Once Google integrates Chrome bookmarks with 'Google Bookmarks', I'll start paying attention to this. At the moment they're hard to find, and while useful (priority in search results), not worth the hassle.
I really don't understand why chrome's current bookmark-sync goes into google docs rather than their existing bookmarks site. I can't decide whether it's people not talking to each other, /bookmarks being unable to handle the load (which again would point to its priority in the scheme of things), some grand plan that hasn't been unveiled yet, or something else.
It's certainly a royal pain though, because it's still useful the way my bookmarks show up at the top of search results -- now I just need a painless way to get them in there!
Indeed. I really tried to use Google Bookmarks for years, and its horrible browser integration (no toolbar integration plugins at all for Safari and Chrome, only a semi-functional one for Firefox) finally made me give up and switch to Xmarks yesterday. A few minutes of effort and finally all browsers are in sync.
It seems bizarre that Google have let Bookmarks gather dust. If they integrated it in to Chrome (instead of continuing to support the weird Chrome-only bookmark sync they've got at the moment), and then produced official plugins for other browsers it would breath some life in to the service. Guess I'll give Xmarks a try.
Delicious has tagging -- and does automatic tagging -- but Google Bookmarks doesn't. That's a dealbreaker for me. And yes, I tried google bookmarks again because of this import, this feature is still missing. Google Bookmarks has 'labels' based on the folder that I have arranged (a few of) my bookmarks into, but I lose the ability to sort by the tags that Delicious has set.
I agree, Google Bookmarks is clearly a neglected service.
I keep repeating the import process because it syncs up correctly by ignoring the previously imported items. Now if I can just get a chrome add-on for google bookmarks that works like the Delicious one.
Makes no sense jumping from one dead service to another. You might as well use Firefox beta and Slurp to get your URLs out from delicious (with tags) and keep them to your local machine. Better liberate your data from the clutches of the cloud and these untrusted services.