I’m currently using a Nextcloud instance hosted by a volunteer run non profit. 12€ per account per year, I have one for me and my girlfriend.
However, calendar sharing is limited to people on the users on that Nextcloud instance, which is a bit limiting.
Do you have alternatives that allow federated calendar sharing?
https://calendar.online/ seems promising and is German, has anyone used them before?
Download and create a calendar on: https://anytype.io/
And then you can share it for collaboration. Theres a bit of a learning curve but you can use it for alot more rhan calender and it works very well
Interesting, I see they are based in Switzerland https://anytype.io/faq
The free tier looks nice https://doc.anytype.io/anytype-docs/memberships/monetization
Tuta Calendar from Tutanota.
I use Fossify calendar. It works really well until now!
Solf-hosted Baikal. Works like a charm.
Your comment made me start to think about self-hosting. What hardware are you using?
I’m running it on a “normal” server, which hosts many VMs. Baikal being one of them. But it would also run on any potato or a raspy. It’s not very demanding. Also was simple to set up.
I’m going to look look into installing mrchromebox on my old Chromebook and using that. Should work right?
Do you have some specific features that are “must have” for you? I’m using the calendar from Proton (considering that I’m using their services as a bundle for mail+drive, I thought “why not”). So far I haven’t found any issues with that, but I’m not a “calendar heavy” user.
My only minor gripe is, that their ipadOS application is just a port from the iOS, not a full-fledged tablet version.
My main use case is to share with calendar availability with some close friends (easier to make plans when we can at least roughly see when everyone is available). In Nextcloud it’s only possible with other users of your Nextcloud server, there is no federation.
The Github issue is still open: https://github.com/nextcloud/server/issues/1440
In the mentioned Proton calendar, you can share your calendars, but NOT when using the free plan.
So I would say - if you’re already using Proton “suite”, you can give it a go. But if you don’t then I don’t think it makes sense to pay just for their calendar feature. It’s pretty basic (which is sufficient for me, but not for everyone)