your calendar on the web

To view a public Google Calendar, just enter the owner's email address,
i.e. john.dough@gmail.com.

iWebCal lets you view calendars from iCal (and other calendar tools) on the Web. Just upload your calendar file to the Internet somewhere and type its address in the box above. Read the quick start for more info, or see iWebCal in action with an example calendar from Apple's calendar library.

© 2003-2005 by David Feldman / InterfaceThis. All rights reserved.

Support iWebCal

Support the iWebCal project by making a donation.

Quick Start

Calendar Libraries

Copy the calendar link to the clipboard and paste it in the box on the right.

Roll Your Own

iWebCal is open source. Check out the SourceForge project to learn more. If you'd like to get involved, drop us a line.

What's New

Google Calendar Support

iWebCal now supports Google Calendar, so you can share your calendars easily with non-Google members and view them in Safari.

Get Your Calendar Online

Don't have a Web site? No problem! iCal Exchange will host your calendar so you can view and share it with iWebCal.

New at InterfaceThis

Zirrus: International characters and RSS - Jan 26

Zirrus has continued its explosive growth in the last week, expanding to over 3500 registered users. We’ve received a lot of useful feedback; if you submitted comments and haven’t heard back yet, we’re working through it as fast as we can.

Today we’re excited to announce one major improvement and one new feature.

Zirrus: View Completed Tasks - Jan 16

It’s been a big week here at InterfaceThis: Zirrus gained over 800 registered users. We’ve received a lot of feedback, and added one major new feature.

Zirrus: A new take on To Do lists - Dec 25

InterfaceThis is pleased to announce Zirrus, an alternative To Do list for the Web. Zirrus combines cutting-edge Web interactivity, the power of tag clouds, and the simplicity of a whiteboard

Improving Choice in Faceted Navigation - Sep 11

When it comes to decision-making, less is more. New research indicates that consumers are more likely to buy when their choices are limited.

Impressions of Path Finder - Mar 31

I’ve been evaluating CocoaTech’s Path Finder as a possible replacement for Apple’s own Finder filesystem browser.