the event organizer, know who will be there. If you make changes to the event, you can notify all the other participants.
The recipient can add the calendar to Calendar by clicking the link you send.
For invitees who use iCloud, the invitation appears in Calendar’s notification box on the iCloud Web site, as well as in Calendar on a Mac or iOS device.
For other invitees, invitation email messages include buttons (or links) for Accept, Decline, and Maybe.
In addition, the event on your own calendar is updated with icons reflecting each invitee’s status.
The recipient can add the calendar to Calendar by clicking the link you sent.
Invitees receive an email invitation, which includes links for Yes, No, and Maybe along with a link to the event and an attachment they can use to add the event to their own calendar.
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