Files for download FreeTime v.1.9 (not for Windows -- use the Windows installer linked in this page instead)
(16 kb)
Earlier files (now out of date) are available for reference.
FreeTime Calendar is a freely available computer program for sharing schedule information. Installed on your personal computer, it provides a simple way of communicating your busy and free times to other people – both University staff and classmates – without sending and receiving large volumes of email. If everyone in a circle, seminar or committee report their schedules via FreeTime Calendar, arranging meetings and events for the group becomes much easier. Nagoya University users may want to refer to the online manual.
To use FreeTime Calendar, you must install the program on your personal computer, together with two configuration files. If you have not received this pair of files and would like to get started with FreeTime, or if you have lost them, please feel free to write to the address at the bottom of this page to have a set of files sent to you.
For users in the Nagoya University law faculty, a Windows installer is available. To install and set up the softwarwe, follow the steps explained in the installation guide to the right. If do not use Windows, or if you have any problems getting the program to work, please send mail to the address at the bottom of this page for help. This is a core tool for numerous activities inside the Law Faculty, and it is important to everyone that it works for you.
If you use more than one computer, you can install FreeTime Calendar on each of them; schedules are stored on the network, and the same calendar information will be available whenever and wherever you run the program with your personal configuration files. Please note, however, that the configuration files you receive for use with FreeTime Calendar are your personal keys to your own calendar; if you install them on a public-access computer, anyone will be able to modify your calendar information. Please take care to install the program only on your own computer.
Enjoy!
