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  • 11 Jul 2023 7:20 AM | Anonymous

    The Belfast Free Library is now a FamilySearch affiliate library. The designation means local library patrons will now have greater and more convenient access to the wealth of genealogical resources available through FamilySearch, the largest genealogy organization in the world, according to Belfast Free Library, in a news release.

    Details may be found at: https://www.penbaypilot.com/article/belfast-free-library-becomes-familysearch-affiliate-library/176100.

  • 11 Jul 2023 7:16 AM | Anonymous

    The New England Historic Genealogical Society is the recipient of an $18 million bond to expand its Newbury Street location in Boston, MassDevelopment said. The funds will be used to add a visitor’s center and other improvements to the facility.

    Secretary of Economic Development Yvonna Hao, chairwoman of MassDevelopment, said cultural institutions' contributions to the economy are key to bringing visitors to downtown neighborhoods and commercial centers.

    “We’re pleased that nonprofits across Massachusetts like New England Genealogical Society can leverage MassDevelopment’s financing solutions to upgrade their facilities, buy equipment, and pursue other capital projects that help them grow and thrive,” Hao said in a statement.

    A vacant building located at 97 Newbury St., Boston, according to a release, will be reconstructed and expanded to be connected to the genealogical society’s current facility at 99-101 Newbury St. The expansion will feature a Discovery Center with computer kiosks, visitor recording booths, multimedia presentations, and visiting exhibitions and museum pieces.

    “Everyone has a story worth telling and worth hearing; when people are inspired and supported to explore and share their family history, they gain a better understanding of themselves, of others, and of the shared human experience,” Ryan Woods, who serves as executive vice president and chief operating officer of the genealogy society, said in a statement. “Through the financing solutions afforded through MassDevelopment and Brookline Bank, we are able to realize the creation of a national center for family history, heritage, and culture that will provide exceptional experiences for people of all ages and all backgrounds to explore their identities and histories.”

    According to a release, the organization will also move its retail shop and make it larger, improve the original building to current code compliance, create more space for administrative offices, and purchase technology, furniture, fixtures, and equipment. Brookline Bank purchased the bond.

    “The New England Historic Genealogical Society is a destination for people of all ages to explore the history of their families and communities,” MassDevelopment president and chief executive officer Dan Rivera said in a statement.

    The organization, founded in 1845, according to a release, is privately funded with a mission to assist people to explore and discover their family history.

  • 11 Jul 2023 7:12 AM | Anonymous

    Traditional measurements of genetic ancestry rarely offer information on specific ancestors in a family tree. A new approach to genetic ancestry developed by Stanford researchers yields insight into African American history by providing estimates of the number of African and European genealogical ancestors in typical family trees.

    Family trees, photo albums, and grandparents are often the go-to sources of information for people curious to know who their relatives were. Genetic ancestry is also a useful tool, but these measurements typically provide data on percentages of different populations in a person’s ancestry, not on specific people. Now, a new study led by researchers from Stanford and the University of Southern California introduces a new way to think about genetic ancestry, revealing information that approximates the number of people from a source population.

    The researchers apply this new approach to the genetic and genealogical history of African Americans from the 1600s to the present to estimate the number of African and European ancestors who appear in a randomly chosen African American person’s genealogy. The authors provide context for their results by using a historical book written about several generations of the family of Michelle Obama, the former first lady of the United States, as an example.

    You can read more in an article by Holly Alyssa MacCormick published in the Stanford.edu web site at: https://news.stanford.edu/2023/07/10/new-genealogy-method-helps-fill-gaps-african-american-ancestry/.

  • 10 Jul 2023 8:44 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG). Reminder: you can attend webinars from anywhere in the world:

    FREE BCG-SPONSORED WEBINAR

    “Andiamo! Finding Your Italian Family” 

    by Margaret R. Fortier, CG

    Tuesday, July 18, 2023, 8:00 p.m. (EDT)

    Why did your Italian ancestor have five cousins all named Joe? Why did married women travel under their maiden names? Was Sally really Serafina? This presentation explores the factors that pushed and pulled Italians to emigrate, what they found when they arrived, Italian naming patterns and name changes, and how to start your search. Knowing what their life was like in Italy helps us to understand their choices and behavior when they emigrated: why they were slow to naturalize, why the family was the most important institution, and why food was a source of celebration.

    Named for her grandmothers and inspired by her mother’s phenomenal memory, Margaret R. Fortier, CG, is a genealogical researcher, lecturer, and writer. Her research focuses on French-Canadian, Italian, and Portuguese immigrants. She is co-editor of the National Genealogical Society Quarterly. She is a facilitator for the Certification Discussion Group and serves as a mentor for program alumni. She holds an MS in Human Factors in Information Design from Bentley University and serves on the board of the Association of Professional Genealogists (APG).

    BCG’s next free monthly webinar in conjunction with Legacy Family Tree Webinars is “Andiamo! Finding Your Italian Family” by Margaret R. Fortier, CG. This webinar airs Tuesday, July 18, 2023, at 8:00 p.m. EDT.   

    When you register before July 18 with our partner Legacy Family Tree Webinars (http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=8108) you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. Anyone with schedule conflicts may access the webinar at no charge for one week after the broadcast on the Legacy Family Tree Webinarswebsite.

    “We appreciate the opportunity to present these high-quality educational webinars,” said President Faye Jenkins Stallings, CG. “At BCG, our purpose is to promote public confidence in genealogy by supporting uniform standards of competence. These webinars help to achieve that by providing educational opportunities to family historians of all levels of experience.”

    Following the free period for this webinar, BCG receives a small commission if you view this or any BCG webinar by clicking our affiliate link: http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/?aid=2619. 

    To see the full list of BCG-sponsored webinars for 2023, visit the BCG blog SpringBoard at https://bcgcertification.org/bcg-2023-free-webinars/.  For additional resources for genealogical education, please visit the BCG Learning Center (https://bcgcertification.org/learning).

  • 10 Jul 2023 8:37 PM | Anonymous

    The Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) has unveiled a searchable database of over three million names in an innovative partnership with the high-profile genealogy online platform Ancestry.

    Approximately 3.2 million name indexes, relating to valuation records for the period 1864 to 1933, are now free to access with an Ancestry.com account.

    The exciting development, which will benefit genealogists across Northern Ireland, the island of Ireland and the wider Irish diaspora, is a key component of PRONI's 100-year anniversary dating back to its establishment in June 1923.

    Acting Director of PRONI, David Huddleston hailed the release of searchable names by the Public Record Office as an "invaluable substitute" for pre-1901 census records which were destroyed in the Four Courts fire during the Irish Civil War in June 1922.

    He added: "The new data set of searchable name indexes will also provide a rich genealogical source for those interested in tracing their ancestors.

    News Image

    "The indexes represent a major enhancement to existing digitized records that have been available on the PRONI website, but which were previously only searchable by geographic location.

    "We have been delighted to work with Ancestry to make these indexes freely available to local communities and the wider Irish diaspora."

    You can read more in an article published in the 4NI.co.uk web site at: https://www.4ni.co.uk/northern-ireland-news/298563/proni-unveils-new-searchable-names-database. 

  • 10 Jul 2023 11:31 AM | Anonymous

    Here is a list of all of this week's articles, all of them available here at https://eogn.com:                 

    (+) What is the Cloud and Why Should I Care? - Part 1

    The Best Way to Store Data for Decades or Centuries

    What Is Data Backup? 5 Ways to Back Up Your Files

    After 28 Years of Searching, I Solved a Lifelong Mystery and Found My Brother With MyHeritage DNA

    Steve Doocy of Fox & Friends Discovers He’s Related to the First 3 Presidents of the United States

    Microfilm Request Change at FamilySearch

    Unshackle Your Family History With WeAre.xyz

    Technique Turns Maps of Lost Neighborhoods Into Possible VR Landscapes

    Ancestry.com Class Action Claims Website Shows Identifying Info During Advertising Memberships

    History Fellow Mines Immigration Records for Forthcoming Book Chapter

    Who Do You Think You Are? is Not Scheduled for This Season in the U.S.

    Free Online Resource Helps Australian Aboriginal Families Trace Links With WA Orphanages and Missions

    2023 International Conference on Jewish Genealogy

    We Visit Colleen Shogan, the First Woman Appointed U.S. Archivist

    July 2023 Virtual Genealogical Program "Using Revolutionary War Records"

    A New Medium for Communicating With the Dead: AI and Chatbots

    An Invitation from the Library of Congress: Celebrate America’s 250th Anniversary

    Leonardo Da Vinci: Inside a Genius Mind
  • 10 Jul 2023 7:48 AM | Anonymous

    Here's the bottom line summary of this article: Archival-grade optical discs like M-DISC promise to last hundreds or even thousands of years. Tape storage lasts for a few decades, while hard drives and Solid-State Disks (SSDs) can be trusted for 5-10 years, but it all depends on how well you treat and store them.

    Ok, now that you know the bottom line, you might want to learn a few details to see how to extend the life of your disk drives for as long as possible.

    Perhaps you might need to hold onto data for a long time. Maybe you have some old documents or records that you’d like to pass down to future generations, or perhaps you need to keep financial records and other necessary paperwork around for legal reasons. Even if you’re trying to preserve your personal memories, like photos or videos, you’ll need to figure out a way to store all that stuff.

    You could choose high-quality paper or film designed to last a long time. However, it will have to be acid-free paper. Did you know that most paper sold today contains acids? 

    According to Wikipedia:

    "Acid-free paper is paper that, if infused in water, yields a neutral or basic pH (7 or slightly greater). It can be made from any cellulose fiber as long as the active acid pulp is eliminated during processing. It is also lignin- and sulfur-free. Acid-free paper addresses the problem of preserving documents and preserving artwork for long periods."

    Acid-free paper is a MUST if you want to save that paper for many years. There are only two problems with acid-free paper: (1.) it is difficult to find and (2.) it is expensive.

    If you really want to use paper, what you need is Alkaline paper.

    Alkaline paper has a life expectancy of over 1,000 years for the best paper and 500 years for average grades. Those numbers assume that the alkaline paper is storred in a facility with rigid temperature and humidity controls. Storing the paper in that environment will be expensive over a period of many years. 

    The making of alkaline paper has several other advantages in addition to the preservation benefits afforded to the publications and documents printed on it. Unfortunately, alkaline paper is even more difficult to find and even more expensive than acid-free paper.

    Then there is the issue of inks.

    The so-called ink used in today's inkjet and laser printers isn't really ink at all. 

    In the case of laser printers, the "ink" called toner (powdered carbon or other chemicals) is used. A laser beam is projected onto a drum. Photoconductivity allows the charged electrons to fall away from the areas exposed to light. Powdered ink (toner) particles are then electrostatically attracted to the charged areas of the drum that have not been laser-beamed.

    Inkjet printing works by propelling droplets of ink onto paper and plastic substrates. An inkjet nozzle sprays ink in the size of about 0.003 inches.Fluids with surface tension may be water based, wax or oil based and even melted metal alloys.

    The problem with both laser and inkjet printers involves fading. In both cases, the "ink" will start to fade within a very few years. It probably will become unreadable within less than 100 years. In most cases, it will fade in much less than 100 years.

    In short, if you want the printed paper to last for more than 100 years, you cannot print it on inkjet or laser printers. What eise is there? Ink. Good, old-fashioned India ink. Applied with a fountain pen. 

    NOTE: Don't even get me started with the expected lifespan of ballpoint pens!

    So the bottom line is that if you want to preserve information for many years, it is not cost-effective for private individuals to publish on paper. So what else is there? Either on clay tablets, copper tablets, or electronically.

    I will ignore clay tablets and copper tablets in this article. That leaves only one practical method: disk drives.

    Publishing on Disk Drives

    If you are thinking about storing digital data for the long term on disk drives, there are several challenges you should be aware of.

    First, digital storage media like hard drives and Solid-State Disk Drives (SSDs) can degrade over time and eventually fail. (With one expensive exception I will describe later.) That means you must keep making new copies of long-term data before your storage devices fail.

    Perhaps a bigger challenge is file format obsolescence. Some file formats may become outdated or incompatible with newer software as technology advances. That means even if your storage media survives, there may be no drives to read it, and even if there are, the details of the file formats you used to store that data might be lost.

    On the other hand, every time you migrate your current data to a newer format to preserve it for a few more years, it might degrade in some way that won’t become apparent until someone tries to access it someday.

    Hackers, malware, and natural disasters can all threaten your stored data, so it’s important to implement strong security measures to protect your information and to store the media in an environment that’s both safe for that media and offers long-term stability.In other words, make multiple copies and store each copy in a different place.

    Perhaps a separate, but equally important, problem with file obsolesce is the issue of disk storage capacity. Only a few years ago, a hard disk drive capable of saving 100 megabytes of files was considered to be huge. Today, it is difficult or maybe even impossible to purchase a new disk drive with that limited about of storage space. 

    Hard drives used in personal computers used to use the ST-506 or ST-412 interface. Today, those are no longer available, having been replaced mostly by IDE or ATA interfaces. 

    If you save data today on some state-of-the-art disk drive will you or someone else be able to read it in 10 years? 50 years? 100 years?

    The long-Term (but Expensive) Solution

    In this rapidly-changing world it is difficult to predict where the technology will be in another 20 years. However, today's archival-grade optical discs, such as M-DISC, are designed specifically for long-term data storage. Unlike CDs and DVDs, they use a special type of data layer made of materials that are resistant to degradation over time, including UV light and moisture. Two factors are commonly responsible for “disc rot.” These discs can last for up to 1000 years or more—at least that’s what the various manufacturers claim. Obviously, it’s impossible to actually test this claim, but they can make an educated guess through testing.

    You can learn more about M-DISC technology at: https://youtu.be/bQENbP8npsw

    The big problem (today) is with disk drives capable of creating data on M-DISC. 

    (NOTE: Don't confuse them with Blu-Ray drives. They are NOT the same thing!)

    When preparing this article, I as unable to find a source for M-DISC drives. My suggestion is to start at https://www.mdisc.com/, the company that invented M-DISC technology and ask them for a source.

    (NOTE 2: I happen to own an M-DISC drive but I certainly am not interested in selling it!)

    Another Possible Solution

    Perhaps a more effective solution is to not store your data on any sort of disk drive. A possible solution is waiting for you in the cloud. That will avoid all the problems with making sure the data remains readable.

    Soting files in live storage in the cloud is available nowadays for modest prices per year. However, the main focus of this article is storing data for many years and those "modest" prices would soon add up to a rather significant price over the years.

    In short, there is no cheap and easy solution that I know of with today's technologies.

    So, what is the recommended procedure?

    There are a number of options to choose from. However, the simplest and probably the cheapest solution has been in common use for quite a few years:make lots of copies top different hard drives and store the drives in different locations. Then, every few years, copy the data on the disk drives to new drives. Luckily, the price of disk drives has dropped like a rock in the past few years. This solution is not as expensive as it was just a few years ago. Thousands of data centers and even private individuals have been doing this for years and it has proven to be very reliable. 

    The copy, distribute, and copy again method even has a name: Locks of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe, abbreviated as L.O.C.K.S.S. 

  • 10 Jul 2023 7:35 AM | Anonymous

    From help writing obituaries to texting with a simulation of a deceased loved one, the grief technology industry is on the rise. 

    Carrie Rowell still misses the 7 a.m. phone calls from her father, who died six years ago.

    He would use her nickname, "Toots," or ask, "Hey, babe, how's your morning going?"

    "I would give anything to hear that again," Rowell said.

    But interacting with a version of a departed loved one is now more accessible than ever, thanks to generative language models such as ChatGPT. Trained on a deceased relative's words — from a digital journal, videos or other content — a chatbot can reply to a prompt or question from a survivor with what it predicts the relative would say.

    This might sound like the episode of the science-fiction series "Black Mirror" that explored a woman's use of technology to create a virtual version of her dead boyfriend, with disturbing implications. But this is the very real way technology is helping people deal — or maybe not deal — with death.

    Funeral homes already are adding AI-powered obituary-writing services to the digital memorial webpages they create. An interactive app, HereAfter AI, lets a user preserve photos and memories for family members to access after the user has died. The Project December website offers to "simulate the dead" in a text-based conversation with anyone, "including someone who is no longer living."

    You can read more in an article by Todd Nelson published in the Star Tribune web site at: https://tinyurl.com/54nf2p8z.

  • 7 Jul 2023 4:39 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a Plus Edition article written by and copyright by Dick Eastman. 

    The newest technology in computers these days is called “cloud computing.” However,  many experienced computer users do not yet understand the term. In fact, "the cloud" can be different things to different people. I thought I would write a three-part article: the first part explains what the cloud is, and the second part will describe using the cloud for genealogy purposes. The third part will address some of the frequently-asked questions (FAQs) concerning the use of cloud computing.

    A few years ago, Ancestry.com had outages with its RootsWeb/USGenWeb/WorldConnect web pages. Some users have declared, “So much for the cloud and trusting others with your data.” However, that statement shows a lack of familiarity with cloud computing. While Ancestry uses industrial grade computers as servers to deliver information on the World Wide Web, they obviously are were using cloud computing methods in those days for the affected services that suffered weeks of outage.  

    NOTE: Most cloud-based services provide 99.999% or better uptime. An article some time ago in Network World at http://goo.gl/YQjLYQ states that “Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) recorded 2.41 hours of downtime across 20 outages in 2014, meaning it was up and running 99.9974% of the time.” The same article also states, “Perhaps even more eye-catching is the uptime of Google Cloud Platform’s storage service, which experienced 14 minutes of downtime in all of 2014, according to CloudHarmony. That’s good for a 99.9996 uptime percentage.” 

    Such statistics are common for true cloud-based services running in multiple data centers. 

    It is the intent of this article to reduce some of the confusion about the term “cloud computing.” 

    Computers are marvelous things. We can sit at home with a desktop computer or use a laptop when traveling or even use a handheld computer while sitting in a city park or while riding a commuter train. We can watch YouTube videos, read and write email, check the latest news and weather reports, research a family tree, plot the best travel route to Poughkeepsie, or perform any of dozens of other tasks, regardless of our location. We can do this because we are connected to a monstrous collection of computers and computer accessories that include routers, switches, hubs, and miles and miles of cabling. 

    In the traditional world of desktop applications, data is usually stored on a computer’s hard drive. In “the old days” of a few years ago, I could go on vacation and leave my computer at home but then could not access my email, photos, or any of my data. In the new world of cloud services, my email and all my data are safely and securely stored online, that is, in the cloud. I can get to it by using a web browser from any computer that’s connected to the Internet. Even better, that information is available to me essentially all the time. 

    In many cases, I can even get to it from a so-called "smartphone," that is, a cellphone with a built-in computer that usually runs on an Android or Apple operating system.

    The hardware that lets us compute anyplace on any device is invisible to us, and most of us do not understand how it all works. However, our computers, even our tiny cell phone "smartphones," are actually plugged into the collective power of thousands of computers that serve all this information to us from far-away computer systems distributed around the world. It’s almost like having a massive supercomputer at your beck and call, thanks to the Internet.

    There may be hundreds of thousands of hardware boxes involved along with millions of services available on the Internet. This collection of hardware, software, and data is collectively called "the cloud." 

    In fact, some people think that any web server that is available on the World Wide Web is part of “the cloud.” However, that impression is incorrect; a web server can be any computer, large or small, that serves up data to the web where people can see it. For instance, some people believe that the web server that is displaying this page to you from http://www.eogn.com/ is a single web server installed in one data center. If that web server stops working at some point, the web page you are reading right now will not be available to you.

    Again, that is incorrect. The cloud changed all that.

    Definitions are not rigidly defined. The term “cloud” can be taken to mean many different things. However, most data processing professionals will tell you that a single web server installed in a single data center does not qualify as a cloud-based service.

    The remainder of this article is reserved for Plus Edition subscribers only. If you have a Plus Edition subscription, you may read the full article at: https://eogn.com/(*)-Plus-Edition-News-Articles/13225059

    If you are not yet a Plus Edition subscriber, you can learn more about such subscriptions and even upgrade to a Plus Edition subscription immediately at https://eogn.com/page-18077

  • 7 Jul 2023 8:02 AM | Anonymous
    • New online database provides information about hundreds of Aboriginal children placed in Perth institutions from 1868 to 1920 
    • Database launched during NAIDOC Week 
    • Aboriginal History WA is dedicated to helping families trace their ancestral histories   

    A free online resource will help Aboriginal families establish links to children sent to Perth orphanages and missions from 1868 to 1920. 

    The Perth and Swan Orphanages and Mission Index is a searchable database holding information on children admitted to four institutions located in Perth and the Swan Valley.

    Over the course of almost 50 years, about 300 children were removed from their families and placed within these institutions.

    In Western Australia the practice of forced separation of Aboriginal children from their families began in the 1830s and was only stopped in the 1970s. 

    Over this period, a framework of laws, practices and policies existed that saw as many as a third of Aboriginal children removed from their families – some were as young as two years old. These practices resulted in what is now known as the Stolen Generations. 

    The Perth and Swan Orphanages and Mission Index is an initiative of the Department of Local Government Sport and Cultural Industries' (DLGSC) Aboriginal History WA unit (AHWA).

    It has been painstakingly compiled from a range of historical sources including admission registers, microfilms, historical departmental files, death and burial records, and newspapers. It adds significantly to those records already made available by AHWA.

    AHWA is dedicated to helping Aboriginal Western Australians trace their family histories through the provision of information and production of comprehensive genealogies. 

    For more information, and to access the Perth and Swan Orphanages Mission Index, visit https://www.dlgsc.wa.gov.au/aboriginal-culture/reconciliation-and-history-projects/perth-and-swan-orphanages-and-missions-name-index

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