Archive for January, 2012

Press Release: Attend some of RootsTech Free Online!

Monday, January 30th, 2012

RootsTech Conference Will Broadcast Select Sessions Free Online

SALT LAKE CITY—RootsTech, a leading family history and technology conference held in Salt Lake City, Utah, February 2-4, 2012, announced today that fourteen of its popular sessions will be broadcasted live and complimentary over the Internet. The live broadcasts will give those unable to attend worldwide a sample of this year’s conference content. Interested viewers can watch the live presentations at RootsTech.org. The second-year conference has attracted over 3,000 registered attendees.

The free online sessions include the keynote speakers and a sampling of technology and family history presentations. Following are the fourteen broadcasted sessions and speakers. All times are in Mountain Standard Time (MST):

Thursday, February 2

8:30-10:00 am, Inventing the Future, as a Community (Keynote Address) by Jay L. Verkler

11:00 am-12:00 pm, Do I Trust the Cloud? by D. Joshua Taylor

1:45-2:45 pm, Effective Database Search Tactics by Kory Meyerink

3:00-4:00 pm, Twitter – It’s Not Just “What I Had for Breakfast” Anymore by Thomas MacEntee

4:15-5:15 pm, Eleven Layers of Online Searches by Barbara Renick

Friday, February 3

8:30-9:30 am, Exabyte Social Clouds and Other Monstrosities (Keynote Address) by Josh Coates

9:45-10:45 am, Publish Your Genealogy Online by Laura G. Prescott

11:00 am-12:00 pm, Optimize Your Site for Search Engines by Robert Gardner

1:45-2:45 pm, Genealogists “Go Mobile” by Sandra Crowly

3:00-4:00 pm, Google’s Toolbar and Genealogy by Dave Barney

Saturday, February 4

8:30-9:30 am, Making the Most of Technology to Further the Family History Industry (Keynote Address) by Tim Sullivan and Ancestry.com Panel

9:45-10:45 am Genealogy Podcasts and Blogs 101 by Lisa Louise Cooke

11:00 am-12:00 pm, Future of FamilySearch Family Tree by Ron Tanner

1:45-2:45 pm, Privacy in a Collaborative Environment by Noah Tatuk

For more information:
Jim Ericson,
RootsTech Marketing,
jericson@familysearch.org,
801-592-2520
Paul Nauta,
RootsTech Media Relations,
nautapg@familysearch.org,
801-240-6498

WikiTree: A different sort of web site for genealogists

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

I recently had a wonderful opportunity: Chris Whitten, the Creator of WikiTree.com (his page is http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Whitten-1) agreed to let me interview him about his genealogy web site.

WikiTree is a genealogy site where you can upload your genealogy data and compare it to data others may have on the same people. If you have a match you can merge the two entries on the same person and that way establish some connections.

I recently had a wonderful experience with this site in this way. A third cousin, the granddaguther of one of my granmother’s cousins, found me on WikiTree and we have exchanged pictures and data.

So here is my quick interview with Chris:

Q; What is a good one-sentence description of WikiTree?

Our mission statement: To grow a single, worldwide family tree that will make genealogy free and easy for everyone.

Q:  What was the reason you decided to create WikiTree? Why did we need > another genealogy interaction site?

A: I originally started the site for my own family. I couldn’t find another tool that had the balance of privacy and collaboration that I wanted (and still don’t know of another one). At that point (circa 2004) I was still working on another site (WikiAnswers) and didn’t envision this as a worldwide family tree. It was just something for organizing my own family history, privately sharing it with family, and enabling them to add information on the fly. As time went by the idea developed. In 2008 I left WikiAnswers and devoted myself to WikiTree.

Q:  What makes WikiTree different?

I still think of the “privacy-collaboration balance” as what makes it special. The idea is a little abstract, but here’s what I mean. We developed this unique system of privacy settings and “Trusted Lists” that operate on each individual person profile. This enables you to share a profile with the people you want to share with. For modern people it’s just close family members. But as you go back through the generations, you have more and more distant cousins collaborating on the same ancestors. Because the privacy controls operate on the individual profile level we can all work on the same family tree without compromising privacy.

Q: Is WikiTree good for beginning genealogists? In what way?

Yes, I think it does work for beginners. Since I first started this when I was still a very amateur family historian (OK, I still am) I set things up in the way that made sense to me. I’ve learned a lot since then and as WikiTree has grown I’ve tried to work with advanced genealogists to figure out what tools and features they need, and how they expect things to work. But it still works for the beginning genealogist too. It’s generally considered very user-friendly.

Q:  What is the best thing about the site? What is the “worst” thing (the thing you most want to improve)

A: The best thing? Maybe that it’s all free. Every bit of it. There are no premium memberships or anything like that.

The worst thing? Probably the amount of genealogical garbage that careless users have left behind for more serious users to clean up. Some people don’t respect what they get for free. As a result, we’ve had people start using WikiTree without taking the time to understand that what they do here affects others, because we’re all working on the same tree. We’ve taken a lot of significant steps to minimize this problem for the future, but good WikiTreers are still cleaning up the

Q: Can you give some pointers on the most efficient way to use  WikiTree?

Updating profiles, in whatever way you can, is a great way to get them noticed. Any edit will bring a person’s profile to the top of the surname index. That means it’s more likely to get noticed by browsers and search engines (and, hence, by your cousins).

Using FindMatches is important, if you haven’t done much of that yet. http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Special:FindMatches
We don’t run it automatically yet, so it depends on users doing a search once in a while to see if their tree overlaps with others on WikiTree. This is especially important for those who got started on WikiTree with GEDCOMs. When you add a profile manually, a background search is done to see if the person might already exist. But if a GEDCOM is creating 100 or 1,000 people at once, the background searches aren’t done at all. You have to do it with FindMatches.

Thank you Chris, for a great site and for your time!

 

Why Online Genealogy is So Cool

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

Of course, things like this happened back in my mother’s day, when you did your genealogy queries and research by sending letters and reading magazines, but still:

Looking for my grandmother’s genealogy, I came across Looking4Roots.com, which had Flora Beeman Powell’s family. I emailed the owner, who is my third cousin. Her name is Carol Ann. She answered, but that was right around the holidays and we both lost track….

So this week, Carol Ann  found ME again, this time on WikiTree. (I hope to blog about this site next week). AND she found me on Ancestry as well!

Carol Ann wrote:

I bought Family Tree Maker 2012 so I could supposedly merge the tree on my computer with the one on Ancestry.com. It turned into a huge mess making kids married to their parents, duplicating entries, etc. Thank goodness I did back up what was on my computer. I started over on the Ancestry.com tree and have a lot of living people from the one on my computer so I made it private. I don’t exactly how the program determines who to make “Living” when you put living people in your tree.

 I’m still not sure how much data is being synchronized because I get error messages every time I do it. I don’t have nearly as many photos on Ancestry as I did. I don’t believe I have any photos of your John Wesley Beeman but I do have other Beeman photos if you are interested in seeing them. And I’d love to see any you might have of the Beemans.

 A small part of the Beemans left the South and came to Texas. I never knew I had Beeman relatives in Texas other than my grandmother and her sisters Carrie & Sudie. When I got old enough to care about the family history, every time I would ask my Daddy to tell me about the family he would just say he didn’t know anyone or anything. I have no idea what the story was there but I know good and well he knew more about the family than he wanted to fool with telling me. I only have the one cousin who found the photos on the Downs/Beeman side of the family and she never had an interest in genealogy until I shared what I had with her a couple of years ago, so she’s not helpful either.

So I am sorting through what I have, and hoping to send Carol Ann some pictures of my grandmother and her sisters.

Isn’t online genealogy cool?

Come hear me speak at the Navarre Library January 31!

Friday, January 6th, 2012

Using genealogy, history and online resources, Elizabeth Crowe will paint a lively picture of Colonel Guy Wyman, the founder of Navarre, at 5:30 p.m. January 31, 2012, at the library. It’s a story of murder, mayhem, madness and many wives. There’s never a dull moment in the story of Wyman and his family.

 

Libbi Crowe, a Navarre resident, is the author of Genealogy Online, now in its 9th printing. Crowe’s father really was a rocket scientist and she has been involved with computers since the early days. Her family got involved in genealogy after discovering an old Bible with family records going back to 1812.

 

The program is part of the free Lore, Legends and Learning series at the Library sponsored by the Friends of the Navarre Library. The program is held on the last Tuesday of each month, presenting a variety of topics to the public. Reservations are not required..

 

Visit our website:  http://www.friendsofnavarrelibrary.org/ for the most current information.

Soundtrack of my life, sort of.

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

Played this list while at a friend’s house, and she really liked the mix:

Name

Album

Artist

Beautiful

Rhino Hi-Five: Gordon Lightfoot – EP

Gordon Lightfoot

Bittersweet

Best Of James Taylor

James Taylor

Breathe

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

Calling All Angels

My Private Nation

Train

Carefree Highway

Rhino Hi-Five: Gordon Lightfoot – EP

Gordon Lightfoot

Chasing Cars

Eyes Open (Deluxe Edition)

Snow Patrol

Crazy Love

Moondance

Van Morrison

Don’t Worry, Be Happy

Best of Bobby McFerrin

Bobby McFerrin

Grace

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

Hallelujah

Hallelujah

Brian Sutton

Hey There Delilah

Hey There Delilah – Single

Plain White T’s

How to Save a Life

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

How We Operate

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

I’ll Be 

Rhino Hi-Five: Edwin McCain

Edwin McCain

I’m Yours

We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things

Jason Mraz

If You Could Read My Mind

Rhino Hi-Five: Gordon Lightfoot – EP

Gordon Lightfoot

Kathleen (Live)

iTunes Live from Soho

David Gray

Mad World

Trading Snakeoil for Wolftickets

Gary Jules with Michael Andrews

Mexico

Best Of James Taylor

James Taylor

More Than a Feeling

Boston

Boston

Rain Day

The Rumba Foundation

Jesse Cook

The Reason

The Reason

Hoobastank

The Riddle (Album Version)

Two Lights

Five For Fighting

Run Back to Your Side

Run Back to Your Side – Single

Eric Clapton

Runnin’ On Sunshine

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

She’s On Fire

Drops of Jupiter

Train

She Will Be Loved

Songs About Jane

Various Artist

Southern Cross

Crosby, Stills & Nash: Greatest Hits

Crosby, Stills & Nash

Southern Cross

Buffett Live – Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays

Jimmy Buffett

Spill the Wine

The Best of Eric Burdon & War

Eric Burdon & War

The Story

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

Sundown

Rhino Hi-Five: Gordon Lightfoot – EP

Gordon Lightfoot

Superman (It’s Not Easy)

America Town

Five for Fighting

Universe & U

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

Wait

Grey’s Anatomy: The Music Event

Grey’s Anatomy Cast

Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald

Rhino Hi-Five: Gordon Lightfoot – EP

Gordon Lightfoot

Year of the Cat

Al Stewart: Greatest Hits

Al Stewart

Yellow

Parachutes

Coldplay

You’re Beautiful

Back to Bedlam

James Blunt

 In a way it is a soundtrack of my life from grade school to now….so if anyone writes a novel about me and wants to listen to the music of my life, this is a good start.