In theory, you can export your Google Bookmarks and import those into
Chrome.  With this accomplished, you'd be in the "new system" which I
presume will ultimately replace Google Bookmarks, using the Google
Docs List as a replacement interface.

In the meantime, it will mean you won't be able to keep your Google
Toolbar (in Firefox and IE) bookmarks synced with Chrome until there
is an add-on for those browsers to sync with this new system.


On Aug 3, 11:07 am, "m.f" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I agree on the convenience of syncing with the users' existing (if it
> exists) Google Bookmarks data store.  I myself have been using Google
> Bookmarks for quite some time and built up a nice inventory that I
> would love to sync directly to.  Will this be a feature?
>
> On Jul 31, 5:59 pm, Caleb Eggensperger <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The doc says:
>
> >    - Provide a web interface to access stored / synced bookmarks, likely via
> >    the docs.google.com doclist.
>
> > What about google.com/bookmarks? Shouldn't be difficult -- toolbar syncs to
> > there currently.
>
> > On Fri, Jul 31, 2009 at 14:07, Tim Steele <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Hi!
>
> > > A bunch of us have been working on a feature to sync user data in Chromium
> > > with a Google account.  (Surprise! :))  The great news is that we'll be
> > > starting to work directly in the Chromium project this week, and let me 
> > > tell
> > > you, are we excited to do that!  This email discusses how we're planning 
> > > to
> > > get started, in detail (maybe too much detail... sorry).
>
> > > We have built a library that implements the client side of our sync
> > > protocol<http://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/developers/design-document...>,
> > > as well as the Google server-side infrastructure to serve Google Chrome
> > > users and synchronize data to their Google Account.  Of course, all the 
> > > code
> > > going into Chromium is open source, and the messages between the client 
> > > and
> > > server use the open protobuf <http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/> format
> > > and library.  Check out the sync developer 
> > > page<http://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/developers/design-document...>
> > >  if
> > > you're interested in low-level goals and technical details.
>
> > > We will be landing this code in a few steps rather than one giant
> > > changelist for a number of reasons.  First, this makes reviewing a *lot* 
> > > easier;
> > > it isn't the most straightforward code by nature, so the more fine grained
> > > scrutiny the code gets, the better.  Second, we've been working in a
> > > proprietary environment until now because of the dependency of having to
> > > build the complementary Google production server environment for syncing.
> > >  As such, the code uses a small number of internal libraries that we need 
> > > to
> > > open-source or replace, as well as libraries that would be redundant to 
> > > what
> > > Chromium already includes.  Removing these, and open sourcing the entire
> > > sync engine, is our highest priority and we expect this to take about 
> > > three
> > > weeks.
>
> > > So how will we commit the code in pieces and not totally hose the build in
> > > the process?  First, a little more background.  You may have come across 
> > > the
> > > CHROME_PERSONALIZATION #define when digging through Chromium source code.
> > >  Right now, this is used in conjunction with a relatively small number of
> > > private c++ source files to conditionally build Chromium with sync 
> > > enabled.
> > >  These files are in fact a glue layer between Chromium and what is called
> > > the "syncapi", which is the bulk of the client library I was talking about
> > > above.  On windows, syncapi is built into a DLL, and when
> > > CHROME_PERSONALIZATION is defined this DLL gets placed alongside 
> > > chrome.dll
> > > for use at runtime.  Syncapi builds and runs on Linux, but not Mac (yet).
>
> > > With the initial checkin, we will leave the CHROME_PERSONALIZATION #define
> > > as-is, so the sync code will not be built by default.  We'll be working 
> > > hard
> > > over the coming weeks to make sure the code passes all existing test 
> > > suites
> > > that are part of the regular buildbot cycle, and on removing the #define.
> > >  After that, our hope is that we will be free of the DLL altogether and 
> > > have
> > > all the code checked in to the repository, fully functional or not, in a 
> > > few
> > > weeks.  We do *not* plan on ever checking in the windows-only syncapi dll
> > > to the main chromium repository.  So until the dll is no longer needed, 
> > > the
> > > public repository won't have all the bits to actually build Chromium with
> > > sync enabled.  That said, we want to keep the sync build running smoothly,
> > > so we will use a combination of command-line flag (to enable sync) and
> > > delay-loading syncapi.dll only when it is needed.  This will allow the
> > > "glue" code to compile as part of the normal Chromium build without
> > > introducing a dependency on this dll, yet still make it possible to run 
> > > with
> > > the dll present.
>
> > > On that note, we're planning to use the syncapi DLL to produce a
> > > sync-enabled Google Chrome build for dev-channel users in a week or so, to
> > > get the feature into experimentally inclined hands.  We have a great deal 
> > > of
> > > infrastructure, both in the browser and in the form of production Google
> > > services, that need to start seeing real user traffic and usage.  It 
> > > takes a
> > > great deal of testing and confidence inspired by real usage statistics
> > > before any complex system like this can be deemed adequate for use by a
> > > large user base.  So if we want to let all Google Chrome users use sync 
> > > (and
> > > we do! we do!), we've got to get started on this pronto.
>
> > > Our developer 
> > > page<http://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/developers/design-document...>
> > >  also
> > > covers the hierarchy of files we're landing that you can expect to start
> > > syncing (in the gclient sense) down in the next couple of days.  We can't
> > > wait (*really*) to work on this with the rest of the Chromium community
> > > and going even further in creating the best browzr ever!
>
> > > Thanks for reading, and happy syncing!
>
> > > - the cloudy bunch
> > > {idana, nick, nickbaum, chee, munjal, brg, chron, zork, laforge, 
> > > tejasshah,
> > > tim} at chromium.org
>
> > --
> > Caleb Eggenspergerhttp://calebegg.com/
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