By Jose Vilches
This past weekend over 150,000 Internet users woke up to find their
Gmail inboxes, contacts and chat conversations gone. The issue,
according to Google, was caused by a storage software update that
introduced an unexpected bug. But while the company has since begun restoring data
from tape backups and will likely offer some form of compensation where
applicable, the incident served as a reminder that no matter how
reliable some cloud-based services are, they are certainly not
infallible, and thus it might be prudent to have your own backup ready
just in case things go amiss.
There are numerous ways to backup your Gmail data and deciding which way
to go will largely depend on the level of effort you want to put into
it. You could simply setup Gmail to forward all your mails to another
email account and call it a day, for instance. But there are also a
handful of other options that offer a bit more flexibility and
convenience.
Below, we've listed a few of them, so you can choose whichever best suits your needs.
Use a standalone backup program
Gmail Backup is a simple and easy-to-setup free alternative that does
exactly what its name says. Upon installation, just type in your
credentials and it will begin downloading all your e-mails, backing them
up securely, and allowing you to restore them to your account should
the unthinkable happen. The program is free and Windows-only. Their
website seems to be down due to the increased load in the past few days,
but you can download Gmail Backup here from our local mirror.
If you're willing to shell out $20, Gmail Keeper
will back up Gmail messages or messages from a Google Apps Mail account
as a .zip file to a local disk. It supports multiple accounts and even
stores labels associated with each message, while those concerned about
privacy can encrypt their mail and password protect it.
Third-party Web service
Backupify is a
handy tool that automatically performs scheduled backups for a number of
popular online services including Google Apps, Facebook, Twitter and
others. You won't have to put too much effort into the whole backup
process -- just supply the login credentials of the sites you want
backed up and Backupify takes care of the rest. Be aware though that
you're essentially moving your info from one cloud to another.
The site offers both free and paid accounts with varying limitations,
but given the recent Gmail blunder, Backupify is taking the opportunity
to entice new users with a coupon code "savegmail" for a year of free
backups with one of their premium plans, so there's really no reason for
not giving it a shot.
Use a desktop mail client
This is probably the most common approach and should take just a few
minutes to set up. Gmail offers access to all your mail through desktop
clients such as Apple Mail, Microsoft Outlook, Mozilla Thunderbird, and
many others. The latter is free and available on all major operating
systems, so if you're doing this for the first time and especially if
you're only planning to use it for backups rather than as your primary
client, then Thunderbird might be the way to go.
For those unfamiliar with the setup process: After signing into Gmail,
click the "gear" in the upper-right corner, choose Mail settings, then
load the "Forwarding and POP/IMAP" tab. Enable POP for all mail and set
Gmail to keep its copy.
You'll then need to setup your desktop mail client to retrieve your emails. Google offers step-by-step instructions
for a number of clients and Thunderbird's automatic configuration is
usually spot on getting your settings right with just your username and
password -- but make sure to use POP instead of IMAP for one-way message
transfers.
Messages will be downloaded automatically each time you launch Thunderbird and stored into your profile folder
-- which you can back up standalone as well for some added security.
It's pretty straightforward, but for those who prefer to use the
web-based Gmail interface, remembering to run Thunderbird or whatever
desktop email client every once in a while might be more work than
they're willing to deal with.
Source: Techspot
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