Louis Kessler’s Behold Blog The Behold User Forum
Louis Kessler (lkessler) Blog Entries
1.
Success at Transcribing Russian Handwriting with AI! - Blog entry by lkessler - 15 Nov 2024
Back in February, I wrote Can Artificial Intelligence Read Russian Handwriting?. I tried the tool Transkribus which looked promising, but did not do well at all. I forgot all about this until I started working with my sister’s niece Kim on my sister’s husband’s genealogy. Kim successfully used the ...
2.
FamilySearch CETs - Blog entry by lkessler - 13 Nov 2024
Here’s something new for those who would like to try it. FamilySearch has for a long time allowed uploads of private trees to its space called Genealogies.Those trees were searchable by others but were not editable. To update them, you had to upload a new tree. Quietly, FamilySearch has started a new ...
3.
What’s Your CC7? - Blog entry by lkessler - 28 Sep 2024
If you’re not a recent user of WikiTree, you might not be familiar with the term CC7. It stands for Connection Count at 7 Degrees. One “Degree” at WikiTree is defined to be a connection to a parent, sibling, child or spouse. Your connections up to 7 degrees are your shortest path to any other person. ...
4.
Creating a New Tree on MyHeritage - Blog entry by lkessler - 2 Jul 2024
MyHeritage is the site where I maintain my family tree information. I have one main tree for my family and my wife’s family along with a place-to-place study of the people who left the town of Mezhirichi in the Russian Empire in the early 1900’s to come to Winnipeg and their families. This tree now has ...
5.
Behold Version 1.99 Beta - Blog entry by lkessler - 25 Jun 2024
Today, I released a new version of Behold. This has been a long time coming as I’ve been working on it off and on for the past number of years. I gave my last status report in February that had some thoughts as to where I’m taking Behold. I wasn’t planning on releasing Version 2.0 of Behold until it was ...
6.
My Biggest Brick Wall - Blog entry by lkessler - 22 May 2024
Will I break it now? Today on Facebook, Alex Krakovsky posted: Alex Krakovsky 34m · Yes, it's true. FamilySearch started publishing Jewish metrical records from the Odesa archive. Something that all of us were waiting for many many many years. So far they have published 81 books. 69 of ...
7.
Retesting my DNA at MyHeritage - Blog entry by lkessler - 22 Apr 2024
I took my first MyHeritage DNA test at RootsTech 2017 in Salt Lake City. At RootsTech 2024 last March, MyHeritage announced Ethnicity Estimation 2.0 which is to be released this June. There are many good reasons to get their new estimates. The estimates will be a free update for all users who tested on ...
8.
Excluding Living People - Blog entry by lkessler - 17 Apr 2024
… and including deceased people. This is something you want your online genealogy programs to do for you. Privacy of living people is important, so you want living people to be excluded. MyHeritage displays living people like this, showing all the people with their birth surname and a given name of ...
9.
Honoring My Parents’ 100th Birthdays - Blog entry by lkessler - 7 Apr 2024
Bertha German was born April 1, 1924 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The youngest of 7 children, living together in a small house at 524 Flora Avenue. Toby Braunstein was born on April 7th, 6 days later and 600 km (370 miles) to the west on the farm in the rural municipality of Tullymet, Saskatchewan, Canada. ...
10.
Remembering What You’ve Searched - Blog entry by lkessler - 27 Mar 2024
Do you often go to a genealogy site and do a specific search (e.g. surnames and places) for your family records? And then do you go back a few weeks later and search for the same information again because you forgot that you searched for it a few weeks ago? And then do you go back a month later and search again ...