To all Plus Edition subscribers:
The weekly Plus Edition newsletter was sent to your e-mail address a short time ago. It should have arrived by now. If you have not yet seen it in your in-box, check your spam folder. If it is not there, please contact your e-mail provider to see why it was blocked. This week's entire Plus Edition newsletter is also available at: http://www.eogn.com/wp/thisweek.htm.
Here are the articles in this week's Plus Edition newsletter:
- Join Me in Southborough This Thursday
- (+) Google Sidewiki for Genealogy
- (+) Endangered Species: CD and DVD Disks
- (+) Windows 7 versus Macintosh OS X
- Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, or What the Pilgrims Really Ate at Thanksgiving
- The Myth of Family Coats of Arms
- Your Ancestors Traveled Along the Interstate Highway
- Footnote.com Holocaust Collection Update
- Kerry Church Records to Appear Online
- Broadlands Archives in England Could Be Sold Overseas
- Laura G. Prescott Elected APG President
- Technology Helps Unearth Family Trees
- Pelham Historical Society Web Site Wins Research and Documentation Award
- Ancestry.com Publishes Online Collection of Twentieth-Century Navy Records
- National Genealogical Society Seeks Nominations for the 2010 Genealogy Hall of Fame
- National Archives Launches New Online Reservation System
- Guild of One-Name Studies Opens On-line Store
- American Ancestors Journal
- Update: Dropbox: Why You Need This Program
- DiamonDisc Will Store Data for 1,000 Years on Stone Disks
- Paint.NET - the Free Photoshop Alternative
- BestBuy Black Friday Desktop Computer Sale With Monitor and Printer For $299
If printed, this week's Plus Edition newsletter is 40 pages long! Where else will you find this much genealogy information? per week? With no advertising?
Continue reading "Plus Edition Newsletter Has Been Sent" »
If you live in or near Southborough, Massachusetts, you might be interested in attending a meeting of the Genealogy Club this Thursday evening, November 19. I will be the guest speaker at this month's meeting and will be talking about "Google for Genealogists." I hope to show a few tricks for using everyone's favorite search engine.
Continue reading "Join Me in Southborough This Thursday" »
Did you read an article in this newsletter that you would like to share with others? You can send it to someone else via e-mail or you can easily forward an article to FaceBook, Twitter, MySpace, Digg, Delicious, Google Bookmarks, LinkedIn, to any of a number of other sites, or even to your own blog if it is hosted on WordPress, Blogger, or TypePad.
To do so, read the article on
http://blog.eogn.com and then look at the bottom of the article. Click on "ShareThis" just to the right of the green logo and select the method or service to which you want to send the article.
Continue reading "Want to Share an Article From This Newsletter?" »
On September 15, I wrote an article entitled, Survey: Please Tell Us About Your Experiences. I asked the readers of this newsletter to answer an online questionnaire about their genealogy interests, genealogy software, their computers and their Internet connections. I wrote:
I would like to ask for your help. I feel I can better meet your needs and interests if I can learn more about the experiences and the expertise of the readers of this newsletter. If you can answer a few quick survey questions, I can compile a clearer picture of the “typical online genealogist.” help me identify the "typical newsletter reader," I can then write articles aimed at that more reader's’ interests.
I know that lots of other people are also curious. The curious people include other genealogists as well as genealogy software producers, operators of genealogy web sites, and others. We want to know about you, the genealogist. A bit of knowledge about you and a few hundred other genealogists will help all of us focus our products and services to better service our customers.
I am delighted to report that 2,113 newsletter readers took the time to answer the questions. I believe the questionnaire produced some very useful information. I know I found a couple of surprises.
Continue reading "Survey Results: Please Tell Us About Your Experiences" »
I am creating a new service for genealogists as a supplement to this newsletter. I think it will be somewhat different from any other online genealogy service available today.
I need a few beta testers to try it out, find any bugs, give usability feedback, and also load some data into the new web site. The site is very empty right now, and I cannot load much data by myself.
Continue reading "Help Wanted: A Few Beta Testers" »
I would like to ask for your help. I feel I can better meet your needs and interests if I can learn more about the experiences and the expertise of the readers of this newsletter. If you can answer a few quick survey questions, I can compile a clearer picture of the “typical online genealogist.” help me identify the "typical newsletter reader," I can then write articles aimed at that more reader's’ interests.
I know that lots of other people are also curious. The curious people include other genealogists as well as genealogy software producers, operators of genealogy web sites, and others. We want to know about you, the genealogist. A bit of knowledge about you and a few hundred other genealogists will help all of us focus our products and services to better service our customers.
Click here to take survey
Continue reading "Survey: Please Tell Us About Your Experiences" »
A great online genealogy magazine, called Digital Genealogist, recently ceased publication. (See my earlier article at http://blog.eogn.com/eastmans_online_genealogy/2009/08/digital-genealogist-to-cease-publication.html.) However, owner/editor Liz Kerstens and I decided to give all the subscribers of that magazine a chance to switch to subscriptions to Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter at no additional charge. The change is optional; there is no need to change if you do not wish to.
I'm delighted to report that many Digital Genealogist subscribers elected to make the switch and are now here as Plus Edition subscribers. They will be receiving this week's Plus Edition e-mail version and also now have full access to the Plus Edition web site at http://www.eogn.com/wp/.
Continue reading "Welcome Digital Genealogist Subscribers!" »
I am delighted to announce that another author has joined the crew at this newsletter. Scott Norton is a DNA expert and will be writing occasional articles about DNA and genealogy for the EOGN newsletter.
Scott has been involved in DNA and Family History for more than 10 years and has a lot of experience turning DNA into history. He runs several DNA surname studies, but spends most of his spare time in the Norton DNA project at www.nortonfamily.net. He and the others involved in the Norton DNA Project are linking every Norton line with DNA and confirming paper history.
Continue reading "Introducing Scott Norton" »
Now you can take your genealogy news with you. You can read the latest news on your lunch hour, at the park, when riding the commuter train, while waiting at the airport, or at most any other convenient time and place. All you need is a web-enabled cell phone or an iPod Touch.
Actually, there are many ways to read this newsletter with cell phone web browsers or RSS newsreaders. Today I added one more method, and it is one that is easy to use. Open the web browser on your cell phone and go to http://eogn.com/mobile. Bookmark that URL in your cell phone's web browser, and you will be able to return to that address time and time again.
Continue reading "Read Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter on your Mobile Phone" »
Would you like to have these news articles delivered to your e-mail in-box every day? I'll remind you that e-mail delivery of Standard Edition headlines is available to you at no charge.
Established in 1996 and read by over 30,000 users world-wide, Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter features the latest in genealogy news from all over the world. You can subscribe today and have snippets of each new article delivered straight to your email inbox -- absolutely FREE!
You can subscribe at: http://www.feedblitz.com/f/?Sub=48932 or enter your e-mail address here and then click on "Subscribe Me!":
Continue reading "Genealogy News Delivered Daily to Your In-box" »
If you read this newsletter regularly, you already know that I travel quite often. By the time you read these words, I should be on a coast-to-coast flight en route to the Southern California Genealogy Jamboree being held this weekend in Burbank. I am looking forward to this trip: I was at the same conference last year and loved it. I suspect this year's event will be at least as good, if not better.
I am flying on Thursday. The conference is being held Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Hooray! A conference that is held on both weekend days! I'm taking a red-eye flight back Sunday evening, leaving at midnight, and should arrive home early Monday morning.
The Southern California Genealogical Society goes "all out" on their annual Jamboree and usually attracts 1,000 or more attendees. The facility used at the Burbank Marriott Hotel and Convention Center is just about the right size for an event of this type.
Continue reading "On the Road Again" »
A couple of people have asked so I thought I would post the answer here for all to see:
A few weeks ago, I changed the format of the Plus Edition newsletters sent every week by e-mail. The new format is much shorter, providing the title and the first few sentences of each article. You can read the articles online individually or, to read the entire weekly newsletter at once, you may go to http://www.eogn.com/wp/thisweek.htm. The entire weekly newsletter is available online in both HTML and PDF formats.
Continue reading "Update: New Plus Edition PDF Version of This Newsletter" »
I always enjoy genealogy conferences, but my personal highlight is the Saturday night dinners. For years, I have organized dinners after the close of conferences. I must say that this year the dinner was organized by newsletter editor Pam Cerutti as she did most of the work at this conference.
Planning for these dinners is always hectic and performed at the last minute as I find it difficult to plan dinners well in advance in a distant city. I typically wait until I am at the conference, then look around for a nearby restaurant that is willing to handle a large crowd on a Saturday night. That by itself is a challenge, but we have usually been successful. Most of the dinners have turned out to be great events, and this year's Raleigh, North Carolina, event was no exception.
Continue reading "EOGN Readers' Dinner in Raleigh" »
If you read this newsletter regularly, you already know that I travel quite often. Indeed, I plan to be traveling for the next week and a half.
First, I'll leave on Friday and go to Maine to be a part of my daughter's wedding. Yes, my only daughter is getting married, and Dad is proud as can be. She would claim she is not a techie, but she created a web site for the wedding at http://www.kellyanddavewed.com. I'm proud of that girl!
Continue reading "On the Road Again" »
I have been monitoring the comments posted in the online survey about the Plus Edition e-mail messages. (See http://blog.eogn.com/eastmans_online_genealogy/2009/05/changes-required-in-the-plus-edition-email-newsletter.html.) One thing that caught my eye is that several Plus Edition subscribers wrote "I would read it if the Plus Edition newsletter were available via RSS" or similar words. Actually, that has been available for nearly five years now. Apparently, not everyone knows that.
The Plus Edition RSS newsfeed is available at: http://eogn.com/wp/?feed=rss2.
Continue reading "Read the Plus Edition Newsletter in an RSS Feed" »
Attention Plus Edition subscribers: I need to make some changes and would appreciate your input at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=FLpAmQgx6Ss1p7lFAL37yQ_3d_3d.
Here's the problem: the Plus Edition newsletters sent by e-mail every week have become too big.
The newsletter has grown! In fact, if printed, the latest weekly Plus Edition newsletter is 29 pages! That's a lot of pages for a weekly publication. I believe it is more than what any other genealogy publication produces PER MONTH.
Normally, I would suggest that having bigger newsletters is a good thing. However, the newsletter has grown so large that it is now creating complications.
Continue reading "Changes Required in the Plus Edition E-mail Newsletter" »
I worked almost two straight days on the comments problem on the new EOGN Plus Edition web site but was unable to resolve the problem. The software producer's Tech Support department was also unable to help. I gave up and installed a different software product. I believe the problems are fixed. At least the comments work well for me in testing. I'd appreciate it if a few Plus Edition subscribers would test it also.
Continue reading "Update: Plus Edition Web Site" »
I am experimenting with a new feature on this newsletter: you can now listen to the articles on your computer, on your iPod, or on most any other MP3 music player.
When you look at the newsletter's home page at http://blog.eogn.com, you will note that a new icon appears near the top of each article: Listen Now. Clicking on that icon allows you to listen to a computer-generated voice that reads the article to you. You can listen to it directly through your computer's speakers or have it sent to iTunes for later listening on an iPod or iPhone. Another option is to have the article sent to most any other MP3 player that is capable of accepting audio from the Internet. Finally, you can download articles as MP3 files and save them on your local hard drive and listen to them later at your convenience.
Continue reading "Listen to This Newsletter" »
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