Abstract:
A computer implemented method of providing time-zone capability to existing personal information management (PIM) software that lacks time-zone capability, the method comprising: executing the existing PIM software; executing a time-zone application in parallel with the existing PIM software, wherein the time-zone application determines that there has been a change in time zone; and changes times of appointments stored in the PIM software to reflect the new time zone.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
   This application claims benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/302,521, filed on Jul. 2, 2001, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. 

   TECHNICAL FIELD 
   This invention relates to personal information management software of the type used for recording appointments and other calendar events. 
   BACKGROUND 
   Personal information management (PIM) software is widely used today for recording appointments and other calendar events. PIM software is used on both desktop computers and handheld computing devices. Often, the PIM database on one computer will be synchronized with a PIM database on another computer. Some PIM software includes enterprise synchronizing and scheduling capabilities that synchronize PIM databases for users across an enterprise, or that schedule meetings for multiple participants in the enterprise. 
   Some PIM software, typically software intended for desktop use, represents the time of appointments in universal time (UTC), which is equivalent to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Microsoft Outlook, for example, makes all time entries into its PIM database in universal time (UTC). The actual time that a user sees varies with the time zone setting of the user&#39;s software. This arrangement has the advantage that when a user changes time zones (e.g., as a consequence of traveling), his appointments can readily be adjusted to appear in the local time of that time zone merely by entering the new time zone. Also, when PIM databases across an enterprise are synchronized, or appointments scheduled using scheduling software, the different time zones of users in the enterprise are automatically taken into account. 
   Other PIM software, e.g., the Palm OS, a very widely used PIM software for handheld devices, represents appointments in local time. No provision is made for time zones. As long as the user does not move between time zones, and only synchronizes with another PIM database in the same time zone (e.g., between his desktop and handheld), this limitation is not a practical problem. The latest version of the Palm OS (Version 4.0) has added a limited time-zone capability that allows a user to change his time zone, but making such a change has no effect on appointments, which remain at the local time at which they were first entered. 
   SUMMARY 
   The inventors have found a practical method of adding time-zone capability to existing PIM software that lacks such capability. A separate time-zone application runs in parallel with the existing PIM software. When the time-zone application determines that the user&#39;s time zone has changed, it changes appointments in the PIM database to reflect the new time zone. 
   In a first aspect, an embodiment of the invention features a computer implemented method of providing time-zone capability to existing personal information management (PIM) software that lacks time-zone capability. The method comprises: executing the existing PIM software; executing a time-zone application in parallel with the existing PIM software, wherein the time-zone application determines that there has been a change in time zone; and changes times of appointments stored in the PIM software to reflect the new time zone. 
   In a second aspect, an embodiment of the invention features computer software including at least one computer-readable storage medium having computer-readable program code portions stored therein. The computer-readable program code portions include executable portions for providing time-zone capability to existing personal information management (PIM) software that lacks time-zone capability. The code portions comprise instructions for executing the existing PIM software; executing a time-zone application in parallel with the existing PIM software, wherein the time-zone application determines that there has been a change in time zone; and changes times of appointments stored in the PIM software to reflect the new time zone. 
   In preferred implementations of the invention, one or more of the following features may be incorporated. 
   A user of the software may pick a default time zone at the outset of using the time-zone application. 
   The time-zone application may choose a default time zone based on the local clock time of the device to which the time-zone application is initially downloaded. 
   Daylight savings time adjustments to appointments stored in the PIM software may be made either automatically or with a prompt to a user asking if the adjustment should be made. 
   The creation time and date of e-mails may be adjusted to reflect changes in time zone. For example, e-mails stored in a user&#39;s outbox in the e-mail software, but not yet sent, may be adjusted in response to a time zone change. 
   Time zone changes to appointments may be effected by adjustment to the system clock of the device operating the software. 
   The software may give a user the option of not changing appointment records in the PIM software upon changing time zones. 
   The existing PIM software may lack the capability to store an appointment that crosses a day boundary, so that the start time of the appointment is in one day, and the end time of the appointment is in a following day, and the time-zone application may enter the correct start time for the time-zone adjusted appointment, but an end time for the time-zone adjusted appointment that is within the same day, and the time-zone application may enter an appointment duration in a separate field of the appointment record. 
   The separate field may comprise one of the Note field, the appointment description field, and an application specific field made available by the API of the PIM software. 
   When the time zone changes so that the appointment no longer crosses a day boundary, the time-zone application may read the duration stored in the separate field, and use the duration to determine the correct end time for the appointment. 
   The time-zone application may thereafter remove the appointment duration data from the separate field in which it was stored. 
   The end time used for time-zone adjusted appointments that cross a day boundary may be a time ending near midnight that a user would not ordinarily use for an ending time for an appointment. 
   An appointment that crosses a day boundary may repeated on both the start and stop day. 
   The appointment stored for the second day may not be accurate at a view level that shows start and stop times but accurate at a higher level view. 
   The higher level view may comprise a view that only indicates whether an appointment exists on a particular day. 
   The time-zone application may communicate with a server to which the existing PIM software synchronizes, and wherein the time-zone application may be interrogated by the server and provide the server with the time zone of the appointments stored in the existing PIM software. 
   The server may use the time zone acquired from the device running the existing PIM software to convert the times of appointments in the server to a universal time when processing the appointments in the synchronization. 
   The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims. 

   
     DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS 
       FIG. 1  is a flow chart for a preferred embodiment of the invention. 
       FIG. 2  is a flow chart for a preferred embodiment in which e-mail creation times are adjusted. 
       FIG. 3  is a flow chart for a preferred embodiment in which appointments crossing an end of day boundary are handled by the invention. 
       FIG. 4  is a flow chart for a preferred embodiment in which time zone information is provided to a server with which the PIM database is being synchronized. 
       FIGS. 5 and 6  are screen shots showing the presentation of an appointment that crosses an end of day boundary. 
       FIGS. 7 and 8  are screen shots showing two of the interfaces with which the user selects a time zone and the treatment of daylight savings time adjustments. 
       FIGS. 9-11  are screen shots showing the interfaces with which the user installs an embodiment of the time-zone application. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
   Preferred embodiments of the invention may incorporate one or more of the following features: 
   User picks the default time zone at outset of using time-zone application, or the application chooses a default time zone based on the local clock time of the device to which the software is initially downloaded. 
   Daylight savings time adjustments are made either automatically or with a prompt to the user asking if the adjustment should be made. When the adjustments are made, changes are made to appointments in the PIM database. 
   The creation time and date of e-mails stored in a user&#39;s outbox, but not yet sent, is adjusted in response to the time zone change. 
   The system clock of the device is adjusted. This is all that is adjusted in the case of some PIM software that has limited time-zone capability. 
   The user is given the option of not changing records in the PIM database upon changing time zones. This helpful to deal with a problem that the user may have. 
   When a time zone change causes an appointment to span across more than one day, e.g., an existing appointment for 8 pm to 11 pm in the Pacific Time Zone of the United States becomes an appointment for 11 pm to 2 am when the user moves to the Eastern Time Zone, the software has the capability of handling the change even when the PIM software is incapable of recording an appointment that crosses a day boundary. The software will also restore the original appointments to their original times when the user moves back to his original time zone, in which the appointment does not cross a day boundary. What the software does, when the adjusted appointment begins on one day and ends on the next, is enter an appointment that runs from the correct start time to an end time that is within the same day, and enter an appointment duration in a separate field. Typically, the field used is the Note field, but the duration could be entered in the appointment description field, or in an application specific field made available by the API of the PIM software. When the user moves to a time zone (e.g., the original zone) in which the appointment no longer bridges a day boundary, the duration entry is read, used to determine the correct ending time for the appointment, and removed from the field in which it was stored. A technique that can be used to determine whether an appointment has such a duration entry is to search for appointments with ending times near midnight (e.g., in the Palm OS, the ending time may be set to 11:59 pm, which is not ordinarily available for use by a user making a manual entry of an appointment ending time). 
   To preserve the correct appearance in certain calendar views on the device, an appointment that bridges a day boundary may be repeated on both days. The entry on the second day is not accurate at a detailed level (as it shows the start time on the prior day), but the view on certain of the device&#39;s calendar views (e.g., dots indicating appointments on the Palm OS monthly view, or bold face in Outlook) will correctly show that there is an appointment on both days (i.e., a portion on day one, and a portion on day two). 
   The new time-zone application is also useful for synchronizing the PIM database with a server with more sophisticated time-zone capability. The server with which the synchronizing occurs can interrogate the time-zone application on the local device to determine the time zone of the entries in the local device&#39;s PIM database. Knowing the time zone, it can convert the entries to a universal time when processing the entries in the synchronization. 
     FIGS. 1-4  are flow charts showing the steps followed by various embodiments of the invention. 
   One platform on which embodiments of the invention can run is the Palm platform, which is in common use in a variety of handheld devices. The time-zone application installed on the Palm platform allows a user to select the time zone used by the Palm handheld. The Palm handheld uses this time zone for data display and entry, specifically, for calendar dates and times, as well as e-mail postmark dates and times. The server to which the handheld connects stores all times in a universal time format (GMT), and performs the necessary conversions for a given time zone. Time zone conversion supports users that travel across time zones and meetings and appointments where attendees are geographically dispersed. 
   Installing the time-zone application generates a default time zone setting. By default the software installs support for all available time zones on the Palm handheld, and it sets the current time zone to the one being used on the PC used for the installation. The PC&#39;s operating system determines the time zones that are available. The default time zone settings may be viewed by selecting Time Zone Support for PalmPilot Organizers. The Time Zone for Palm Computing Platform opening dialog box ( FIG. 9 ) appears. This dialog box displays the default settings. The scroll bars may be used to view the entire list of available time zones. 
   To change time zone settings for the Palm handheld, the Time Zone Support for Palmpilot Organizers is selected, to open the Time Zone for Palm Computing Platform dialog box ( FIG. 9 ). The user clicks Change to modify settings. This brings up the Time Zone Properties dialog box ( FIG. 10 ). 
   The user chooses the General tab to change the current zone on the handheld. If the user wants a time zone that supports both standard and daylight savings time, the user can specify additional options. One option indicates whether the time zone application should automatically adjust for daylight savings changes; another specifies whether the user wants to be notified, via alarm, when a change to and from daylight savings time occurs. The user can also set these options from the Palm handheld. 
   The user may then choose the Time zones tab ( FIG. 11 ) to customize the list of time zones that displays on the Palm handheld. Checkboxes are checked or unchecked to select time zones. 
   To set the current time zone from the Palm handheld, Time Zone is selected from the application screen. The Time Zone dialog boxes ( FIGS. 7 and 8 ) appear. The desired time zone is selected, and details for that time zone appear. If the user selects a time zone that supports both standard and daylight time, the user can specify additional options by clicking the corresponding check box. A Change Time Zone dialog box then appears, with an Update calendar/e-mail records option checked. If this checkbox is left checked, then the time-zone application will adjust all calendar events and e-mail records to the selected time zone. Typically, this is what the user will want to do. Once the user selects this checkbox, it is advisable to leave it in its checked state so that all events and records uniformly observe the current time zone. If the user clicks this box to uncheck the box, the time-zone application adjusts only future calendar events and e-mail records to use the selected time zone. Other calendar events and e-mail records are left unchanged. 
   When entering appointments for events occurring in other time zones, one must enter the event in the correct time for that zone. For example, suppose one is located in Paris and needs to schedule an 8:00 pm event in Tokyo for a given date. One would enter the event based on Paris time, which is seven hours earlier (during daylight savings time), and so would enter the appointment as 1:00 pm. When one goes to Tokyo and changes the time zone to Tokyo&#39;s time zone, the event time will be correctly displayed as 8:00 pm. Another way to do this is to select the current time zone for Tokyo on the handheld, enter the appointment in Tokyo time, then switch back to the current time zone. 
   The time-zone application is capable of handling appointments that span over two or more days. An appointment of this type can result from time zone adjustments. For example, suppose a user has an appointment that goes from 8 pm to 11:30 pm, and his device is set for Pacific standard time. If he chooses to change the device time zone to Eastern standard time, he will cause all appointments to shift forward three hours. This causes the appointment to appear as 11:00 pm to 2:30 am. This may make the existing appointment invalid according to the operating system running on the handheld device. 
   When this situation occurs—the time-zone application forcing an appointment to cross an end of day boundary—the appointment is changed into a two-day repeat (an exception is when the adjusted appointment ends exactly at midnight). The time-zone application adds a tag field containing the appointment duration to the appointment Note field, and the end time of the appointment is chopped to 11:59 pm. In the case of the 8:00 pm to 11:30 pm example, the appointment is changed to appear as follows: (1) the appointment becomes 11:00 pm to 11:59 pm ( FIG. 5 ); (2) the Note field is modified to include “Actual Duration: 210 minutes” ( FIG. 6 ); (3) the record becomes a daily repeat for a length of two days. This latter action may provide an incorrect low-level view, but a correct high level view, of the appointment (e.g., showing that he has an appointment on two consecutive days). 
   A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.