Alan E.
Mann, AG
alan.familyhistory@gmail.com
Accredited
Genealogist
OGSA Summer Conference 2007 www.alanmann.com/articles
Friday, 17 August 2007 10:45
– 11:45
New and Emerging Technology
This session looks at some new things on the Internet. There
are so many new web sites we can’t possible begin to look at even 1% of what’s
new. Rather, I would like to, demonstrate some new technologies or concepts,
examine some new services, and give you a few hints on how to keep find more of
the same on your own.
New
Technology or Concepts
Surface
computing
An exciting new technology in Microsoft Surface. The
initial introduction only scratches the surface of its potential. The basic
idea is that a common surface (initially a table top) become
both the display and the input device for a computer, and that the user can use
any physical object, from a pencil to a paint brush to a finger, to communicate
with the computer. It can accept multiple simultaneous inputs, as well. You lay
a wireless device such as a laptop, telephone, PDA, iPod,
MP3 player, etc. on the surface and it can interact with the device without any
connectors or special software. Thus, lay your digital camera on the tabletop,
and the computer grabs the photos off the memory card in the camera and
displays them on the table top. Want to share a photo? a
favorite sound track? A genealogy database? Just lay the
device that has it on the table top and it transfers it. Want to share the file
with someone else, lay their device on the table top and drag the file from the
table top to the device. Some of the potential can be seen once you consider
the surface doesn’t have to be a table top. It could be a wall, or a sidewalk,
or a street lamp. For more information, see:
1. Intro to MicroSoft Surface - www.popularmechanics.com/technology/industry/4217348.html
and www.microsoft.com/surface/
2. Examples -
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/317737_msftdevice30.html
Social
Networking
What if we now combine this with the current phenomenon of
social networking—people adding their opinions or contributions to a web site.
Popular Mechanics has a demo of how Microsoft Surface can be applied to allow a
game of chess. One player is in
Two excellent examples of social networking being applied in
the genealogical community are www.genesreunited.com and www.familylink.com
(part of worldvitalrecords.com). Read about these sites on their home pages.
You can listen to a radio show about the new familylink
service at www.familyrootsradio.com/2007/05/episode-thirteen-podcast-available.html.
The possibilities
don’t end here. Add GPS and wireless devices, and our whole way of life could
change. For example, see www.earthcomber.com.
Right now, it works with a cell phone. Earthcomber
locates you (your phone does not have to have GPS—it uses GPS in the cell phone
towers), then offers you local services similar to what you would have on the
web. Right now, digital cameras with GPS also add the location where the photos
were taken into the saved digital photo itself. Thus, you could have a photo
your relative took of or at some location, then have a web-based service tell
you through your cell phone which way to walk to get to the spot where that
photo was taken.
What if we stored
our genealogy on our PDA or smart phone? Then, these devices could communicate
with other devices nearby wirelessly. They could compare genealogies without
sharing actual private data. Genealogical application would include:
·
Mark a spot with your cell phone, and
tag it. You and anyone else can then return to that spot and know where it is
(useful for headstones, where pictures were taken, family historical locations,
etc.)
·
Walking down the street and your
PDA/smart phone beeps. The screen displays a message—that lady approaching you
is your second cousin three times removed on the Schwitters
side…
·
Sitting the in the
Ubiquitous
Video
Recently, lawmakers have been discussing a plan to have
video cameras at every intersection. This is being considered despite the
incredible cost as a possible way to reduce crime and aid in the capture of
felons. Whether or not this scheme succeeds, video available everywhere is
probably in our future. Perhaps through video drones or millions of fixed
location cameras, but it will happen. This may open new opportunities for
genealogists. What if we could connect to a video camera at the cemetery
(placed there to catch vandals?) and view what it says on our ancestors
New
Services
You Tube is a phenomenon. It is video or even television on
the web. Innovators are seeking to apply the immense success of YouTube to genealogy. YouTube is
getting some genealogy postings, or try Roots Television (rootstelevision.com).
Social networking is getting involved again. You can see others’ suggestions
and recommendations as you view a particular video. Why not apply this to supporting
documentation? Have a video explaining reasoning which also shows the evidence
(documents, etc.). Then genealogy enthusiasts add their recommendation or
objection to the reasoning and presentation of evidence.
See these examples of videos uploaded:
Family Photo Collage - www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYxDp4-G1qM.
Julie Andrews/Gene Kelly song - www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9cnHQKqhF4&NR=1
I am my own grandpa - www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfNpk2Bt0OM
Library VLog - www.youtube.com/watch?v=RiedZAXWrdk
RootsTube – one of many channels on www.rootstelevision.com.
The home page gives you a variety of categories of videos, but they are
disguised as icons on the right. Hover the mouse of the icons and a tool tip will pop up telling what that
icon represents. Click on the icon to see a list of available videos in that
category.
Widgets are small things that perform some function over the
web. There are tens of thousands of widgets. NetVibes
uses widgets to allow you to customize your own homepage (www.netvibes.com),
and has now made possible shareable, customized, configured home pages. Thus,
one can create a home page for family history, or one specifically for family
history research for a certain country, and then share it. All of the
additions, links, and services can then be seen and used by others. NetVibes calls it the NetVibes
Universe. When a widget is added to a web browser, it is called an extension.
Many are designed for FireFox web browser, and
Microsoft has entered the game by allowing extensions in new Internet Explorer
7. One widget is for translation and dictionary lookups. It is called
Babylon6. Check it out at www.babylon.com. It allow
you to CTRL-rightclick on a word and get a definition
and translation into 85 languages. You can even add it to your web page for
others to use. It is free for private, non-profit use, but also has a paid
version.
Wikis are a not-so-new concept that is becoming
more common place. One of particular interest is the Open University. They have
courses designed for online learning. I’ve seen course modules on life stories,
war memorials, and family pictures. I believe
The Family History Library is digitizing records with the
intent of making them available online. For two examples, see http://search.labs.familysearch.org/recordsearch/
and http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=23963&disp=A+genealogical+register+of+the+descendan
Another idea which isn’t so new, but is only recently being
applied to genealogy is federated searching across different web sites. Some
early examples include www.worldvitalrecords.com/InternationalPages.aspx,
and www.myheritage.com/FP/Company/myheritage-research.php.
I’ve often mentioned automatic backup services, and I’ve
tried to use several. One of my long time favorites, Mozy,
has introduced unlimited size backup service for a fee of only $4.95/mo. Alternatively, you get a free 2 gb
(+256 mb if you use this link - https://mozy.com/?ref=6H24GG).
Another technology which is having impact on family history
is podcasting. A podcast is
a digital audio file distributed over the Internet. In essence, it can be a
radio show on the web which you listen to on your computer. With the free iTunes program, you can subscribe to dozens of weekly
genealogy podcasts, including the Family Roots Radio
Show (www.familyrootsradio.com), Eastmans
Genealogy Newsletter Show (http://blog.eogn.com/eastmans_online_genealogy/podcasts/index.html),
Genealogy Guys (www.genealogyguys.com), and DOZENS more!
How to
Find More on Your Own
There are thousands more such sites on the internet. It
would be impossible to list them all here. Even if I could list them all, there
would be more that weren’t listed by tomorrow! So how can you find more?
There’s a lot you can do to be aware of developing technology. I would suggest:
·
Read online newsletters, chiefly Dick Eastman’s newsletter (www.eogen.com).
See www.cyndislist.com/magazine.htm#E-zines
for a list of many others.
·
See www.webware.com/8300-1_109-2-0.html
for cool web sites & services
·
Participate in or read technology Blogs (www.mashables.com,
www.ldscio.org,
www.netvibes.com/techcrunch,
http://beta.tech.lds.org,
http://labs.familysearch.org,
http://eatslikeahuman.blogspot.com or others.
).
o
Linkpendium (www.linkpendium.com)
o
Search Systems (www.searchsystems.net)
o
Genealogy Sleuth (www.progenealogists.com/genealogysleuthb.htm)
o
Cyndi’s List (www.cyndislist.com/primary.htm#Online)
o
Genealogy Links (www.genealogylinks.net)
©Copyright 2006-7 by Alan E. Mann. All rights reserved.
Written permission to reproduce all or part of this syllabus material in any
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