Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

The sun sets on Sunrise Calendar

sunrise sunset calendar
It was a long time coming. Shortly after Microsoft acquired Sunrise Calendar, the company said it would incorporate most of the calendar’s features into Outlook, and then shut down the service.

We now have an exact date for Sunrise’s sunset — August 31.

Recommended Videos

“The entire Sunrise team is now working side by side with the Outlook team and it’s a thrilling moment for us to work on an app of this scale,” the Sunrise team said in a blog post. “Unfortunately, as all good stories go, there’s a sad bit to it: we’re not able to support and update Sunrise anymore. No new features. No bug fixes.”

To discourage people from downloading the app, so as not to disappoint them further, the Sunrise team will be pulling its apps from the App Store and Google Play in the next few days. If you have it downloaded or if you’re using Sunrise on the web, the service will still function until August 31.

The team says it’s working hard to bring many of Sunrise’s best features to Microsoft’s Outlook calendar — and you can see them being incorporated already. Microsoft unveiled Calendar Apps earlier in April, which brought support for a number of apps, like Evernote, Facebook, and Wunderlist, to Outlook.

For those of you who are dreading Sunrise Calendar’s inevitable demise, you do have a little more than three months to switch to something new, and we’ve put together a few apps that are good alternatives.

For iOS

Moleskine Timepage ($5)

Moleskine-Timepage_
Moleskine, the company famous for its journals, released a calendar app last year that went on to be one of Apple’s “Best of 2015” apps. This gorgeous app gives you an endless timeline view of your events, as well as a heatmap overview of the month that displays the days you are least busy. Best of all, the app also offers weather updates, as well as travel estimates to your events.

iTunes

Fantastical 2 ($5)

Fantastical-2-iPad
Fantastical 2 is another award-winning app that offers a solid design experience. Apart from scheduling events, you can also add reminders as well as geofences for when you arrive at a certain location, or when you leave it. Fantastical also has a pleasant month-view widget, which makes it easy to see upcoming events at a glance. And it makes it dead easy to add an event — if you don’t want to bother with time dials or anything of the sort, just type out what you want and the event or reminder will be scheduled. Fantastical has a great Mac client that offers a solid desktop experience as well.

iTunes

For Android

Google Calendar

Google Calendar
Google Calendar is the default calendar app on stock Android devices, and for good reason too. The app is also available for iOS, and it features a polished Material Design, and has features like Goals, reminders, and event integration from Gmail, and it also has Exchange support. You can view your events however you like, whether through Schedule, Day, 3-Day, Week, and Month. Of course, Google Calendar also has a solid presence on the web for desktop users.

Google Play

iTunes

Today Calendar ($3)

Today calendar
This beautiful calendar app has continued to stay popular on Android — likely thanks to an active developer who repeatedly adds new features that leave users wanting more. Sure, it closely resembles Google Calendar, but it adds a lot more features you didn’t know you wanted, like AMOLED mode, themeable design, a sleek widget, and more.

Google Play

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Google’s Android monopoly finds its biggest challenge, and Apple might be next
Apps screen on the Google Pixel 7.

The Competition Commission of India slapped Google with two hefty fines over anti-competitive strategies that have allowed it to dominate the mobile ecosystem in India. Totaling over $250 million, the penalties reprimand Google for forcing smartphone makers to avoid Android forks, prefer Google’s web search service, and pre-install popular cash cows like YouTube on phones.

Google was also disciplined for forcing its own billing system on developers that allowed the giant to take up to a 30% share of all in-app purchases for applications listed on the app store. Google is not really a stranger to titanic penalties; The EU handed Google a record-breaking fine of approximately $5 billion in 2018 for abusing its dominant market position — a penalty that was upheld in September this year following Google’s appeal.

Read more
Google slapped with record-setting antitrust fine in the EU
Google Search on mobile

Google has been handed a blistering setback totaling over $4 billion in Europe. The company was slapped with a record fine by the European Union in 2018, following a 2015 investigation alleging that the company abused its market position as the dominant smartphone operating system (via Android) and engaged in anticompetitive practices.

Google appealed the fine, but the European Court of Justice has rejected it and has largely upheld the original penalty. The commission originally imposed a fine worth 4.343 billion Euros, but following Google’s unsuccessful appeal for annulment, the General Court has only slightly reduced the penalty to 4.125 billion Euros and maintains that the search giant violated antitrust laws.

Read more
The best thing about Android 13 isn’t a new feature or setting — it’s something else
Android 13 logo on a Google Pixel 6a.

After months of testing, Google has finally unleashed Android 13, its current Android smartphone update for 2022. As far as updates go, it's not one that you'll notice. I've been using Android 13 for around two months prior to its release, and it's been a pretty whelming experience.

Unlike iOS 16, which is a large and hefty update, Android 13 is rather pedestrian. There's not much differentiating it visually or functionally from previous Android releases. Much of what sets Google apart from Apple on this front is that Apple frontloads all its significant app improvements into its big iOS releases. Google trickles its features out as soon as they're ready, so many features announced with Android 13 -- like a revamped Google Wallet and tablet-optimized apps -- have already landed. Because of that, Android 13 is an update that's barren of excitement.

Read more