Sunday, October 13, 2013
Genealogy Roadshow Ends Tomorrow. Will It Return?
Apparently the Genealogy Roadshow production company is planning for the show to return to PBS next season. The final show for season one filmed in Austin is due to air tomorrow night. A website at www.grcasting.com is soliciting applications for next season. I can only assume that "grcasting" stands for Genealogy Roadshow casting.
Let's hope they are starting production early enough the second time around so that more DNA results can be included if appropriate. In the shows aired thus far this season the time schedule did not seem to allow testing results to get back from the lab in time to be included except for a couple of admixture reports. Although admixture reports can answer some genealogical questions, in most cases they are now the softest science in DNA testing. The DNA results are not wrong. However, the underling population studies are too scanty for most geographic areas to make highly accurate predictions that can be relied on to tie a set of results to specific locations at specific times.
DNA testing is not appropriate to answer all genealogical questions. However, it is strange that Who Do You Think You Are? went a whole season without any on camera testing and Genealogy Roadshow had only a token amount. Could this be because autosomal testing is the focus for Ancestry.com the lead corporate sponsor for WDYTYA? Autosomal testing is great for sorting out close relationships, but it is only one tool in the kit of a well prepared genetic genealogist.
Dr D's New Toy: Family On My Phone
I finally gave up my old Blackberry phone that I have had
for years. My wife has been through several phones since I got
"Dingleberry." On Friday, October 4th, she got a new Samsung Galaxy
Note 3 "phablet" –a cross between a phone and a tablet computer. I
then inherited her old Samsung Galaxy S 4 phone that has been out for a few
months. By so doing I joined the Android world.
The next day I learned why I needed an Android. RootsMagic
whose database programs I have been using for years to store and organize my genealogy
data announced they were looking for beta testers for a new Android app. This
app will allow you to upload a file of your genealogy information to your
phone. I immediately signed up. I now carry about 25,000 relatives around in my
pocket. I also carry about 12,000 of my wife’s ancestors.
This app is a reader only. While I can view the information,
I cannot edit it on my phone. While it
is nice to be able to whip out my phone and look up some information, greedy me
would like to be able to edit it on the fly and have it sync back to my desktop
and laptop computers. Oh well, I’m sure that will be possible sometime soon.
For quite a while I have been using Dropbox to sync my desktop and my laptop. When I am at home I
prefer to work on my desktop computer. When I want to sync to my laptop, I just
need to make sure that I have closed all the files on my desktop and that they
are saved to the Dropbox folder. Then I boot up my laptop and it immediately
syncs any files I have updated or created since I last used the laptop. Not
only does this keep my files in sync, it backs up my data so that I have copies
in three places – in the cloud and on both of my computers.
For now I’ll have to be content just to read my genealogy information
from my phone. It includes all the information including census notes and other
notes on individuals. It now features pedigree, family, descendants and
individual views. It is a great feature for “show and tell” to impress your
friends. It is also useful to be able to lookup information on your family
instantly no matter where you are and whether or not you have cell or Wi-Fi
coverage and even if you are operating in that soon to be obsolete airplane
mode.
There are still a few bugs in the app. The surname search
feature seems to have redundant steps and sometimes causes the app to lock up.
RootsMagic tech staff members have already asked for copies of my data so that
they can work with it to test the search feature. I’m sure there are other bugs
in it that I have not yet stumbled into.
However, I’m enjoying the ability to take my family with me where ever I
go.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)