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Replying to Is It Possible To Save A Gmail Backup To A File ?
Topic Summary
yordan
Posted 11 August 2010 - 10:33 PM
vhortex
Posted 11 August 2010 - 08:35 PM
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I swap Gmail versions and toogled my features but still I can't find the menu item that zzj mentioned.
Checking the Lab tools, there was an experimental "Create a Document" plugin by Jeremie LE & David K which will add a new menu items on the right when you are viewing an email.New window Print all Create a document Expand all Collapse all Forward all
When I clicked the button, it opens up Google docs with the email content. The link is thread aware so any email thread will have all the replies and the original mail and any similar mail considered as a thread by gmail imported into 1 google document. The feature still lacks getting the added header info from being imported but it you like to just convert to google docs then this tool is for you.
There is a bad thing about this one, it is experimental and since it is a Lab item.. its lifespan is unknown. The plugin can be removed anytime they want.
vhortex
Posted 11 August 2010 - 08:10 PM
Depends probably from your contry.
In my gmail window, the upper right corner has three links : "parameters", "help" and "logout". Which one are you talking about?
Mine have
"myemail@gmail.com | lab button | Settings | Help | Sign out"
@zzj
I think yordan was using the old version of Gmail, i am using the skinned version of Gmail from Google Labs. Just for verification, I'll try later to shutdown the content rich feature and the lab tools that is active on my Gmail then go down to HTML basic mode.
yordan
Posted 11 August 2010 - 06:44 PM
Depends probably from your contry.Can be stored in a Google document. Gmail has a link in the upper right corner.
In my gmail window, the upper right corner has three links : "parameters", "help" and "logout". Which one are you talking about?
vhortex
Posted 11 August 2010 - 05:13 PM
backing up my entire inbox takes at least 6 hours to take even if the file downloads only takes 1 hour for my thousand of emails in my main inbox.
it is important to me to be able to see all informations like email sender, sending server's name/address/IP and other stuffs that gmail stores. this items are not important aspects for most people however i require the special aspect of getting this extra info backup together with the attachments that they have and any related files that is of concern.
the extra headers will help me tell apart the spam and the valid mails, even if google have a very nice spam feature.. some still go past the protection by spoofing email addresses and sender server name's. the extra info also tells me if the mail was sent by a php script via automated alerts that i have inserted on CRON jobs or sent manually by a server admin for technical reasons.
Feelay
Posted 11 August 2010 - 01:26 PM
Edit
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You might want to press the "read more" link to read about it and make sure it's what you want =)
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Regards
/Feelay | Nanashi
yordan
Posted 11 August 2010 - 01:19 PM
Can be stored in a Google document. Gmail has a link in the upper right corner.
Thanks for the info. However, Google documents can easily be imported from a file on your PC. But there is no easy way to import the text of a mail.
Unless there is something I didn't understand in the Google Docs menus?
zzj
Posted 11 August 2010 - 01:02 PM
rbeede
Posted 18 June 2010 - 08:53 PM
I used to use Thunderbird which kept all the e-mails in an mbox file format. You could save individual ones if you wanted via Thunderbird.
However I now use a custom Perl script I wrote that downloads every e-mail into separate folders and files. The entire e-mail message and attachments are kept within one MIME message format file which can easily be opened on other computers with Outlook, Outlook Express, Thunderbird, etc. This is mainly done for backup purposes but also as an easy way to search archives of my e-mails.
Google limits the speed at which you can download. Pulling 13,000 messages from my account takes about 3 hours. It would be faster, but Google has to limit the number of connections to 2 in order to prevent overloading the system.
The Simpleton
Posted 13 June 2010 - 03:15 PM
No, no need to select part of a text.
Well yordan I was referring to this part by Spencer:
For exact replicas of web content which keeps formatting intact, web2pdf is good, but unfortunately the text is non selectable which is a big strike against this.
CutePdf seems to have a lot of useful features. I think I'll use it to backup my mail too. I never exactly was fully happy with Thunderbird in the first place anyway. This is a much neater way to save important mails.....



