Availability Window
An availability window is a defined period during which someone is open to scheduling meetings or calls, based on their calendar, preferences, and work patterns, used to determine valid meeting times without exposing full calendar details.
Understanding Availability Window
Scheduling meetings traditionally requires either exposing your full calendar or manually coordinating availability through back-and-forth emails. Availability windows provide a middle ground: you define the times you are generally available, and scheduling tools use these windows to offer valid meeting slots without revealing your complete schedule. Smart availability windows account for time zones, travel time between meetings, focus block protection, energy patterns, and the type of meeting being scheduled.
How GAIA Uses Availability Window
GAIA manages your availability windows intelligently, offering meeting times that respect your configured preferences while accounting for existing commitments, buffer time needs, and focus block protection. When someone asks to meet, GAIA identifies optimal available slots without exposing your full calendar or requiring manual availability checking.
Related Concepts
Calendar Automation
Calendar automation uses AI to intelligently manage your schedule by finding optimal meeting times, preparing briefings, blocking focus time, and coordinating calendar events with your tasks and communications.
AI Calendar Management
AI calendar management is the use of artificial intelligence to schedule, organize, and optimize your calendar by finding ideal meeting times, protecting focus blocks, preparing meeting briefs, and coordinating events with your tasks and communications.
Buffer Time
Buffer time is intentionally scheduled empty space between calendar events, providing time for meeting preparation, task completion, mental transition, and recovery before the next commitment.
Time Zone Management
Time zone management is the practice of correctly interpreting, converting, and coordinating times across different geographic time zones to avoid scheduling errors and ensure meetings occur at the intended local time for all participants.


