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Three Smart Tricks to Stay on Top of Schedules and Meetings (and How to Apply Them in Google Calendar and Outlook)

If you rely on Google Calendar or Outlook to organize your daily schedule, a few simple adjustments can dramatically improve how you manage time and meetings. Experts say there are three key tricks that can make your calendar clearer, save time, and help you feel more in control: using color codes, creating templates for recurring events, and integrating your calendar with task apps.

1. Use colors to spot events at a glance
Color-coding is a quick and effective way to categorize and prioritize your schedule. For example, blue can mark work meetings, yellow medical appointments, and green family events.

In Google Calendar, the best way to do this is by creating a separate calendar for each category, each with its own color. Just click “Add another calendar” from the sidebar, assign a name and color, and all will appear together on your main view.

In Outlook, the process uses categories instead. Right-click an event, select “Categorize”, and choose or create a color. Outlook even lets you assign multiple categories to one event—useful for meetings that overlap between projects or urgency levels.

2. Save time with templates and recurring events
If you often schedule similar meetings or reminders, creating templates and recurring events can make life much easier.

While Google Calendar doesn’t have formal templates, you can duplicate an event with all its details to future dates. When adding a new event, click “Does not repeat” to open frequency options (daily, weekly, monthly, or custom). You can even define advanced patterns like “every two Thursdays” or “the last day of the month.”

Outlook offers more robust recurrence controls. When creating an event, click “Recurrence” to set detailed repetition patterns and duration. It also lets you save events as .oft templates, ideal for standard meetings or follow-up reminders.

3. Integrate with task management apps
Integrating calendars with task apps creates a unified workflow. Google Calendar syncs seamlessly with Google Tasks—you can access it directly from the sidebar, set dates and times, and drag tasks onto your schedule.

Outlook pairs with Microsoft To Do, though they work more independently. Emails flagged in Outlook appear in To Do automatically, while tasks with due dates in To Do show up on your Outlook calendar.

Bonus tips
Both tools offer extra features to refine your schedule: create “focus time” or “break” events, enable time zone support for international teams, use keyboard shortcuts (press “C” in Google Calendar to create an event), and personalize notifications with varying alert times depending on event importance.

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Microsoft Unveils 365 Premium Plan with Integrated Copilot AI Assistant

Microsoft announced on Wednesday the launch of Microsoft 365 Premium, a new $19.99-per-month subscription plan for individuals that bundles its Copilot artificial intelligence assistant across core productivity apps such as Outlook, Excel, and Word.

The new offering represents a strategic consolidation of Microsoft’s growing AI ecosystem, simplifying user access to its generative AI tools while embedding them more deeply into the company’s mainstream productivity suite. The move underscores the broader industry trend of monetizing AI investments by weaving advanced features directly into widely used software platforms.

According to Microsoft, 365 Premium provides users with the highest Copilot usage limits to date and introduces a set of exclusive tools — including Researcher, Analyst, and Actions — designed to enhance workflow automation, data analysis, and content creation. The plan also includes 1 terabyte of cloud storage and advanced cybersecurity protection via Microsoft Defender.

The launch of 365 Premium also signals the end of Copilot Pro, Microsoft’s previous $20-per-month AI subscription. Existing Copilot Pro and Microsoft 365 Personal or Family users will have the option to migrate to Premium, the company confirmed.

Microsoft said it would continue offering a free version of Copilot, but 365 Premium users will benefit from expanded functionality and higher usage limits across multiple applications.

The move mirrors the subscription model of OpenAI’s ChatGPT Plus, which also costs $20 per month, but Microsoft aims to differentiate its offer by integrating AI directly into productivity workflows rather than providing a standalone chatbot experience.

The company added that current Personal and Family subscribers will also receive limited Copilot upgrades at no additional cost, as part of its effort to encourage broader adoption of AI-assisted tools within the Microsoft ecosystem.

With this shift, Microsoft continues to strengthen its leadership in the consumer AI productivity market, while aligning individual plans more closely with its enterprise-focused Copilot for Microsoft 365, already used by millions of business customers worldwide.