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Sharing Family Stories on iPad and online. Jeri J. Steele, President BGAMUG, Bowling Green, KY jjs@PioneerInfoServices.com. NEW!. Since the submission of the topic of today’s presentation there have been new features added to FamilySearch.org General Public can submit trees
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Sharing Family Storieson iPad and online Jeri J. Steele, President BGAMUG, Bowling Green, KY jjs@PioneerInfoServices.com
NEW! • Since the submission of the topic of today’s presentation there have been new features added to FamilySearch.org • General Public can submit trees • Save Photos & Stories • Pedigree & Fan Charts
Overview • Family story tips • FamilySearch.org • LegacyStories.com • iPad apps: Legacy Stories, Heirloom, & Evernote • Others: 1000memories.com
Interview & Writers Block • Overwhelming when you say, “Tell me about your family” • Gather stories of all kinds. They can be as small as a few sentences and as long as several pages (or a book) • Plan for a small topic: Occupations, all the houses you lived in, schools attended, etc.
Record the Interview • Worst is paper notes because you leave out information that later can be important • Do an audio or video recording • If you plan on using it in a book or in a podcast get a signed release. • Don’t get bogged down with paperwork if it interrupts a story!
Other Ideas • How did you meet dad? • What was your wedding day like? • Tell me the story of …. (holes in the radiator, the broken arm, or the pink cat) • Something funny, major life or world event • If someone is being evasive or gives different answers at different times there maybe more to the story! • Ask time bracketing questions if dates are elusive (Where were you heard about Pearl Habor?)
Keeping the Context • After you finish the interview be sure to record: Who, What, When, Why and Where you conducted the interview • Transcribe the interview with names -Jeri: Mom, “When did you first go to the USO for a dance?” -Eleanore(mom): “I had gotten sick and had to come home from nursing school. I volunteered at the USO in Tyler.”
Other Tips • Plan if it’s a formal interview (sometimes its better to just capture the conversation!) • Learn how to record on an iPhone, iPad or small voice recorder. (check your batteries!) • Don’t run the interview more than an hour without a break. • Bring out a photo and have the person tell you about the photo.
iPad Apps • Search on Audio Recorder and you get 283 results (free – 6.99) • My favorite way EvernoteApp from evernote.com
Evernote.com • Create Note of Audio, Photo (any image), text or .PDF files (premium) • Can create all three on the same note • Create a new note and it automatically adds a geographic tag (address or nearby town) or uses a calendar entry • Bring up evernote– Add a new note and click record. You can attach an audio file recorded in any software up to 25 MB for Free and 100 MB for Premium.
More on Evernote • A Premium User can create a directory and share with only other family members or make it public • A PDF and image files are automatically indexed. (Photo has to be of text that their OCR can decipher ) • Take a photo of photo or page of text and add it to a note
LegacyStories.org • Upload a photo and make a recording of family talking about the photo (talking photos) • Link your photos and stories to any family on FamilySearch.org • Story prompts, slide shows, Multimedia Stories • Accounts are inheritable • One shoebox is free ($5 a month, other longer plans at a discount) • http://www.legacystories.org/?wiz_id=82
iPad Legacy Stories • http://www.legacystories.org/about-us/ipad-app • Currently in review for an update – Keep looking in App store
FamilySearch.org • Log into an account (or create one) • Can save family tree now • Upload GEDCOM from other program • Current limitation no notes, sources or multi-media links uploaded ( you add after people created) • https://familysearch.org/upload/trees • Google ‘Family Tree: Quick Start Guide’
1000memories.org • One of many photo album sites (bought in October last year by Ancestry.com) • Has an Android & iPhone App • Can share your photos on your family tree on Ancestry.com($) • Problem – If your tree has many people you will be unable to find the person on the iPhone. You will have to attach it through a web brower into your Ancestry.com account.
Enter or upload Tree • GEDCOM – Genealogy Exchange Format • Current limitation no notes, sources or multi-media links uploaded ( you add after people created) • Compares to current submitted Trees (you get to say if it’s a match and what facts will be attached to the tree) • Watch people of the same name • Submit only a few names at a time or hand enter them
Sharing Family Storieson iPad and online Jeri J. Steele, President BGAMUG, Bowling Green, KY jjs@PioneerInfoServices.com