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  • 22 Aug 2024 8:03 AM | Anonymous

    Event Details

    Sat, Sep 21, 2024 at 11:00 AM - 1:00 pm EST 

    Pinellas Genealogy Society at the Largo Public Library, 120 Central Park Drive, Meeting Room/Jenkins B, Largo, FL 33771

    Genealogy is the same the world around, yet there are some unique challenges when researching African American family history. For example, specific strategies are required to identify and work with records before 1860 and locating identifiable names among government records can raise the difficulty level. Even though it can be challenging, it can also be rewarding. Especially if you plan to volunteer for community projects like our Clearwater Colored Cemeteries program. We’ll provide research strategies to take you around the obstacles to help you find the records you seek. Presented by Taneya Koonce.

    Taneya Koonce works extensively in the genealogy community with leadership roles in the USGenWeb Project and the Afro-American Historical & Genealogical Society (as National Treasurer and Nashville Chapter President). Through her Academy of Legacy Leaders Facebook community, Taneya facilitates education and inspiration for 2,500 family history enthusiasts. She is an active genealogy & family history blogger and author. Genealogy has been her passion since 2005 especially in technology, historical newspaper research, digital photo & file organization, and genetic genealogy all while keeping family history fun!

    Note: FREE and open to the public. This is the monthly general membership meeting with educational program. The first 15 minutes of this program will include the Society meeting. This hybrid meeting will be held in-person at the Largo Public Library, 120 Central Park Drive, Meeting Room/Jenkins B, Largo, FL 33771 AND online via Zoom. Registration is only required for Zoom attendees.

  • 21 Aug 2024 8:47 PM | Anonymous

    New and Updated

    • NEW Florida, U.S., State Prison Register, 1875-1959 08/19/2024
    • NEW Savannah, Georgia, U.S., Savannah Morning News Obituary Index, 1916-1996, 2011 08/19/2024
    • UPDATED Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., Tax Records Index, 1798-1808 08/19/2024
    • NEW Idaho, U.S., Voter Registration Records, 1916-2020 08/14/2024
    • UPDATED Nebraska, U.S., Federal Naturalization Records, 1835-1987 08/08/2024
    • UPDATED Tennessee, U.S., Naturalization Records, 1888-1992 08/08/2024
    • UPDATED San Francisco, California, U.S., Registers of Chinese Laborers Returning to the U.S., 1882-1912 08/08/2024
    • UPDATED Ohio, Roster of Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines in World War I, 1917-191808/ 07/2024
    • UPDATED Floyd County, Virginia, U.S., Births, 1873-1879 08/07/2024
    • UPDATED Rockingham County, Virginia, U.S., Births, 1888-1890 08/07/2024
    • UPDATED Amelia County, Virginia Births, 1853-1896 08/07/2024
    • UPDATED Arkansas, U.S., Divorces, 1923-1973 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED Arkansas, Marriage Certificates, 1917-1972 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED Arkansas, Death Certificates, 1914-1969 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED Alabama, U.S., Naturalization Records, 1888-1991 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED California, U.S., Federal Naturalization Records, 1888-1991 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED Illinois, U.S., Federal Naturalization Records, 1856-1991 08/05/2024
    • UPDATED New Jersey, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1739-1991 08/01/2024
    • UPDATED Washington, U.S., Naturalizations, 1853-1980 08/01/2024
    • UPDATED Wisconsin, U.S., Federal Naturalization Records, 1848-1992 08/01/2024
    • UPDATED Iowa, U.S., Marriage Records, 1880-1948 07/29/2024
    • NEW Web: Charleston County, South Carolina, U.S., Voter Registration Roll, 1868 07/29/2024
    • NEW Web: United States, Dead Fred Genealogical Photo Archive Index, 1816-2001 07/29/2024
    • UPDATED U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current 07/25/2024
    • UPDATED North Carolina, U.S., Birth Indexes, 1800-2000 07/22/2024
    • NEW Rhode Island, USA, World War I Portraits, 1914-1918 07/17/2024
    • NEW New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., Historical Notaries' Indexes, 1770-1966 07/11/2024
    • UPDATED Illinois, U.S., Catholic Diocese of Joliet, Sacramental Records, 1800-1976 07/11/2024
    • UPDATED Yarmouth, Massachusetts, U.S., Directory 1895 07/11/2024
    • UPDATED Newton, Massachusetts, U.S., Directory 1929 07/11/2024
    • NEW Rutherford County, Tennessee, U.S., Marriages, 1889-1940 07/10/2024
    • UPDATED Wisconsin, U.S., Divorce Records, 1907-2015 07/10/2024
    • UPDATED Wisconsin, U.S., Death Records, 1872-2004 07/10/2024
    • UPDATED Wisconsin, U.S., Birth Records, 1812-1921 07/10/2024
    • NEW California, U.S., Registrations of Motor Vehicles, 1905-1922 07/10/2024
    • NEW Rhode Island, U.S., Birth Registrations 1846-1921 07/09/2024
    • NEW Arlington, Virginia, U.S., Arlington National Cemetery, 1861-2024 07/08/2024
  • 21 Aug 2024 4:40 PM | Anonymous

    Apple Podcasts got the full Apple Music treatment with its own web app today. The UI is essentially the same as Apple’s native app but with the added flexibility of working on non-Apple devices. Apple says Podcasts works on all major browsers, including Safari, Chrome, Edge, and Firefox, and can be accessed in more than 170 countries and regions in their local language. If you’re an Apple Podcasts user, your progress will be synced from the web to your Apple devices, too.

    Apple Podcasts' web app is nearly identical to the native version.

    The web app strikes me as a win for both listeners and podcasters. Podcast fans now have more ways to enjoy their favorite shows, discover new ones, and share episodes with others. Suddenly, Apple Podcasts is cross-platform, which is still relatively rare among the most popular podcast apps, except for Pocket Casts.

    Links opened on Apple devices will open in the native Podcasts app and in the browser on other devices, although on the Mac, it is possible to play episodes in a browser if you prefer. Here’s Comfort Zone playing on everyone’s current obsession, the Boox Palma:

    You can read more in an article by John Voorhees published in the MacStories.net web site at: https://www.macstories.net/news/apple-podcasts-is-now-available-as-a-web-app/.

  • 21 Aug 2024 8:33 AM | Anonymous

    A good private video editor is hard to find—especially when you want it to work across all of your devices. Yes, there are lots of decent video editors, including Microsoft’s Clipchamp tool and Apple’s iMovie app. But Clipchamp is one of many modern video-editing tools that requires you to sign in with an account and upload your videos to a company’s servers. And iMovie, of course, is limited to working only on Apple’s own products.

    I’ve been looking for a free web-based video editor that is completely private, compatible everywhere, and available to use without any sign-in or account-creating requirement. Now, I’ve found one that fits the bill.

    It’s named Wide.video, and it runs in your web browser, which means it works on whatever computer you happen to be using: Windows PC, Chromebook, Mac, Linux, or whatever else you might prefer.

    But, while it runs in your web browser and is technically a web app, it does all the work on your computer. You don’t have to sign up for an account, you don’t have to install anything, and you don’t have to upload your private videos to any company’s servers. And while it’s free, it doesn’t even have ads.

    You can read more in an article by Chris Hoffman published in the FastCompany web site at: https://bit.ly/4dyecd2.

  • 21 Aug 2024 8:26 AM | Anonymous

    A stylized logo for “The Famous Computer Cafe.” The logo resembles a vintage neon sign, featuring a tall, vertical structure with multiple components. The topmost part of the sign has a depiction of a small satellite or atomic model, labeled with “The Famous.” Below this, in bold block letters, reads “COMPUTER”. Extending downwards, the word “CAFE” appears vertically in a similar bold style. Both “COMPUTER” and “CAFE” have an arrow motif, with the word “CAFE” positioned inside a large downward-pointing arrow, which is embellished with numerous small lights around its perimeter. The entire logo is rendered in a palette of dark blue and yellow, giving it a striking, retro look indicative of classic neon signs.

    A previously lost cache of celebrity and historical interviews from a long-dormant radio show have been discovered, digitized, and made available for all.

    The Internet Archive is now home to 53 episodes of The Famous Computer Cafe, a 1980s radio show about the new world of home computers. The program included computer industry news, product reviews, and interviews, and aired from 1983 through 1986 on radio stations in southern and central California.

    The creators of The Famous Computer Cafe saved every episode on reel-to-reel tapes, but over the years the tapes were forgotten, and, ultimately, lost. Earlier this year archivist Kay Savetz recovered several of the tapes in a property sale, and recognizing their value and worthiness of professional transfer, launched a GoFundMe to have them digitized, and made them available at Internet Archive with the permission of the show’s creators.

    While full of time-capsule descriptions of 1980s technology news, the most exciting aspect of the show has been the variety and uniqueness of the interviews. The list of people that the show interviewed is a who’s-who of tech luminaries of the 1980s: computer people, musicians, publishers, philosophers, journalists. Interviews in the recovered recordings include Timothy Leary, Douglas Adams, Bill Gates, Atari’s Jack Tramiel, Apple’s Bill Atkinson, and dozens of others. The recovered shows span November 17 1984 through July 12, 1985.

    Many more of the original reel-to-reel tapes — including shows with interviews with Ray Bradbury, Robert Moog, Donny Osmond, and Gene Roddenberry — are still lost, and perhaps are still waiting to be found in the Los Angeles area.

    The stories of how The Famous Computer Cafe was created — and saved, 40 years later — is explored in an episode of the Radio Survivor podcast. The podcast interviewed show co-creator Ellen Fields and archivist Kay Savetz, providing a dual perspective of how the show was created and how it was recovered.

    The recovery of these interviews, 40 years after their original airing, holds out hope that many more relics and treasures still await discovery.

  • 20 Aug 2024 5:27 PM | Anonymous

    Maria Branyas, who was the world's oldest person, has died peacefully in a Spanish nursing home at the age of 117. From a report:

    "Maria Branyas has left us. She has died as she wanted: in her sleep, peacefully and without pain," her official X account said, and a spokesperson at the nursing home confirmed the news without providing details. Branyas had suggested that her demise was imminent on Monday on X, saying: "I feel weak. The time is coming. Don't cry, I don't like tears... You know me, wherever I go, I will be happy." Her X account is handled by her daughter.

    She had turned 117 on March 4, according to Guinness World Records, and had become the oldest person in the world in January 2023. Born in San Francisco, California, in 1907, she moved with her Spanish family back to the northeastern region of Catalonia when she was seven. She spent the rest of her life there, living through the 1936-39 civil war and two pandemics a century apart - the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic and the 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic. In 1931, she married Catalan doctor Joan Moret, with whom she had three children. Her husband passed away in 1976 and she also outlived her son, August, who died in a tractor accident at the age of 86, Guinness World Records said on its website.

  • 20 Aug 2024 4:32 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by the folks at MyHeritage:

    The Super DNA Sale is on, and this isn’t any old DNA sale — it’s a rare opportunity to stock up on MyHeritage DNA kits for the lowest price this year, and even get a headstart on your holiday shopping!

    Order MyHeritage DNA for the lowest price of the year


    Whether your summer was filled with family outings or furthering your family history research, there’s never been a better time to discover your origins and find new relatives with the MyHeritage DNA test. This is a rare opportunity to stock up on MyHeritage DNA kits for the lowest price this year, and even get a headstart on your holiday shopping.

    Order MyHeritage DNA for the lowest price of the year

    MyHeritage DNA kits don’t expire, so you can buy them now and gift them to your loved ones for the holidays or beyond! Plus, you’ll enjoy free shipping on orders of 2+ DNA kits.

    MyHeritage DNA reveals your origins across 2,114 geographic regions and connects you to relatives you may not have known about. Curious about where you come from, or looking to break through a brick wall in your family history research? A MyHeritage DNA test may offer the answers you’re looking for. 

    Grab this incredible deal before it’s gone and order MyHeritage DNA today!

     

  • 20 Aug 2024 7:20 AM | Anonymous


    Christopher Michael Green

    Dallas County Criminal District Attorney John Creuzot has announced that Christopher Michael Green will spend the rest of his life in prison after a Dallas County jury found him guilty of Aggravated Sexual Assault. The 52-year-old defendant was charged in a 2005 cold case attack on a young mother whom he sexually assaulted at knifepoint. This case marks the first jury trial in Dallas County history to utilize Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG) as an investigative tool to help identify the suspect.

    “We have been working this case with the Dallas Police Department since we started the Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI) almost a decade ago,” said lead prosecutor Leighton D’Antoni. “I remember long-time Dallas Police Department Sex Assaults Detective Todd Haecker telling me this was his ‘white whale.’ We exhausted every investigative tool without success until the DA’s Office and DPD began working with the FBI Dallas Violent Crimes Task Force, which finally cracked this case.”

    During the punishment phase, evidence of five additional violent assaults allegedly committed by Mr. Green was presented, along with powerful testimony from the survivors— four of whom were between the ages of 15-17 at the time of their attacks

    “You chose your path,” said one of the survivors. “I have been waiting for this day for 24 years.”

    Throughout the trial, Mr. Green maintained his innocence and testified during punishment he did not commit any of these aggravated sexual assaults, but based on the compelling testimony and DNA evidence, the jury swiftly returned a guilty verdict and handed down a life sentence.

    “Predators can’t live with the truth. Survivors can’t live without it. The truth came to light in this courtroom,” lead prosecutor ADA Leighton D’Antoni said in his closing argument.

    Use of Innovative Genetic Genealogy and Traditional DNA

    Law enforcement first identified a suspect DNA profile in one of these cases back in 2001. Over the next 15 years, the same DNA profile appeared in five more cases. However, without a prior felony conviction, Mr. Green's DNA was not in the national database, preventing a match. IGG is what provided a breakthrough -- enabling investigators to link unknown offender DNA profiles to familial connections, ultimately leading them to Green. Although IGG serves as an investigative lead and not as trial evidence, it helped put Green on the investigators' radar. Four of the six survivors identified Green in a photo lineup, but Detective Carlos Cardenas sought further confirmation, obtaining a search warrant for Green’s DNA via a buccal swab. The DNA was a perfect match in all six cases. This traditional (STR) DNA evidence, the gold standard for forensic identification since 1986, was what prosecutors presented at trial and confirmed Green’s identity.

    As one of the survivors put it in her victim impact statement, “Science proved that you’re it. Nobody else shares your DNA.”

    You can read more in an article published at https://bit.ly/3SUIq1E.

  • 19 Aug 2024 6:39 PM | Anonymous

    Google released the August 2024 core update today. It will take about a month to fully roll out.

    This update is not just a normal core update. The August 2024 core update takes into account the feedback Google heard since the September 2023 helpful content update that seemed to have a negative impact on many small and independent publishers.

    What Google is saying. John Mueller, Search Advocate at Google, wrote.

    “Today, we launched our August 2024 core update to Google Search. This update is designed to continue our work to improve the quality of our search results by showing more content that people find genuinely useful and less content that feels like it was made just to perform well on Search.”

    Google said this update aims to promote useful content from small and independent publishers, after Google listened to feedback it received since the release of the March 2024 core update. Mueller added:

    “This latest update takes into account the feedback we’ve heard from some creators and others over the past few months. As always, we aim to connect people with a range of high quality sites, including ‘small’ or ‘“’independent’ sites that are creating useful, original content on relevant searches. This is an area we’ll continue to address in future updates.”

    This August 2024 core update “aims to better capture improvements that sites may have made, so we can continue to surface the best of the web,” Mueller added.

    Guidance updated. Google posted several updates to its help page about core updates, including more in-depth guidance for those who may see changes after an update.

    More details. Google told us we should expect a core update soon, after many publishers have become concerned and anxious about the next update.

    Since then we have seen a tremendous amount of Google search ranking volatility without a confirmation from Google on a core update or any update of its kind. In fact, this morning, I posted about even more intense Google Search ranking volatility on Search Engine Roundtable.

    What to do if you are hit. Google has given advice on what to consider if you are negatively impacted by a core update in the past. Google has not really given much new advice here.

    There aren’t specific actions to take to recover. A negative rankings impact may not signal anything is wrong with your pages.

    Google has offered a list of questions to consider if your site is hit by a core update.

    Google said you can see a bit of a recovery between core updates but the biggest change would be after another core update.

    In short, write helpful content for people and not to rank in search engines.

    “There’s nothing new or special that creators need to do for this update as long as they’ve been making satisfying content meant for people. For those that might not be ranking as well, we strongly encourage reading our creating helpful, reliable, people-first content help page,” Google said previously.

    Previous core updates. The previous core update – the March 2024 core update – was the largest core update, according to Google. It started March 5 and completed 45 days later on April 19.

    Here’s a timeline and our coverage of recent core updates:

    • The March 2024 core update was on March 5th and ended on April 19.
    • The November 2023 core update was on November 2nd and ended on November 28.
    • The October 2023 core update was on October 5th and ended on October 19
    • The August 2023 core update was on August 22nd and ended on September 7.
    • The March 2023 core update was on March 15th and ended on March 28th.
    • Other updates. We did have a spam update between the last core update and this core update. It was the June 2024 spam update that started on June 20 and took 7 days to finish rolling out, completing on June 27.

    Why we care. Many sites are hoping, and have been hoping, to see improvements with the last core update ever since the September 2023 helpful content update rolled out. Most, if not all, of those sites that were hit in September did not see recoveries. They were hoping to see recoveries with the March 2024 core update, but did not.

    Now, with this August 2024 core update, many of those sites hit by previous updates will be watching closely to see if their sites recover over the next few weeks.

  • 19 Aug 2024 6:34 PM | Anonymous

    Published starting in 1984, MicroTimes magazine lauded itself as the newsletter for computer users in California. Published in two editions (Northern and Southern California) with the primary difference between them being the advertisements. MicroTimes provided interviews, instructions, humor and opinion pieces related to all manner of home computers and business. These issues are open access on Internet Archive with the blessing of the publisher.

    The following issues are missing from this archive. If you have any of them, please contact Kay Savetz.

    • Volume 2 Number 12
    • Volume 3 Number 1
    • Volume 3 Number 2
    • Volume 3 Number 3
    • Volume 3 Number 6 thru 12(?)
    • Issue 78
    • Issue 151-152
    • Issue 154-155
    • Issue 159-160
    • Issue 162
    • Issue 165
    • Issue 182-199
    • Issue 201-215
    • Issue 217-end??

Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter









































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