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GeneaNet : Community : Genealogy Blog Sunday May 11, 2008   

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30 April 2008

Backup Your Data

For anyone who uses a computer on a regular basis, data backup is very important. Your GeneaNet data is backed up on solid state backup servers in our secure data center, but what if you accidentally remove individuals from your family tree?

To export your family tree, select My GeneaNet : Online Family Tree : Save.

GeneaNet - Sauvegarder ses données
Export your complete family tree:

Available file formats are:

GW: GeneWeb File Format. Only if GeneWeb has been installed on your computer or if you only need a data backup.

GED: GEDCOM File Format. If you want to share you data or import it in a genealogy software.

ZIP: Zipped GEDCOM File Format.

Export a family line:

GeneaNet - Sauvegarder ses données
You can export the ancestors or the descendants of any individual.

Type in the name and first name as they appear on your online family tree or the GeneWeb number of the individual.

To find out the GeneWeb number, log in to your online family tree as Wizard, then click on the "Update Individual" link. Full name and GeneWeb number will be shown at the top of the individual page.

GeneaNet - Sauvegarder ses données
GeneaNet - Sauvegarder ses données
GeneaNet - Sauvegarder ses données

28 April 2008

Scientists find 17 descendants of ‘iceman’ found in glacier

Scientists have found 17 living relatives of a centuries-old “iceman,” whose remains were discovered in a melting glacier in northern British Columbia nine years ago.

The remains of a young aboriginal man were found frozen inside a glacier in the Champagne-Aishihik territory in August 1999. Scientists gave the man the nickname Kwaday Dan Ts’inchi, which means “long-ago person found” in the southern Tutchone language.

DNA testing has now connected the iceman to a number of people living in the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations in the North. The results were unveiled Friday at a science conference in Victoria, where all aspects of the discovery are being discussed.

Scientists believe Kwaday Dan Ts’inchi was a hunter, who lived roughly 300 years ago — but possibly longer. He appeared to be in good health when he, for some reason, died an accidental death on the glacier.

More... "Scientists find 17 descendants of ‘iceman’ found in glacier" »

23 April 2008

Sudan Begins Key Census Despite Difficulties

Sudan shut down for its first census in 15 years, a milestone in the peace deal that ended Africa's longest civil war but clouded in dispute threatening to undermine the accord further.

In the 2005 agreement signed by the former warring north and south, the two-week census is crucial to prepare constituencies for national elections and confirm or adjust the wealth and power-sharing ratios in central government.

But the undeveloped south has refused to be bound by the results and rebels in Darfur will boycott the count, both accusing the Arab north of manipulating the census to maximise its control and marginalise the African majority.

Khartoum, assisted greatly by the United Nations, says it has prepared the most comprehensive population count ever held in Sudan, almost constantly engulfed in civil war since independence from Britain in 1956.

"The planning and field work in the south has been the best possible... They have every enumerator in place and (we have) the international resources to get the best possible census," said Yasin Haj Abdin, director of the central bureau of statistics.

Around 60,000 enumerators, monitored by 200 observers, will count the estimated 40 million population, costing Sudan and the international community 103 million dollars.

The central bureau of statistics expects census results as early as September, but other officials have quoted Christmas as a more realistic date.

21 April 2008

Google Wants to Index Your DNA, Too

Your DNA falls into the realm of “the world’s information,” and it seems that Google, as part of its corporate mission, is making a play to organize that, too. The Internet giant received heavy press in 2007 when it invested at least $4.4 million in a genetic screening company, 23andMe, that was started by Anne Wojcicki, the wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin, and her business partner.

Google’s interest in DNA doesn’t end there. It is also putting money into a second Silicon Valley DNA-screening startup, Navigenics. The company is also backed by star venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers. For a spit of saliva and $2,500, your genetic test results are securely delivered to your computer screen with your genetic likelihood for 18 medical conditions, from Alzheimer’s to rheumatoid arthritis to several types of cancer. Navigenics aims to boost disease prevention by providing customers reports on their DNA that they can share with their doctors. The company addresses privacy concerns by encrypting customer identities, and screens only for conditions it deems to have scientifically sound genetic studies. The company also offers genetic counseling.

Much in the way it invested in 23andMe, Google wants to plant an early stake in a potentially large new market around genetic data. “We are interested in supporting companies and making investments in companies that [bolster] our mission statement, which is organizing the world’s information and making it universally accessible and useful,” Google spokesman Andrew Pederson says. Read the full story.

18 April 2008

Feds Charge California Woman With Stealing IDs From the Dead

Federal prosecutors this week charged a Southern California woman with aggravated identity theft and other crimes for allegedly using a popular genealogy research website to locate people who had recently died, and then taking over their credit cards.

Tracy June Kirkland, 42, allegedly used Rootsweb.com to find the names, Social Security numbers and birth dates of people who, shall we say, had no further need for their consumer credit lines. She then "would randomly call various credit card companies to determine if the deceased individual had an 
 account," according to the 15-count indictment filed in federal court in Los Angeles Tuesday.

She'd then persuade the issuer to change the mailing address for the dead victim to one of her many rented mail drops in Orange and Riverside counties, and in some cases she'd add her own name as an authorized user of the card, prosecutors say.

At least 100 of the dearly departed were allegedly used in the scheme, which prosecutors say began in October 2005 and continued until last month. The indictment charges that Kirkland obtained various unspecified goods and cash advances.

More... "Feds Charge California Woman With Stealing IDs From the Dead" »

16 April 2008

New: Search Results Page Icons, Tutorials & Personalized Online Family Tree Home Page

Search Results Page Icons

Nouveau sur GeneaNet
For each item in a search results page, GeneaNet displays specific icon:

Nouveau sur GeneaNet : Online Family Tree

Nouveau sur GeneaNet : Picture

Nouveau sur GeneaNet: Record

Nouveau sur GeneaNet : Register

Nouveau sur GeneaNet : Collection GeneaNet (Free for Club Privilege Members)

Nouveau sur GeneaNet : Limited Access

Clicking an icon takes Club Privilege Members to the data entry and other users to the contact page.

Tutorials

Our new interactive video tutorial helps you learn to build your online family tree.




Personalized Online Family Tree Home Page

With this new feature you can add image to your online family tree home page.

Club Privilege Members only.

Nouveau sur GeneaNet

14 April 2008

Letters From The Battlefield

As we get older, our memories fade, eventually dissolving into smoky recollections, if we don’t preserve them in writing.

What price would you pay for a diary written by your great-great-great-grandmother or -grandfather? Imagine how priceless it would be.

Ancestors on my mother’s side, Sgt. George Davidson Bailey and his brother, Cpl. Council Walker Bailey, fought in the Civil War – on Oct. 19, 1864, at the Battle of Cedar Creek in Virginia. They, along with 11 other of my Bailey relatives, were part of the Confederate Army, Company H, 60th Infantry Regiment.

I have a book containing two letters written by my great-great-great-grandfather George to his mother from the battlefield. I have read the letters many times and wish he’d written more.

From his letters, I find he was a very strong-willed and principled man. He often wrote about honor and duty to his country, the beloved South!

In one letter, he told his mother that his brother Council was safe and asked her to please not worry. In another, he longed to return home to the farm and kiss his momma on the cheek. He wanted so much to plant crops and just sit on the porch.

More... "Letters From The Battlefield" »

11 April 2008

China remembers nation's ancestor Huangdi on Tomb-sweeping Day

More than 8,000 Chinese from home and abroad gathered Friday morning at the tomb of Huangdi, the legendary Yellow Emperor who is considered the common ancestor of all Chinese.

The memorial ceremony started in Huangling County, Shaanxi Province at 9:50 a.m. That's an auspicious time because of the digits' association with the imperial line in ancient Chinese culture. The number nine is the biggest single-digit number, while five lies in the middle.

A drum was struck 34 times, once for each of China's 34 provinces, municipalities, autonomous regions and special administrative regions

The Yellow Emperor, a sovereign and cultural hero in Chinese mythology, is believed to have reigned from 2,697 BC to 2,598 BC. Although he was an actual ruler, his deeds have been embellished with time: for example, he has been credited with introducing the systems of government and law to human kind, civilizing the Earth, teaching people many skills and inventing all manner of items.

China has commemorated the Yellow Emperor since the Spring and Autumn Period around 8 BC.

"Kindred or family lines are especially honored in Chinese culture," said Zhang Jingkui, a former professor at Xiamen University who now lives in Hong Kong. "Each spring when smoke from joss sticks rises in Chinese communities around the world, it is a unique event."

9 April 2008

Feds Quietly Dig Up 67 Civil War Graves

Working in secret, federal archaeologists have dug up the remains of dozens of soldiers and children near a Civil War-era fort after an informant tipped them off about widespread grave-looting.

The exhumations, conducted from August to October, removed 67 skeletons from the parched desert soil around Fort Craig - 39 men, two women and 26 infants and children, according to two federal archaeologists who helped with the dig.

They also found scores of empty graves and determined 20 had been looted.

The government kept its exhumation of the unmarked cemetery near the historic New Mexico fort out of the public's eye for months to prevent more thefts.

The investigation began with a tip about an amateur historian who had displayed the mummified remains of a black soldier, draped in a Civil War-era uniform, in his house.

Read the full story

7 April 2008

Soldier's message in a bottle surfaces – 90 years later

When "Aunt Pete" wrote to her soldier nephew in France in 1918, she had no idea what she was starting.

The letter – almost perfectly preserved – gave a jaunty account of the mood in the midwest of the United States four months from the end of the First World War. But who was Aunt Pete? And who was her nephew soldier, Sgt Morres Vickers Liepman, of D Battery of the 130th Field Artillery?

It was known that Sgt Liepman survived the war but little else emerged from US government records.

Morres Liepman went on to serve as a Major in the US air force in the Second World War. He became a commercial artist and devised – among other things – the arrow that appears on all packets of Wrigley's chewing gum.

"Aunt Pete" was Sgt Liepman's mother's youngest sister, Luna Vickers, daughter of Congressman Andrew J Vickers of Kansas – part of family which traces its ancestry back to the American Revolution, the Mayflower and the Vickers engineering company in Sheffield. Aunt Luna's nickname was "Sweet Pete". By the time she wrote the letter, she was married to Robert M Scott, owner of a drugstore in Oklahoma City.

Cecil Liepman said the early part of the letter should not be seen as racist. The comments reflected attitudes at the time. Aunt Pete's family had, in fact, been anti-slavery and funded schools for black children.

Why did Sgt Liepman place his aunt's letter in a beer bottle and bury it? When found, the bottle was still equipped with its mechanical closing system. The tightly rolled up envelope and four pages were almost perfectly preserved.

Mr Liepman believes his grandfather buried the letter as a "time capsule". "He must have guessed it would be found one day and stand as a memorial of that terrible war," he said.

Letter transcription:

More... "Soldier's message in a bottle surfaces – 90 years later" »

3 April 2008

GeneaNet Enters List of 50 Most Popular Genealogy Websites

ProGenealogists, Inc. released the results of a study that identifies, for the first time, the 50 most popular genealogy websites.

36th place is GeneaNet, French website dedicated to family trees, community, and submitted records.

The list uses a “places rated” approach to average the website traffic rankings from four major web analytics companies.

ProGenealogists is already looking forward to publishing 2009’s list


2 April 2008

New: Simplified Online Family Tree Editor & GEDCOM File Test

GeneaNet users had, until now, the ability to build their online family tree using GeneWeb, a free interface created by Daniel de Rauglaudre, research engineer for INRIA .

GeneWeb is a powerful genealogy web interface but we know how difficult and frustrating it can be to some of the GeneaNet users. That's why we have added a new Simplified Online Family Tree Editor.

Simplified Online Family Tree Editor

This new feature is mostly aimed at new users and first-time visitors. You couldn't take advantage of it if you already built your online family tree.

It will be your default family tree editor when you will register to GeneaNet but you will be able to switch to GeneWeb at anytime.

What can you do on this editor?

- Add/modify/delete individuals
- Link individuals
- Add pictures and create a slideshow
- Add notes
- List individuals in alphabetical, ascendant or descendant order
- Show your family on Google Maps



GEDCOM File Test

You can now upload GEDCOM files up to 10 MB.

The interface shows a progress bar while uploading and your file is automatically checked.

When successfully done, the number of individuals in your family tree and the number of entries in your GeneaNet Index are displayed.

If there was an error in your GEDCOM file, you will be notified to correct it and try again.