APP COMRADE

Samsung TV / information / MYONLINECALENDAR

REVIEW

MyOnlineCalendar is a generic-named calendar tile on Samsung TVs.

A free Tizen utility from a developer called Deuse, filed under Information, with no store description and no screenshots — almost everything about it has to be inferred from the name.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

Samsung TV

MyOnlineCalendar

DEUSE

OUR SCORE

6.4

SAMSUNG TV

★ —

PRICE

Free

MyOnlineCalendar arrives on the Samsung TV store the way a lot of Tizen utilities do — with an icon, a name, and almost no other information. The developer is credited as Deuse. The category is Information. The price is free. There is no description, no screenshot, and no rating. Everything else about the app has to be inferred from the four words in the title.

That title is the entire pitch. A calendar, online, on the TV. On Tizen that almost always means one of three things: a viewer for a public ICS feed, a renderer for a Google Calendar share link, or a polling client for a hosted web calendar URL. Which of those MyOnlineCalendar actually is, the store does not say. The release date is recent — 30 March 2026, with an April refresh — so this is not abandoned shovelware. It is a new, small, quiet utility that has not yet told its own store page what it does.

For a Samsung TV owner, the calculus is straightforward. The download is free, the risk is low, and the only real cost is the few minutes it takes to launch the app and discover whether the name matches the function. That is the install decision MyOnlineCalendar leaves on the table — not because the app is bad, but because the listing refuses to argue for itself.

MyOnlineCalendar arrives on Tizen with nothing to read — no description, no screenshots, just a name that promises a calendar on the TV.

FEATURES

MyOnlineCalendar is a free Tizen app from a developer credited as Deuse, listed in the Samsung TV store's Information category. The store listing publishes an icon and a release date and nothing else — no description, no screenshots, no rating, no review count, no featured image. Whatever the app does, it does without telling the Samsung TV store about it.

The name carries the entire pitch. "MyOnlineCalendar" suggests a TV-screen view of a calendar pulled from an online source, which on Tizen typically means either a public ICS feed, a Google Calendar share link, or a hosted web URL the app polls in the background. None of that is confirmed on the listing.

The app is free, dated 30 March 2026, and was updated in mid-April. That cadence is consistent with a small utility from an independent developer rather than abandoned shovelware.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

Free is the headline. There's no price, no trial countdown, no in-app upsell visible from the listing. For a Samsung TV utility in a category dominated by paid widget bundles, that's a real point in MyOnlineCalendar's favour.

The recent release and update dates suggest the developer is still around. A March 2026 launch followed by an April refresh is more activity than most Tizen utilities show in a year.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The empty listing is the problem. A Samsung TV owner browsing the store sees an icon, a name, and a free price tag — no description telling them which calendar services connect, no screenshot showing the on-screen layout, no rating signalling whether anyone has tried it and found it useful. That's a near-impossible install decision.

Tizen's store enforces almost nothing about listing quality, so an app can ship with a blank page and stay there. The fix is on the developer's side: a one-paragraph description naming the supported calendar sources, two screenshots of the rendered view, and a contact link would lift this from a mystery icon to a credible utility.

CONCLUSION

Install MyOnlineCalendar only if the name describes exactly the thing you want — a calendar surface that lives on your Samsung TV and pulls from somewhere online. The free price keeps the risk low. The empty listing keeps the confidence lower. If the developer publishes a description in a future update, this review is worth revisiting; until then, the app is a name and an icon and not much else.