Nov 30, 2008
We apologize for the few cut-outs
of stereo in this week's episode. We have replaced a damaged cable
and should be fine in the future.
This week's news includes: Edna Parker,
world's oldest woman, died in Shelbyville, Indiana, this week at
age 115 years, 220 days; social networking site Genoom.com
(http://www.genoom.com) announces the
expansion of its international support for 17 languages; social
networking site itsourtree.com has been renamed to dynastree
(http://www.dynastree.com/);
FamilySearch.org is seeking assistance with indexing projects, and
you can learn more at http://www.familysearch.org/eng/indexing/frameset_indexing.asp
- particularly Canadian and Norwegian censuses; Ancestry.com
(http://www.ancestry.com) has recently
added more than 1100 U.S. city directories with more than 50M
names; Calico Pie Limited, maker of the U.K.'s leading family
history program, announces the forthcoming release of version 4 of
its Family Historian program at http://family-historian.co.uk/;
Library and Archives Canada (LAC) announces the launch of a new
online database, Immigrants to Canada, accessible by
clicking here; and FamilySearch.org has released more online
courses.
George reviewed a book last week, and inadvertently misspelled the
author's name. The book is Finding Your Chicago Ancestors: A Beginner's
Guide to Family History in the City and Cook County, by Grace
DuMelle, and published by Lake Claremont Press. My sincere apologies!
This week's listener email includes: John's confusing ancestral
marriages for the Muson family; Sharon had questions about sources,
and about resources for Tory ancestors [Listeners can weigh in on
the topic]; Kathy asked about content in the Ancestry Publishing
surname books, and she offers information about TinyUrl.com
(http://tinyurl.com/); Deborah makes
suggestions for your 2009 genealogy project; Peter tells us that a
Palm OS handheld application for genealogy, MobileGenealogy, has
been newly updated and is available at http://www.mobilegenealogy.com/
[Correction: MobileGenealogy is not a Palm OS application, but
instead a website that discusses handheld genealogy
applications.];Claire discusses the Shrubs app for iPhone, and she
shares another excellent online newspaper application at the
Library of Congress at Chronicling America (http://www.loc.gov/chroniclingamerica/);
Beth shares an excellent and simple database program for Macintosh
called Bento from FileMaker (http://filemaker.com/); Victoria asked
for clarification of how George has been able to run RootsMagic, a
Windows program, on his Mac; and Russ asked about how to handle the
sourcing of a burial in his database.