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=====Why this Format?===== | =====Why this Format?===== | ||
- | Any wiki, most famously wikipedia, is a site that allows anybody to log in and update pages. This allows you to enter data as it becomes available, easy to update at any time. | + | Starting out, I had three goals for my genealogy data: 1) put it online so anyone can access it, 2) put it into a book form so that it can be read on paper or shared with people who don't appreciate computers, 3) be able to update it easily as new information comes in. A bonus would be if other people could update it on their own, if they had the interest and data to share. |
- | There are many online genealogy sites that allow you to do much the same, the best known are Ancestry.com (which has some nice features like census page look-ups, but to make use of most features you need a rather pricey membership) and FamilySearch.com (run by the Latter-Day Saints, so it's free). FamilySearch uses a wiki format and encourages you to connect up to existing family trees already entered by other members. The problem is sometimes you find an individual already in 2 or more trees, with slightly differing details (number of siblings, birth date, etc). You can merge the individuals if you're sure it's really the same person, but you're kind of trampling on other people's data at that point. | + | The solution to me was to use a wiki. Any wiki, most famously wikipedia, is a site that allows anybody to log in and update pages. This allows you to enter data as it becomes available, easy to update at any time. |
- | By having my own wiki site, first, it's specific to the Ungerecht family. Secondly, I can make sure no bad data is entered (although I anticipate I will be the primary author, at least for some time). And as an important bonus, there is a PDF export feature, so the whole site can be exported at any time with the latest data as an Ungerecht Family Tree booklet. | + | There are many online genealogy sites that allow you to do much the same, and they have nice graphical trees you can click on. The best known are Ancestry.com (which has some nice features like census page look-ups, but to make use of most features you need a rather pricey membership) and FamilySearch.com (run by the Latter-Day Saints, so it's free). FamilySearch uses a wiki format and encourages you to connect up to existing family trees already entered by other members. The problem is sometimes you find an individual already in 2 or more trees, with slightly differing details (number of siblings, birth date, etc). You can merge the individuals if you're sure it's really the same person, but you're kind of trampling on other people's data at that point, and asking them to make the merge will often get you nowhere. Finally, with any of these sites I would never be able to make a usable book of just our family and some relevant side data of my choosing. |
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+ | So by having my own wiki site, first, it's specific to the Ungerecht family. Secondly, I can make sure no bad data is entered (although I anticipate I will be the primary author, at least for some time). And most wikis have a PDF export feature, so the whole site can be exported at any time with the latest data as an Ungerecht Family Tree booklet. | ||
====Editing pages==== | ====Editing pages==== |