We apologize for the delay between podcasts, but we're back on schedule again!This week's news includes:
Ancestry.com and the Drouin Institute (
http://institutdrouin.com),
holder of one of the most important Canadian genealogical collections,
announce the successful resolution to arbitration concerning content
and indexing, and Ancestry.com has announced that the collection will
be returning to its site very soon;
dynastree
announces that it now has 10 million family trees on its site, and that
they have added new features including the ability to include family
pictures in a GEDCOM file export;
MyHeritage.com
announces that its free Family Tree Builder software (free for
download) now supports mapping, photo albums, and other new features;
the Free Library of Philadelphia has averted disastrous budget cuts
that would have closed all of its branches in early October; and the
FamilySearch Indexing Project (
http://pilot.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#start) has announced the release of additional new and updated collections.
The Library of Michigan continues to hang under the threat of its
collection being dispersed by executive order of the state's governor.
The
Records Preservation and Access Committee (RPAC), a joint group of the
Federation of Genealogical Societies and the
National Genealogical Society, has initiated an online petition drive at
http://www.petitiononline.com/RPAC2009/petition.html and The Guys strongly encourage you to sign electronically by 30 September 2009,
the deadline date for the petition. For more information about the
situation, visit the Michigan Genealogical Council's website at
http://www.mimgc.org/LOM.html. (The Guys will continue to report on this critical situation over the coming weeks and months.)
This week's listener email includes: Pheobe has created a Cousin Camp
for her nieces, nephews, and cousins aged 9 to 14 and offers to share
information with others; George asks about how to cite death notices;
Rob asks how many listeners there are for the podcast; Victoria
discusses the software she uses on her Mac in order to run
Windows-based programs such as
RootsMagic;
Margaret reports on genealogists and libraries, and methods for
creating knowledge with web 2.0 technologies; Rebecca asks about file
formats for digitizing family photos and documents and saving them into
her genealogy database; Lee asks if other listeners have seen
tombstones on which the wife's maiden name is listed; and Mary Ann asks
for assistance in helping to locate more information about her
grandmother in Texas.