It's now April 2005 and there is still no way to export contacts. I'm
starting to view this as a violation of trust and a breaking of the
Google Golden Rule: Do no evil.
Between jobs I imported all my business contacts into my gmail account,
trusting Google that export was only a few weeks away if I needed them
back. I made many updates to those contacts over the past months, and
now that I've started a new job I need the info back for my new work
account. There's no way to get it. With 1300+ contacts parsing the
html pages by hand isn't a viable solution.
The code to do export is almost symmetrical with the import code
(except you have to do less error checking). After 8 months, I can
only conclude that someone on the business side has decided that they
want to make it easy to join gmail but hard to leave. That's Microsoft
think, not Google think. The entire gmail business model is founded on
us trusting the people who work at Google, and for the first time in my
experience with the company, I'm beginning to wonder if my trust was
misplaced.
Yes I've suggested the feature using the normal suggestion mechanism
and heard nothing. Although I love gmail, I'm suspending recommending
it to my friends and colleagues until I hear a firm commitment from the
Google folks to fix this by a specific date or provide a reasonable
workaround.
Chime in if you agree.
-George Snelling, Seattle
I made many updates to those contacts over the past months, and
now that I've started a new job I need the info back for my new work
account.
One point he makes in his email are critical though:
1) Microsoft is supposed to be the company that does deliberately bad
acts to keep customers
My question is:
If Gmail offers the freedom of POP and SMTP... and they offer the
freedom of mail forwards, then why can't the offer us our contacts
back?
Don, you're the second person who has made a comment about backing up
the contacts. I don't get it .. how can you back them up if you can't
export them? What's *your* secret for backing up your Gmail contacts??
I've just started with Gmail. The inability to export contacts is one
of a number of missing features that will keep me from taking Gmail
seriously until/unless they are provided.
...ken...
I would have to dissagree... When George said he finds it evil and that
it violates his trust, he doesn't mean they promised him something and
didn't keep their word. He means that he expected them to address this
issue (by the way, so did many others), and was disillusioned.
If Google would promise the feature and not deliver, that would be
really bad. But that doesn't mean that if they didn't promise - that
it's ok not to implement it. Gmail strives at giving customers what
they want. Not being able to export contacts is inconsistent with this
strategy. Especially when taking into consideration that most other
services do offer this ability.
Google has, over time, earned a lot of credit with me. This is why I
don't think that it really is evilness that is behind them not
implementing contact export. I don't know the reason, but for various
reasons I think they should do it as soon as possible:
1. It's usefull.
2. It's natural to think that the reason behind the lack of this option
is evil. I don't want this image to stick (I don't think the guys at
Google want it either).
3. Others have the feature, and it's unfair that migrating users from
Yahoo to Gmail can bring their contacts with them, but not vise-versa.
(some might say "this is exactly why they don't do it", but that doen't
fit in with the image I have of Google)
This was just my opinion,
Noam Nelke, Israel.
I'm not sure where this Google Golden Rule comes from. Is it a
community belief, or has anyone at Google said this?
At the end of the day, Google is still another company with bottom
lines and profit margins and shareholders.