


Install Google Chrome's dev build on a different computer and you'll be able to access your bookmarks, edit them and all the changes will be saved online.

You'll be able to access your bookmarks in a weird location: a read-only folder in Google Docs (things will look less weird when Google Docs is transformed into Google Drive, a general-purpose online storage service). Enter your credentials and the sync process should start immediately. Restart the browser and you should find a new option in the Tools menu: "Sync my bookmarks". You should see something like this if you're using Windows Vista:Ĭ:\Users\Ionut\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe -enable-sync (make sure to add a space before pasting the flag). Then create a desktop shortcut for the browser, right-click on the shortcut, select "Properties" and edit the "Target" field by appending: How to try the new feature? Make sure you use Google Chrome's dev channel, which includes a buggier and less polished version of Google Chrome. Because of a technical issue with Google's new sync technology and because Google Chrome uses folders instead of labels, bookmarks will not be displayed in Google Bookmarks, but in Google Docs. The most recent Google Chrome dev build added a feature that lets you synchronize your bookmarks with a Google account.
