Versions:

  • 1.7.1

Google Calendar 1.7.1 by Luke Klinker is a lightweight Electron wrapper that projects the familiar Google Calendar web interface into a standalone desktop window, eliminating the need to keep a browser tab open. Designed for users who treat their calendar as a mission-control dashboard, the app launches quickly, remembers window size and position, and stays quietly in the background until needed. Typical use cases include reception desks that display a shared room schedule, home-office workers who want calendar alarms separate from browser notifications, and IT administrators who need a kiosk-style view of upcoming support rotations on a secondary monitor. Because it simply surfaces the official Google Calendar site, all real-time syncing, color-coded calendars, guest management, and Meet links continue to work exactly as they do in Chrome, while the dedicated frame prevents accidental closure or mixing with other tabs. The single-version release, 1.7.1, ships with no additional features beyond what Google already provides, ensuring a minimal memory footprint and automatic updates inherited from the underlying web service. Falling under the Calendar & Time-Management Software category, the utility is especially helpful on Windows devices where Microsoft’s Mail and Calendar app does not support Google accounts or where corporate policies restrict browser extensions. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

Tags: