Tuesday, April 9, 2024

MyHeritage Updates

MyHeritage has been busy adding lots of new features over the past months, and announced some additional new features and some coming ones at RootsTech this year.

New Releases

MyHeritage have introduced a new profile page with hints directly on it. This makes it easier to work within the profile and not have to leave it.


You will see on the image above that the profile now has a number of tabs across the top (Details, Matches, Biography, Photos, Sources). The Biography tab shows you a narrative version of the subject’s life, or if you chose “Create AI Biography” you can generate a more detailed biography based on information in your tree. This biography, if the appropriate option is selected, also pulls out information from other trees, and sources, as well as including Historical Context and name origins. If there are photos attached to the person’s profile they are included in the AI Biography.

Person with only a standard biography

Person with AI Biography (note scroll bar to show
rest of AI Biography)

My feeling about this biography is that it is a good starting point for a person, though I would probably build on it from there. But it’s certainly better than the stilted narrative that comes from my family history program.

RootsTech also saw the announcement of OldNews.com, a new Historical Newspapers site. It includes newspapers from USA, UK, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria and Czechia, and will soon include NZ papers.


The front page indicates that you can browse the publications, but I couldn’t find how to do so. The filters available to restrict the results are publication year or publication date, publication place (country level only) and publication name. But there is no drop-down or other method of finding what publications are available. It would be nice to have the option of filtering by article type, as many other newspaper sites allow, and to have options to sort the results. Playing around, it seems that the newspapers included the UK are limited to Gazettes at the moment, but more newspapers will be added to over time.

OldNews will be available either through its own subscription, or through an “Omni” MyHeritage subscription. The Omni subscription will include all newspapers, a complete subscription to MyHeritage, access to Geni Pro, a one year subscription to Legacy Family Tree webinars, unlimited photo scanning on reimagine app (and soon on the MyHeritage App). It will be priced at 50% of what it would cost to purchase all of these.

You are now also able to share DNA results with a collaborator. The introduction of two-factor authentication (necessitated by the 23andMe breach) made it difficult for people to share passwords with others to view DNA results. Not that anyone should have been sharing passwords anyway. More details are available here.

Coming Soon

We also got some hints of things that are coming soon: MyHeritage and FamilyTreeDNA collaboration, getting DNA from artifacts like stamps, and a major DNA ethnicity update which will give many more ethnicity groups.

 

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Who are you related to?

What do Jane Austin, Shirley Temple, John Lennon, Orville and Wilbur Wright, Agatha Christie and Helen Keller all have in common? They are all distantly related to me, at least according to FamilySearch's Famous Relatives. Well, that is if there are no errors in the Family Tree on FamilySearch. Some of the lines I am fairly sure of, and some I haven’t yet traced back far enough to know for sure if they are correct or not, but it's still fun. You do need to be aware that there might be errors in some of these trees, as not every connection has been verified to a high standard.

The huge reach of FamilySearch (and RootsTech) means that the FamilySearch Family Tree has lots of ancestors for many of us. That allows RootsTech to find relatives with whom we might be able to share family stories or photos, or even famous relatives.

Relatives at RootsTech have identified 2,471 people who registered for the conference (either in person or online) to whom I am related. The closest relative for me are two 3rd cousins once removed, but you might have closer cousins. They might even be able to help you solve some family mysteries.

If you want a little bit of fun, why not spend some time finding out who you look like at My Look-Alikes. The person it says I look most like (well, of those who have photos uploaded to FamilySearch, is my great-grandmother, Merab Brockbank née Annesley. I have so say, looking at some of the famous people it says I look like, the only similarity I can see is that we have two eyes, a nose and a mouth.



Why not have a look? But Relatives at RootsTech ends on 31 March 2024, so you’d better hurry up.


DISCLOSURE: I am a RootsTech 2024 conference Media Rep and in return for my promotion of the conference I receive a free entry pass and some additional non-monetary perks. My transportation and accommodation are not compensated.

 

Friday, March 15, 2024

Another RootsTech Conference in the bag

Well, RootsTech 2024 is all done and dusted, and I am back home and all the washing has been done.

This year’s theme was Remember, and I have already written about it and its impact on me. But it wasn’t just me. Many people I spoke to commented on it being such a powerful theme. During the first keynote speech, Steve Rockwood, CEO of FamilySearch International, showed the Remember Video and became clearly emotional about it.


The theme Remember was also relevant to the journey RootsTech has made: from a small conference of about 3,000 people, to a worldwide audience of millions.

Photo opportunity at the Findmypast booth
during my first RootsTech conference (2013)

Keynote speaker, Nancy Borowick, was spot-on to the theme. Her talk was about her parents, and their battles with cancer, though she said that her story was not a story about cancer and dying: it was a story about living. Her photographs of her parents were her tribute to them, and her very important message was that “the people you love live on inside of you, because they are part of who you are.” You can watch her story here.

Nancy Borowick with one of her pictures of
her parents

Another powerful keynote speaker was Lynne Jackson, great-great-granddaughter of Dred and Harriet Scott. Their story was one of the catalysts of the Civil War, and out of the Dred Scott Decision came the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments of the US Constitution. Her story can be watched here.

Lynne Jackson

Remember is such a powerful and encompassing theme that it meant something to everyone who attended the conference.



DISCLOSURE: I am a RootsTech 2024 conference Media Rep and in return for my promotion of the conference I receive a free entry pass and some additional non-monetary perks. My transportation and accommodation are not compensated.

 

 

 

Monday, February 19, 2024

Countdown to RootsTech


RootsTech2024 is just on the horizon. This year's theme is Remember, which is very appropriate for family history. Three more keynote speakers have been announced, adding to Lynne Jackson, who has already been announced.




The first is Henry Cho, an American-born Korean comedian. Cho is notable for being one of the only Asian-American acts to appear regularly on the Grand Ole Opry and, on January 6, 2023, became the first Asian-American invited to become a member of the Opry.



The second is photographer Nancy Borowick.  She uses her photos to tell stories of health, struggle and personal relationships and to explore the lives of her subjects. Her photos have been featured in many high-profile publications, like Time Magazine and National Geographic, to name just two.


The final keynote is Kristin Chenoweth, actress and singer, who has appeared in many stage, TV and movie productions, including The West Wing.

As always, the keynote speakers can be watched in person at the Salt Palace Convention Center, or online via the RootsTech.org website, and even when I am not familiar with them, I have found the keynotes riveting.

For those unable to attend RootsTech in Salt Lake City, there will be an online version of the conference. It’s free to sign up for this, and will give you access to many of the presentations, as well as a Virtual Expo Hall.

What about the chance to connect with unknown relatives who might have information about or photos of your family. “Relatives at RootsTech” is available for everyone for free. You do need to have entered at least some of your family tree on the FamilySearch website, but that is free too. I have 716 relatives who have registered for RootsTech (online or in person), but many people have thousands.

Those who are lucky enough to attend in person will have access to many presentations which are not being live-streamed (some of them are), and to the Expo Hall. This year the Expo Hall will be open on Thursday night 6.00-7.30 for Night at the Expo Hall, a masquerade themed event which gives attendees a chance to visit the exhibitors without the conflict of whether to attend a talk, or to visit the Expo Hall.

I hope you are able to attend RootsTech 2024, one way or the other.

 


DISCLOSURE: I am a RootsTech 2024 conference Media Rep and in return for my promotion of the conference I receive a free entry pass and some additional non-monetary perks. My transportation and accommodation are not compensated.