Backing up your text messages from your
Android phone to your Gmail account is so simple there’s no reason to not back
them up and make them search-friendly in the process. Read on to see how you
can turn your Gmail account into an SMS vault.
Fig1: Gmail with
Android
Prerequisites:
It’s easy to lose your text messages. Backing
up your SMS messages to your Gmail account is so simple, however, there’s no
good reason not to do it. For this tutorial you’ll need three things:
- Your Android phone
- A free copy of SMS Backup+
- A Gmail account
Configuring Your Gmail Account for IMAP Access:
SMS Backup+ requires IMAP access to your Gmail account to function. Let’s take a moment and hop over to the Gmail account we’re planning on using with the application and check the status.
Fig2: IMAP and POP label
Login to your Gmail account and navigate
to Settings –> Forwarding and
POP/IMAP. Check Enable IMAP. Scroll down
and click Save Changes. That’s the only configuration
you’ll need to do within your Gmail account.
Installing and Configuring SMS Backup+:
Fig3: Installing SMS Backup+
With our Gmail account IMAP features
toggled on, it’s time to install SMS Backup+. Hit up the Google Play Store and
download the app. After the application is installed, it’s time to get
configuring. Launch the application. The first screen you’ll see will look like
the following:
Fig4: Launch Screen
The first step is to set up the connection to your Gmail account. Tap Connect. The default browser on your Android phone will launch and you’ll be prompted to login to the Gmail account you want to use for backing up your messages. After you login you’ll need to authorize SMS Backup+ to utilize your Google account like so:
Fig5:Google Permission Screen
The first step is to set up the connection to your Gmail account. Tap Connect. The default browser on your Android phone will launch and you’ll be prompted to login to the Gmail account you want to use for backing up your messages. After you login you’ll need to authorize SMS Backup+ to utilize your Google account like so:
Click Grant Access. You’ll be
prompted to begin a backup immediately or skip the initial backup:
Fig6:Backup option Screen
Fig6:Backup option Screen
Click Backup,we
didn’t come all this way not to back things up! If you hit Skip then all the
messages on your phone will be flagged as already backed up and will be
ignored.
The backup process will start, and
depending on how many messages you have, will take anywhere from a minute to a
half hour to complete. It clips along at about a message per second:
Fig7: Back-up Progress Screen
You don’t even have to wait until the
process is finished to jump over to the Gmail account and check the progress.
Login to your Gmail account from a web browser. You’ll see a new label in the
sidebar, SMS. Click on it:
Fig8: Gmail Inbox
Screen
Cool…! SMS Backup+ automatically backs up
your SMS messages as well as your MMS messages. Not only are all of our text
messages there but the pictures we’ve sent back and forth are backup up to
Gmail along with the messages. Now that we’ve got everything humming along,
let’s look at some advanced options.
From the main screen tap Auto
backup to turn it on and then tape on Auto
backup settings to configure the frequency. The default
configuration is a bit aggressive. You may wish to, as we did, decrease the
frequency of backups and even set it to only backup one Wi-Fi if you’re backing
up a lot of MMS and don’t want to burn through your mobile data quota.
After you’ve set up the automatic backup,
return to the main screen and head into advanced settings. There
you can change the settings for backing up, restoring, and notifications. Under
Backup there are some useful settings you may
wish to toggle include turning off MMS backup (again, to save on data
consumption, and creating a white list of contacts you want backed up (instead
of the default where every single message is backed up).
Fig9:Gmail Inbox Screen
There isn’t much to look at under the Restore
settings, but you can take advantage of a handy Gmail-centric trick. When SMS
Backup+ stores your messages in Gmail it creates a thread for each contact. You
can tell SMS Backup+ to only restore the contacts with starred threads which
allows you to quickly select which conversations are important enough to
restore via the star system in Gmail.
So there you have it! All your text
messages (including multimedia attachments) are backed up within Gmail where
you can easily search them and restore them to your handset should the need
arise.
good info...
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