Louis Kessler’s Behold Blog The Behold User Forum
Blog Entries
1.
Three Genealogy Conferences I Wish I Could Have Gone To - Blog entry by lkessler - 26 May 2025
Between 2012 and 2018, I attended 11 international genealogy conferences. They included: 3 times RootsTech in Salt Lake City (2012, 2014 and 2017) 2 Unlock the Past genealogy cruises around Australia and New Zealand (2013 and 2016) the Geanovium genealogy technology conference in Leiden, the ...
2.
Connection Count Relationship Notation (CCRN) - Blog entry by lkessler - 9 Apr 2025
As I work hard to finish up what is in the soon to be released Behold 1.999, there was another notation I needed to devise. Those of you who have worked with WikiTree will be aware of their introduction of connection counts. It was a couple of years ago when the imagineers at WikiTree came up with the concept ...
3.
MyHeritage’s Record Matches and Discovery Settings - Blog entry by lkessler - 23 Mar 2025
One of the best reasons to have your family tree on one of the major online sites MyHeritage, Ancestry or FamilySearch, is because of their record matching systems. They will go out and find records for the individuals in your tree from among the billions of records in their collections and make them available ...
4.
Using AI Bots for Programming - Blog entry by lkessler - 16 Mar 2025
I’m working hard on Version 2 of Behold, and I needed to write some code to strip out HTML from a string. This would be so Behold could display the text embedded in the HTML correctly without formatting. Since I’m a Windows and Office 360 aficionado, I get a version of Microsoft’s AI bot named Copilot ...
5.
RootsTech 2025 - Blog entry by lkessler - 8 Mar 2025
Over the past 3 days, RootsTech took place in Salt Lake City. RootsTech is the largest annual genealogy conference in the world, with tens of thousands of in person attendees and several million online attendees. I went to RootsTech in person three times, in 2012, 2014 and 2017. In 2018. RootsTech started ...
6.
Continuing Education 2024 - Blog entry by lkessler - 1 Jan 2025
A few years ago, the Association of Professional Genealogists @APGgenealogy started requiring that members report at least 12 hours of Continuing Education each year. I found the task of listing my CE time quite interesting and have posted them each year. Below is my Continuing Education activity list ...
7.
Programmers Solve Problems Like Genealogists Do - Blog entry by lkessler - 8 Dec 2024
I’m working hard on Behold to get Version 0.99.1 Beta released. It will include GEDCOM export which I think will make it a valuable tool for many genealogists. It has been taking longer to finish the GEDCOM export than I had hoped, partly because of opportunities to work on my own genealogy (which I don’t ...
8.
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 ...
9.
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 ...
10.
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. ...