Add it before you forget
We've all done it. You spot something that sounds great - a class Tuesday morning, live music this weekend - and you think "oh, I'll remember that." Then Tuesday morning shows up and the plan is gone, lost somewhere between breakfast and the to-do list. The gap between "that looks fun" and actually going is where most good intentions quietly die.
Every event here has a couple of little buttons built to close that gap. They sit right on the time row - on the card itself, and again when you tap an event to open it.
Add it to your calendar
The small calendar icon () does exactly what it says. Tap it and you get a little calendar file that drops the event straight into whatever calendar your phone or computer already uses - Apple Calendar, Google, Outlook, it doesn't matter. The title, the time, and the place all come along, so it lands as a real appointment with a real reminder, not a sticky note you'll lose.
Plenty of what happens around here runs on a schedule - a standing card game, a weekly class, your regular monthly meetup. When we can tell an event repeats, a second calendar icon appears right next to the first. The first () adds just this one date. The second () adds the whole repeating series on its real cadence - daily, weekly, every other week, or monthly - so it's on your calendar over and over without you ever having to add it again. Events that don't repeat just show the single icon. One tap for the one-off, the one next to it for the things you do on repeat.
And nothing here is permanent. If a repeating event runs its course - the season ends, the group wraps up, you simply move on - just delete it in your own calendar app. Removing a repeating event clears it and all the future dates in one go, so you're never stuck managing it from our end.
Bring someone along
Open an event and you'll also find Share, because half the fun around here is doing things with someone. On your phone, Share opens the usual share sheet, so you can text it or send it through whatever app you like. On a computer, it copies a link you can paste anywhere. Either way, the person on the other end gets a tap-to-open view of the very same event - so "want to come?" takes about five seconds, not a paragraph of "it's the thing at the place at the time."
Why so few buttons
I could have crammed the popup full of options. I didn't, on purpose. Almost every "what should we do?" moment ends the same two ways: you put it on your calendar so it actually happens - this once or on its regular schedule - or you send it to a friend so it actually happens together. Everything else is noise. A tap to save, a tap to share, done.
So next time something catches your eye, don't trust your memory - give it a tap. And if there's a way you wish sharing or saving worked that it doesn't yet, I'd love to hear it.