Louis Kessler’s Behold Blog The Behold User Forum
Blog Entries
181.
The Great Canadian Genealogy Summit - Blog entry by lkessler - 9 Oct 2017
#cangensummit2017 - On Thursday, I’ll be flying 2,600 km (1,600 miles), but still be in Canada, as I travel to Halifax, Nova Scotia for the Great Canadian Genealogy Summit being held from October 13 to 15. I’ll be one of 12 speakers, all of us Canadian, giving 18 talks on various subjects of genealogical ...
182.
Deep Ancestors - Blog entry by lkessler - 2 Oct 2017
In the DMT documentation on the Interpreting Results page, I have a section called Deep Ancestors. It says: If the Triangulated Group is from a common ancestor, then there may be smaller identifiable groups within it that are either from a later crossover down one descendant line (in which case all the ...
183.
Triangulation does NOT mean IBD - Blog entry by lkessler - 25 Sep 2017
When I was first learning about autosomal DNA analysis, just over a year ago, I was under the misconception that if three people triangulate on a segment, then that segment is IBD (Identical by Descent). A segment that is IBD is one that is passed down from a common ancestor. These are the segments you are ...
184.
The IAJGS Conference 2017 - Blog entry by lkessler - 31 Jul 2017
I’ve returned from Orlando after the week-long #IAJGS2017 (International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies) Conference on Jewish Genealogy. This was my 8th International genealogy conference, my first being RootsTech 2012, but it was my first IAJGS Conference. The venue was The Swan ...
185.
DMT Version 1.5.1 and IAJGS and DMT Workshop - Blog entry by lkessler - 18 Jul 2017
I fixed a few bugs in Double Match Triangulator that I found while preparing for my workshop at the IAJGS Conference on Monday. I also changed DMT to display people ordered by longest segment rather than total segments, and released it as Version 1.5.1. I’m looking forward to giving the workshop. We’re ...
186.
Match Categories at FamilyTreeDNA - Blog entry by lkessler - 14 Jul 2017
One option I didn’t realize existed at FamilyTreeDNA until Jay Sage alerted me. You can selectively hide or show the people whose matches are deemed “Immediate”, “Close”, “Distant” or “Speculative”. Here’s Jay’s instructions: In the upper-right corner of the home screen, mouse over the ...
187.
A Pet Peeve - Say the Words: “GEDCOM” and “GEDmatch” - Blog entry by lkessler - 10 Jul 2017
It is very true. The English language is full of inconsistencies. And one of these inconsistences is the pronunciation of the letter “G”. There is the hard “G”, as in: great, gallop, flying, guppy and goat. And there is the soft “G”, as in gentle, giraffe, gem or gymnasium. Hard “G”s ...
188.
Do you #Genchat? - Blog entry by lkessler - 7 Jul 2017
Is it true genealogists have more fun? Unfortunately I had to miss #genchat on Twitter last night. The questions and answers this week were about DNA testing, starting with MRCAs and then branching out. For those of you who do not know what #genchat is, it is a genealogy based Twitter chat that happens every ...
189.
The Pickholtz-Diamond Index of DNA Ashkenazi Jewishness - Blog entry by lkessler - 4 Jul 2017
Some of the least reliable information provided by DNA tests are the ethnicity percentages, also called admixtures. After getting my and my uncle’s DNA test results, I posted my ethnicity results. Our Ashkenazi Jewish percentages came in at 79% and 89% at FamilyTreeDNA and my result came in at 83.8% at ...
190.
False Small Segment Matches at GEDmatch - Blog entry by lkessler - 2 Jul 2017
I just happened to come across a post by Patricia Greber which showed the back of her T-shirt that she made to wears at genealogy conferences. Her shirt shows her family names and GEDmatch kit number and asks: “Are we related?” Patricia obviously wants other genealogists to see this, so I checked with her ...