Wednesday, September 26, 2012

RootsTech Early Bird Registration Now Open



RootsTech, the premier family history and technology conference, will be held at the Salt Palace Convention Center in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah, from 21 March through 23 March 2013.

A full three-day pass (250+ classes) is $219, but they are offering an early bird rate of $149 right now. New this year is a three-day $49 Getting Started track with an early bird rate of $39. 

Visit this link to register for the conference.

Want to know more about RootsTech? This description comes from their excellent Web site at www.rootstech.org:
RootsTech is an opportunity unlike any other to discover the latest family history tools and techniques, connect with experts to help you in your research, and be inspired in the pursuit of your ancestors. It is a conference with a unique emphasis on helping individuals learn and use the latest technology to get started or accelerate their efforts to find, organize, preserve and share their family’s connections and history. Attendees will learn key skills from hands-on workshops and interactive presentations at the beginner, intermediate, and advanced level.
I'm delighted to be joining the list of speakers for RootsTech 2013 and will present "Managing Your Digital Environment on 22 March, helping genealogists with that organizing part. 

I hope to meet you in Salt Lake City!

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Try Out This Cloud Service Provider for One Year - For Free!

If you've been thinking about setting up an online account to back up to the cloud, but haven't found the time to do the research on providers, you should know about a deal from CrashPlan.


CrashPlan, one of Lifehacker's favorite online backup tools, is running a promotion for a free year of unlimited backup for one computer (normally $50) or for up to ten computers for nearly 60% off ($50 for the year instead of $120). Lifehacker's post today states:
The free year includes all of CrashPlan's paid backup service features, including unlimited online storage, web and mobile access, and backing up to friends and family. 
Note that this offer is for Carbonite switchers specifically, and former or current CrashPlan users aren't eligible. (However, all that the promotion seems to check is your email address, so I'm not sure how they know if you're using Carbonite.) 
The offer has no expiration date, but it could be pulled at any time. So if you're looking to switch to a better backup service—for free—hit up the link below now. Once you've got your account, here's how to set up your automated, bullet-proof backup solution with CrashPlan.

Don't worry if you're not a Carbonite subscriber. I signed up for CrashPlan today without it and still got the free deal. 

Let me know what you think of CrashPlan.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

9/11: After the People, the Records

The terrible human toll of the 9/11 terrorist attacks is well known. Irreplaceable historical documents, archives, libraries, and art were also lost that day. CBC-Radio Canada has a piece on the loss of these records, including family records and heirlooms in safe deposit boxes in various banks located in the WTC.

The known list from the CBC:
  • 21 libraries inside the World Trade Center, including that of the Journal of Commerce.
  • Records belonging to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Reuters news agency and the Los Angeles Times reported that files in 3,000 to 4,000 active cases were lost, including ones relating to the agency's investigation into investment banks' divvying up of hot sharesof initial public offerings during the high-tech boom of the 1990s.
  • Files belonging to the Central Intelligence Agency, which had a secret office on the 25th floor of 7 World Trade Center, and the U.S. Secret Service, which based more than 200 agents at its offices in the same building. The 7 World Trade Center building was north of the main towers and was not directly hit in the attack but collapsed later in the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001. In the days after the attacks, CIA and Secret Service staff sifted through debris that had been carted to a Staten Island landfill looking for lost documents, hard drives with classified information and intelligence reports.
  • Active case files of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which investigates discrimination cases. The office said it lost documents in about 45 active case files that could not be easily retrieved, including ones relating to a sexual harassment case against Morgan Stanley, whose offices were also destroyed in the attacks. The records loss delayed some court cases.
  • U.S. trade documents dating back to the 1840s that were housed in the library of the U.S. Customs Service in 6 World Trade Center.
  • The offices of the emergency operations command centre for the City of New York. Former mayor Rudy Giuliani and city officials were criticized for their decision to house the centre at 7 World Trade Center even though at the time it was opened in 1999, the WTC site had already once been targeted, in the 1993 bombing that killed six people.
Firemen pass the sculpture The Sphere for Plaza Fountain, which was the only piece of public art to be salvaged from the wreckage of the World Trade Center complex. The damaged sculpture was relocated to Battery Park as part of a 9/11 memorial. Firemen pass the sculpture The Sphere for Plaza Fountain, which was the only piece of public art to be salvaged from the wreckage of the World Trade Center complex. The damaged sculpture was relocated to Battery Park as part of a 9/11 memorial. Peter Morgan /Reuters
  • Numerous art works in the private collections of businesses and agencies that had offices in the WTC as well as several pieces of public art commissioned by the Port Authority over the years and displayed throughout the complex. Works lost includeWTC Stabile, a red steel sculpture by the late U.S. artist Alexander Calder also known as the Bent Propeller that stood in the WTC courtyard; a large tapestry by Spanish artist Joan Miro that hung in the lobby of 2 World Trade Center; paintings by Pablo Picasso, David Hockney and Roy Lichtenstein; works by Paul Klee and Le Corbusier in the Marriott Hotel's collection; and Auguste Rodin drawings and sculptures owned by the Cantor Fitzgerald brokerage firm, which lost 650 employees in the disaster and whose late founder was a renowned Rodin collector. Parts of the Calder sculpture were recovered but not enough to fully restore the work. A cast of Rodin's The Thinker reportedly resurfaced shortly after Sept. 11 but disappeared again; some believe it was stolen from Ground Zero. The value of art lost was estimated at $100 million from private collections and $10 million in public art.
  • Studios, equipment and art works in the spaces occupied by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council in 5 World Trade Center.
  • The offices and archives of Helen Keller International, the agency founded by deaf and blind activist Helen Keller. Among the documents lost were letters written by Keller. Only a bust of Keller and one book were recovered.
  • Thousands of negatives of photos taken by John F. Kennedy's personal photographer, Jacques Lowe, which had been stored in a safe deposit vault at 5 World Trade Center.
A damaged proof sheet with photos of William DeCosta, the aviation director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, recovered a few blocks from Ground Zero. Much of the Port Authority's archive was destroyed when the north tower in which it was stored collapsed. A damaged proof sheet with photos of William DeCosta, the aviation director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, recovered a few blocks from Ground Zero. Much of the Port Authority's archive was destroyed when the north tower in which it was stored collapsed. National September 11 Memorial & Museum/Associated Press
  • The archives and library of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the region's airports, bridges and the World Trade Center. A spokesman for the organization said it only had a "general idea" of what documents were destroyed but one document that is known to have been lost is the 1921 agreement that created the Port Authority.
  • Artifacts from the 19th-century Lower Manhattan neighbourhood of Five Points. About 900,000 objects excavated from an archeological site uncovered in 1991 a few blocks east of the WTC were stored in a room at the 6 World Trade Center building that was destroyed by the collapse of the north tower. Artifacts from an 18th-century burial ground for free and enslaved Africans that were stored in an adjacent room were saved from among the debris.
  • Case files from the office of the U.S. Attorney of the Southern District of New York.
  • Photographs from the Broadway Theatre Archives.
  • Family records and heirlooms stored in safety deposit boxes and vaults of World Trade Center banks, including a collection of 25 antique hand-woven rugs valued at more tha $500,000 US that had been passed down through generations of Muslim families from the Middle East, North Africa and Southeast Asia.
  • Materials in the Pentagon library, which housed 500,000 books, documents and historical materials and was hit by the nose of the plane that crashed into the building, were damaged but the bulk of them was restored.
  • Twenty-four works in the art collections of the army, navy, air force and marine corps at the Pentagon.