The world's largest family history conference takes place annually in Salt Lake City, sponsored by FamilySearch. Some of the sessions can be viewed from home.
RootsTech Live Streaming content this week:
Go to rootstech.org
Click on Salt Lake City 2020 drop down arrow
Click on Conference Information
Click on Agenda drop down
Click on Free Live Stream
Click on the tabs for each day's content
This is the link: https://www.rootstech.org/salt-lake/live-stream-schedule
Some sessions will also be recorded and can be viewed later.
It is a great opportunity to learn and enjoy!
For a number of years, my wife and I served in the Edmonton Riverbend Family History Center, located at 14325-53 Avenue in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, just off Whitemud Drive on 53 Avenue.
Telephone number 780-436-0136.
We were released from service there in 2018, but I continue my interest in FHCs. Ii currently serve as a stake Temple and Family History Consultant.
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Sunday, February 16, 2020
Colorizing black and white photos
You now can use your MyHeritage.com subscription to create colorized copies of black and white photos.
https://blog.myheritage.com/2020/02/colorize-your-black-and-white-photos-automatically-with-myheritage-in-color/
For maybe 50 years, I have been an avid collector of old family photos.
Most of these are black and white, so the idea of converting them to color, seemed very interesting.
The process was very fast.
Results varied, of course, Overexposed and underexposed photos did not do as well, but the results for properly-exposed photos were impressive. See the one below.
Admittedly the software does not really know the original colors, so a lot of guesswork is involved, but I find the results well worth the minimal effort required.
P.S.
The little girl Annie Bray, (shown front center) grew up to become one of my family history mentors in the 1960s. She was born in 1889. Thank you for all your help Annie Bray!
UPDATE: I seem to be able to upload a maximum of about 80 photos to colorize. I wish I had chosen them more carefully.
You now can use your MyHeritage.com subscription to create colorized copies of black and white photos.
https://blog.myheritage.com/2020/02/colorize-your-black-and-white-photos-automatically-with-myheritage-in-color/
For maybe 50 years, I have been an avid collector of old family photos.
Most of these are black and white, so the idea of converting them to color, seemed very interesting.
The process was very fast.
- Upload a photo
- Click colorize
- Download the colorized version.
Results varied, of course, Overexposed and underexposed photos did not do as well, but the results for properly-exposed photos were impressive. See the one below.
Admittedly the software does not really know the original colors, so a lot of guesswork is involved, but I find the results well worth the minimal effort required.
P.S.
The little girl Annie Bray, (shown front center) grew up to become one of my family history mentors in the 1960s. She was born in 1889. Thank you for all your help Annie Bray!
UPDATE: I seem to be able to upload a maximum of about 80 photos to colorize. I wish I had chosen them more carefully.
Sunday, February 2, 2020
I cannot see my spouse and in-laws in Family Tree
This comment came up in a visit to a family this afternoon. Fortunately it is easy to fix. Create records for any living ancestors (typically the parents and grand parents to link your record of your spouse to their deceased ancestors. The first generation of deceased ancestors will automatically bring along all of their linked family members. Check your children's accounts, as they may need to add their living ancestors to connect to their deceased ancestors too. Once this is done for a family line, you will not need to do it again in that account.
What causes this issue? The Church needs to protect the privacy of living people. To do this, the records for living people are hidden from all accounts except the account where the record was created. Any record for a living person exists in a "private space", with a unique ID. If you see yourself in your spouse's account, your ID will be different than the one you see in your own account. This is why you cannot add living people by ID. Any particular living ID can only exist in one account.
I cannot see my spouse and in-laws in Family Tree (53513)
You may not be able to see your spouse's family and ancestors in Family Tree for several reasons.
Your spouse's parents are living.
If your spouse's parents are living, and if their records are already in Family Tree, the records are not visible to you because of privacy restrictions.
If you want to see them in your tree, add them to your tree. Their records will be in your private space and visible only to you there.
Your spouse's parents are deceased, but their records in Family Tree show as living.
If your spouse's parents are deceased, and if their records are already in Family Tree, you probably cannot see them because the records still show them as living.
If the records do not show, your spouse may need to go into Family Tree and mark his or her tree parents' records as deceased. If the records do not show up in your family tree, you can link them as existing people into your pedigree. All of the deceased ancestors connected to them should also appear.
It is also a good idea to see if Family Tree has duplicates of your spouse's parents. If you find any, merge them.
Your spouse's parents are not in Family Tree.
Family Tree may not have records for your spouse's parents. You can add them.
Related articles you can find in the Help Center
How do I add a family member to Family Tree? (56435)
What is a private space in Family Tree? (98224)
How do I add an ancestor who is already in Family Tree to my pedigree? (422315)
What causes this issue? The Church needs to protect the privacy of living people. To do this, the records for living people are hidden from all accounts except the account where the record was created. Any record for a living person exists in a "private space", with a unique ID. If you see yourself in your spouse's account, your ID will be different than the one you see in your own account. This is why you cannot add living people by ID. Any particular living ID can only exist in one account.
I cannot see my spouse and in-laws in Family Tree (53513)
You may not be able to see your spouse's family and ancestors in Family Tree for several reasons.
Your spouse's parents are living.
If your spouse's parents are living, and if their records are already in Family Tree, the records are not visible to you because of privacy restrictions.
If you want to see them in your tree, add them to your tree. Their records will be in your private space and visible only to you there.
Your spouse's parents are deceased, but their records in Family Tree show as living.
If your spouse's parents are deceased, and if their records are already in Family Tree, you probably cannot see them because the records still show them as living.
If the records do not show, your spouse may need to go into Family Tree and mark his or her tree parents' records as deceased. If the records do not show up in your family tree, you can link them as existing people into your pedigree. All of the deceased ancestors connected to them should also appear.
It is also a good idea to see if Family Tree has duplicates of your spouse's parents. If you find any, merge them.
Your spouse's parents are not in Family Tree.
Family Tree may not have records for your spouse's parents. You can add them.
Related articles you can find in the Help Center
How do I add a family member to Family Tree? (56435)
What is a private space in Family Tree? (98224)
How do I add an ancestor who is already in Family Tree to my pedigree? (422315)
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