Tag: geneabloggers Page 35 of 72

Thrifty Thursday: Free Webinars at Legacy Family Tree Webinars!

So life got busy there for a while. It’s settled down now and I will get back to my regular blog posts next week!

Here’s a short one for today – FREE Family History Webinars for 2015 by Legacy Family Tree webinars! Now, you have to view it live to get it free but if you can make the time, this is a wonderful resource for education!

PTDC0072

It’s a light font on the side so if it’s too hard to read, go to the link above and then click on the print brochure button for the pdf copy. The side information gives information on what a webinar is, what you need, and the cost (free if you view it live).

Don’t forget all of the free access items this weekend! I’ve posted about it on Facebook and I’ll post about it again tomorrow 🙂

Tuesday’s Tip: RootsBid

Have you all heard of RootsBid?

Rootsbid

(The video is at the bottom of this post.)

Registration is easy and free. You need your name, email, where you live, etc.

You can then post a project:

Post a Project

Here you fill in all the information about the project. Create a descriptive title and make a very detailed explanation about the problem; there’s an option to upload a document too. You can then designate this project to be done in a specific area or you can click anywhere. You can make it more searchable by adding keywords as well. Then simply review the project and submit! Then just wait for the bidders!

You can also bid on a project:

Bid on project

 

A few things to note:

  • According to their Terms, once a person bids on your project and you accept, RootsBid will hold that payment until the project is complete. That means that you pay right away when you accept a bid for your project. However, the bidder won’t receive payment until you, the project creator, release the funds after receiving the completed project.
  • RootsBid will credit the bidder once the project owner receives the work and releases the money. It can go to PayPal.
  • You can cancel the bid or the project at anytime
  • RootsBid does take a percentage (20% according to their how-it-works page)
  • There is a rating system in place too. This helps people choose their bidders wisely!

RootsBid was one of the competitors at RootsTech this last January. You can read about their introduction here, which also has another video and introduces you to their business idea.

 

So have any of you used this website? What did you think? If you haven’t tried it, would you?

Friday Genealogy Finds June 20th-26th

Today is our 5th wedding anniversary! Here’s to many more in our wonderful life together 🙂


Wedding Anniversary

 

Blogs/Articles

  • Online Map Keeps Tabs on the Lay of Juneau’s Cemetery” – A grant was given to map the graves of the cemetery digitally! Very neat!
  • Genealogy Lady posted another fashion blog post: “Madeleine Vionnet” – Madeleine Vionnet was a French fashion designed who was famous for her ‘bias cut’ dresses. A great read!
  • The American Civil War Then and Now” – an amazing photo collection of what a place looked like during the Civil War and today.
  • Crinolinemania 1857-1867” – an interesting fashion period. I am incredibly thankful that I did not know this time!
  • Who Do You Think You Are returns July 26th! Here is the listing of celebrities for this season on Geneabloggers
  • The UK Who Do You Think You Are is also returning! Check out their lineup here.

Webinars/Videos

Resources

 

Tuesday’s Tip on Wednesday: FamilySearch.org

This would normally be a Tuesday’s Tip but I was trying to finish many things yesterday and didn’t get the chance to do a blog post. So here it is today!

familysearch main page

Yesterday evening, one of the local genealogy groups hosted someone from the LDS church to come and talk about FamilySearch.org. I am already familiar with the website and I have an account because I index with them, so I wasn’t quite sure what I would learn from the talk as I thought she would discuss some of the beginner type of items. I was pleasantly surprised at how wonderfully informative the chat was!

Here are two of the best things that I learned:

  • When you have a family tree on their site (free and ALWAYS public – you can’t make it private), there are many different ways to view it:
The familiar landscape view

The familiar landscape view

The familiar portrait view

The familiar portrait view

My FAVORITE way to see things! The Fan Chart

My FAVORITE way to see things! The Fan Chart

New to me, the Descendancy View

New to me, the Descendancy View

I did not know there were that many options! As you can see, my tree is very sparse on familysearch.org but I plan on changing that!

  • Once you begin a tree on FamilySearch.org you can go to treeseek.com, which is part of FamilySearch.org. You can sign in with your familysearch log in, and then you can create a BEAUTIFUL fan chart with 9 Generations!!!! There are other very neat things you can do there as well like photo charts, name clouds, pedigrees, and smaller generational charts:

Treeseek

 

Overall, the presentation was great and left me excited to put a tree on FamilySearch.

Here are a few things to keep in mind when using FamilySearch for your online tree:

  • The purpose of FamilySearch is to find the dead, not the living. So if you want to find more and more cousins, this may not be the best site for you.
  • FamilySearch has open, public trees ONLY. If you want private, you won’t want to use this site, but you will also lose out on some of the neat things I showed you above.
  • People can change your tree – because it’s public. Of course, you can discuss these changes with the person who changed it and undo the changes or keep the changes as the discussion progresses. This is a big hurdle for many people to get over, if at all. Having documentation to prove one way or the other is incredibly helpful.

One thing I found interesting is that our presenter showed a video where they discussed “my-tree-itis” where you don’t want to share your information or allow others to make changes on your tree. Since I have a private tree on ancestry.com, I completely get this! When people want to change things I admit that sometimes I take it personally; however, if they have evidence to back up their claim, I will gladly change the information!

I can see both sides to the arguments: keep it private so you know the information is correct and share with those you choose; keep it public so others can benefit from it as it is their family as well, which is also what genealogy can do for you: find new family members!

With those two arguments in mind, I did create a tree on the website. I’m starting from scratch on there though, not uploading a GEDCOM. The reasoning is because the ancestor may already be in the system and this prevents creating new people when a merge would be plenty. So, now I have a place to keep all my familysearch research! Will I add items I find outside of FamilySearch? Maybe, more so if it helps to get further back in a generation. I appreciate that this site is for helping and sharing with others who are family. I also appreciate that you can discuss changes on your tree to show why you believe as you do. I’m willing to give it a shot!

 

Have any of you used familysearch.org as your main tree online? Pros? Cons? Advice?

 

Happy hunting everyone!

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