CyberNotes: How to Backup Gmail

This article was written on August 09, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Tutorial Thursday

There have been plenty of occasions where I have been left wondering if I had lost everything in my Gmail account. If you don’t know about any of those situations that I’m talking about, just view all of the past occurrences that we have written about. People have lost every email in their account numerous times, and how do you know that you’re not going to be next?

Honestly, I don’t think people ever really see the value in backing up their data. In the last few months we’ve had two hard drives completely crash leaving the data unrecoverable. One of the drives was for our website, and it could have been really devastating if we didn’t make nightly backups.

I really do hope you realize that in the blink of an eye your data could be gone, and you should take every precaution available to protect it. That’s why we’re presenting you with several different ways to backup your Gmail account, and some are easy while others can be a little more time consuming.

–Configuring POP Access–

A few of the solutions we reference below require that POP access is enabled in your Gmail account. This is a simple process, but I thought that I would mention it before we dive into anything. Here’s what you need to do to enable POP:

  1. Click Settings at the top of any Gmail page.
  2. Open the Forwarding and POP tab.
  3. Select Enable POP for all mail (even mail that’s already been downloaded).
  4. Click Save Changes.

Gmail Backup

–Backup Gmail by Forwarding (only future emails)–

This is going to be the easiest thing that you can do, and could actually prove to be very useful. All this entails is forwarding all of your email messages from your current account to another one. I recommend forwarding to a Hotmail or Yahoo! account so that it is completely separate from Google, and then if Gmail isn’t accessible for some reason, you’ll be able to access your old mail.

Gmail Backup

Here’s what you need to do:

  1. Click Settings at the top of any Gmail page.
  2. Click Forwarding and POP along the top of the Settings box.
  3. Enter the email address to which you’d like your messages forwarded.
  4. Select the action you’d like your messages to take from the drop-down menu. You can choose to keep Gmail’s copy of the message in your inbox, or you can send it automatically to All Mail or Trash.
  5. Click Save Changes.

If you only want to backup emails from a certain person, or mail that contains a certain word, you can try setting up some filters (video demo) to do the dirty work for you. That way the important stuff will get backed up.

–Backup Gmail with an Offline Application (past emails and future emails)–

The first solution that I’m going to talk about is probably the most common. All you have to do is setup Outlook, Thunderbird, or another email application to download the emails from your account. Here’s what you’ll need to do:

  1. Enable POP access on your Gmail account using the steps outlined in the beginning of this article.
  2. Now all you need to do is follow Google’s instructions on setting up your specific application. If you’re using Outlook 2003 there is a video tutorial available, or if you really know what you’re doing, all you’ll probably need is the port and server information found here.

Now once you get that all setup, your email application will begin downloading all of the email from Gmail. If you have a lot of email in your Gmail account, the process might take a short while. This is because Gmail only allows the download of messages in batches, and from my experience it will download a few hundred at a time.

–Backup Gmail to Another Gmail Account (past emails and future emails)–

This is an idea that you probably haven’t heard about before, but it is something that I’ve recommended to other people who don’t want to use a desktop application for backing up all of their emails. All you have to do is setup another Gmail account, and you’ll use Gmail’s new Mail Fetcher to retrieve all of the messages from your main account.

First enable the POP access for your main Gmail account that you want backed up by following the instructions earlier. Then from your secondary Gmail account configure the Mail Fetcher:

  1. Click Settings at the top of any Gmail page.
  2. Click Accounts along the top of the Settings box.
  3. In the Get mail from other accounts section, click Add another mail account.
  4. Enter the full email address of the account you’d like to access, then click Next Step.
  5. Enter the email address to which you’d like your messages forwarded.
  6. Now on this page you’ll need to enter the following information (screenshot below):
    • Username is your email address including the @gmail.com at the end. You can also use a Google Apps account, and if that’s the case you still need to enter in your full email address.
    • The POP server needs to be pop.gmail.com for this to work.
    • Set the port number to 995, and then make sure the SSL box is checked below.
  7. Click Add Account.
  8. Choose the option you desire for being able to send mail as that address.

Here is a screenshot of what step 6 looks like (we’re using a Google Apps account that manages our site’s email):

Gmail Backup

After everything is setup, Gmail will go and retrieve all of your past emails. For some reason, a majority of mine were sent to the spam or trash folders, but I easily moved them around after they were finished downloading. Remember, Gmail allows bulk POP access requests in smaller batches so it might take a little while for all of your emails to get retrieved. I do recommend setting up some filters to organize the mail as it comes in though.

Gmail Backup

–Other Gmail Backup Solutions–

You may have thought that those are the only ways possible to backup your Gmail account, but that isn’t the case. Where there is a will, there is a way, and with the millions of Gmail users, people are bound to come up with some pretty unique stuff. Here are a few other solutions that I found which you might see being useful:

  1. Backup Gmail using Fetchmail
    This guide is brought to you by Lifehacker, and uses the POP access that we gave instructions for above. I wouldn’t exactly say it is for the faint of heart because it involves some command line work!
  2. Backup Gmail using Google Groups
    This is kinda like the mail forwarding that we walked you through above, but it’s using Google Groups. You are able to make your group private, so you don’t have to worry about others seeing your mail, and it might be good to have this on another service other than Gmail.

–Overview–

There are a lot of solutions available for backing up your Gmail account, but unfortunately the best one is still not an option. By that I mean Google offering some sort of backup solution. If you would like that to be an option in the future, head on over to the Gmail survey and pick the “Export message to a CD for storage” option.

The bad thing about all of these solutions is that they make it extremely difficult to replicate the label structure that you have given your emails. The best thing that you can probably do is either forward your emails to another Gmail account, or use the Gmail-to-Gmail POP access I discussed. That way you can at least setup filters to be applied to the incoming messages. They may not catch everything perfectly, but it’s better than nothing.

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Switch to Hotmail from Gmail and Yahoo

This article was written on August 27, 2007 by CyberNet.

Trueswitch: Transfer Email Account to Hotmail

Just last week we wrote about a service Yahoo! provides that lets you bring your existing emails, contacts, and calendar from your existing email account. The only problem, as my brother pointed out when using it, is that you could get locked out of your Gmail account temporarily because of the heavy access:

My only complaint is in the process of using this feature it logs into your Gmail account who knows how many times which caused it to lock my account with Gmail due to suspicious activities. I was locked out for over 26 hours in 2 days with no access to new emails what so ever. So while this is a great feature I do stress caution in using it.

Now you can also switch to Hotmail using the same service that Yahoo! incorporates. With it you can switch to Hotmail from any of these providers: AOL, Gmail, Comcast, Yahoo!, Cox, Earthlink, MSN, Netscape, Netzero, Juno, CS, Optonline, and Worldnet. It takes just a minute to initiate the transfer process, but it can take up to 24-hours to complete. Here’s the three steps that you go through:

  1. Enter the email address and password of both accounts.
    Switch to Hotmail Account - Step 1
  2. Choose what you want to transfer.
    Switch to Hotmail Account - Step 2
  3. Sit on your hands and stare at the ceiling for 24-hours.
    Switch to Hotmail Account - Step 3

As you can see the process to switch from one email provider to another is no longer the pain that it once was. Heck, this is easier than switching between desktop apps that manage your emails (at one point I had a heck of a time trying to go from Thunderbird to Outlook, and visa versa).

I have a feeling that Google might also start using Trueswitch because visiting this URL gives a "Forbidden" warning instead of the standard "Not Found" message. That essentially means that the directory has been created, and it probably even contains files. Of course, I could be looking too far into that.

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Thunderbird Organization Established — MailCo

This article was written on September 18, 2007 by CyberNet.

It’s been nearly two months since Mozilla originally announced that they were going to help Thunderbird "spread its wings," and it looks like we finally have a result of the talks. Mozilla has decided to branch Thunderbird off into its own subsidiary, and it will be started with $3 million in seed money that has been provided by the Mozilla Foundation.

Mitchell Baker, Mozilla’s CEO, says that this move will help them improve the email client:

The result is that Mozilla is launching a new effort to improve email and internet communications. We will increase our investment and focus on our current email client — Thunderbird — and on innovations in the email and communications areas. We are doing so by creating a new organization with this as its sole focus and committing resources to this organization. The new organization doesn’t have a name yet, so I’ll call it MailCo here. MailCo will be part of the Mozilla Foundation and will serve the public benefit mission of the Mozilla Foundation.

What will the new organization do exactly? Here’s a few things it hopes to accomplish:

  • Take care of Thunderbird users
  • Move Thunderbird forward to provide better, deeper email solutions
  • Create a better user experience for a range of Internet communications — how does / should email work with IM, RSS, VoIP, SMS, site-specific email, etc?
  • Spark the types of community involvement and innovation that we’ve seen around web "browsing" and Firefox.

The interesting thing in Mitchell’s article is that she was extremely careful this time around to shed some light on the positive things, and seemed to stray away from the things that could cause some concern. One of the things that came to my mind is what’s going to happen after the initial $3 million in seed money is gone? Where are they going to get their funding from then? Firefox is a goldmine when it comes to the integrated search box, but Thunderbird doesn’t really have the same revenue sources as a browser.

Don’t expect to see anything out of the ordinary for a little while since the three current developers will continue to work on Thunderbird 2 patches as well as the future Thunderbird 3. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that this move truly is to make Thunderbird better, and here’s hoping that MailCo can sustain itself!

Sources: Mozilla Press Release, GigaOM & Mozilla Links

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Facebook Messages: Every Email, Text, and Chat In One Place [Facebook]

As expected, is announcing a “modern messaging system” today. Mark Zuckerberg says it’s not email. But it might just replace it. Get ready for your @facebook.com address. More »

Watch Facebook’s messaging event right here!

Nope, we’re not liveblogging Facebook’s messaging-related event today, since we’re en route to the Web 2.0 summit — and a new email service isn’t really our bag anyway. But we know a lot of you are interested, so we thought we’d throw up the stream. Any guesses on what might be in store? And whether our own Josh Topolsky will get mobile, social, and Four Loko with it after last week’s podcast rant? The floor is yours.

Watch Facebook’s messaging event right here! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Nov 2010 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Man Hacks 3,000 Women’s Email Accounts, Posts X-Rated Photos on Their Facebook Pages

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Last Friday, California police arrested a 23-year-old “man” who has been accused of hacking into the email and Facebook accounts of more than 3,000 women. Once in their various accounts he would search for, and often find, sexually-explicit photos of the women, and then send the photos to the victims’ contacts and post them on their Facebook accounts.

The suspect, George Samuel Bronk, was arraigned on Tuesday following an investigation involving Federal authorities and the California Highway Patrol’s Computer Crimes Investigation Unit.

Bronk first came to authorities’ attention after a Connecticut woman told police that someone had stolen explicit photos from her email and posted them onto her Facebook page. Police were able to trace an IP address to Bronk’s computer where they found that Bronk had gained access to almost 3,200 women’s email accounts.

It is thought that he tricked the emails into resetting their passwords based on pre-answered personal questions which he was able to guess based on info available on the women’s Facebook pages.

This guy deserves to do some time for what amounts to harassment and acting as a Peeping Tom on a cross-continental scale. But 3,200 accounts. That’s a lot. Almost, in a strange way, impressive. This guy could probably have found Osama Bin Laden or invented some kind of new Twitter had he put his hacking talents and seemingly endless amount of free time into good rather than evil.

via Switched

Switch to Yahoo! Mail from Gmail and Hotmail

This article was written on August 20, 2007 by CyberNet.

If you’ve been looking to make the switch to Yahoo! Mail then I’ve got the tool you need. Yahoo! has a partnership with a company called TrueSwitch which is used to transfer emails, calendar info, and contacts from one account to another. So for no additional costs you can switch to Yahoo! Mail from any of these providers: Hotmail, AOL, Gmail, Comcast, Yahoo!, Cox, Earthlink, MSN, Netscape, Netzero, Juno, CS, Optonline, and Worldnet.

The process looks like it is extremely painless, and it’s kinda funny that I just found this. My brother recently switched from Gmail to Yahoo! Mail because of the better support for his Blackberry, but he had troubles getting all of his stuff moved over. I’m sure knowing about this tool would have made it a lot easier! Here’s a video on how it works:

Also, it appears that Yahoo! Mail has upped their attachment size limitation to 20MB, thereby matching what Google offers. They’re even adding 24-hour mail support via IM, as well as a few other things. Yahoo! might be on a roll here.

Thanks for the tip netster007x!

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Twitter from Your Outlook Inbox

This article was written on July 10, 2009 by CyberNet.

twinbox-1.png

arrow Windows Windows only arrow
Are you addicted to Twitter, but afraid to use it while you’re at work? We’ve got the cure for your addiction! Well, not really a cure… I guess it would be more like throwing fuel on the fire. What if I said there’s a way for you to post on Twitter directly from your Outlook Inbox? Not only that but you’ll also be able to read posts from the people you’re following? Sounds great, right?

The app that will let you do all of this for free is called TwInbox. It integrates directly into your Outlook client so that you can both read and post to Twitter… all while looking like you’re sifting through hundreds of emails. The toolbar serves as a quick access point for all of your Twitter needs.

Want to know what all this is capable of? Here’s a list of features:

  • Update your Twitter status directly from Outlook.
  • Receive your friend updates in Outlook.
  • Archive, manage, group and search your tweets the same way you manage your email.
  • Search, track keywords. TwInbox will automatically download ALL tweets matching the keywords you specify, even if you are not following the tweet sender. This feature is perfect for keeping up to date with the Twitter buzz on your name, brand, interests, etc.
  • Group tweets by sender, topic, etc using the Search feature.
  • Upload and post picture files and Outlook email attachments.
  • See new tweets at a glance.
  • Assign custom folder and categories to new messages.
  • Use Outlook’s “Reply” and “ReplyAll” commands to send twitter direct messages and @replies.
  • Automatically sort new tweets into per-sender folders.
  • Shorten URLs with tinyurl.
  • See graphs of your Twitter usage statistics.
  • Tweets sent to you (@replies and direct) are marked with high importance, so you can see them at a glance.

Honestly, this is the most creative interface I’ve ever seen for managing a Twitter account. When I first saw this I didn’t expect it to do much more than provide a popup box for posting to Twitter. The thing is a full-featured Twitter client right in your Inbox! I could see this being a huge hit in the corporate world… especially for people who are forced to tweet for the company they work for. Pretty much everyone is familiar with Outlook, and this undoubtedly minimizes the learning curve. Not that Twitter is difficult to use, but this makes it feel no different than sending a short email.

I give mad props to the developer(s) for not only creating this, but for also making it free. And, in case you’re wondering, it works with both Outlook 2003 and Outlook 2007.

TwInbox Homepage (Windows only; free)

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UAE says BlackBerry is now compliant with regulations, free to rock on

The latest thrilling installment in BlackBerry’s Middle East saga has turned out not to be so thrilling after all. Having set an October 11 deadline for RIM to comply with its “telecommunications regulatory framework,” the United Arab Emirates is today reporting that the BlackBerry maker has managed to make the necessary changes with plenty of time to spare. Consequently, there’ll be no state-ordained curtailing of email, web, or BBM services within the UAE, which mirrors similar agreements that BlackBerry has managed to finagle with India and Saudi Arabia. Of course, the grand purpose of the UAE’s ultimatum was for RIM to allow the state access to encrypted messaging communications, and while the current announcement is pointedly missing details on what’s been done to appease the Abu Dhabi decision makers, we can’t imagine them giving up the fight without RIM making some type of concession. And the shady, undisclosed concessions happen to be our least favorite kind.

UAE says BlackBerry is now compliant with regulations, free to rock on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 03:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceYahoo! News  | Email this | Comments

New Galaxy Tab video offers thorough overview, glimpse of starry mail client

Can’t get enough of the Galaxy Tab? Then Samsung’s got you covered with its latest, and possibly most detailed video overview of the tablet yet. Running just over nine minutes, the video doesn’t exactly offer a ton in the way of surprises (apart from a rather curious contact listing for someone named “Bill Jobs”), but Samsung’s demonstration of the Tab’s email client did catch our eye. As you can see above, it shows a Gmail account with what appears to be starred emails. Unfortunately, it’s not clear if those stars are actually tied to Gmail, since the client also showed the same stars in a Hotmail account during our first hands-on with the device. So, is a star just a star, or a star? Just one of many things to ponder as you watch the complete video after the break.

Continue reading New Galaxy Tab video offers thorough overview, glimpse of starry mail client

New Galaxy Tab video offers thorough overview, glimpse of starry mail client originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Sep 2010 17:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSamsung Mobile (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments