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George Lewis

CDR Longevity – Manufacturers’ Reaction

There has been a lot of discussion all over the place about the life span of your typical CDR. It’s important to genealogists, because we store our data on them, we use them to distribute data to others, we use them as backups, etc. etc.

So just how long do they last? A few weeks ago PC World carried a story of an expert that made the case for a short life span for burned CDs. Now they are carrying a response from some manufacturers, namely TDK and Memorex. TDK says that if properly cared for, it’s products will last upto 70 years. A General Manager for TDK did stress that a controlled room temperature was important.

Keep in mind we are talking CDRs – most people, including those interviewed in the above article recommend against CDRWs.

Memorex is preparing a new product lineup, to be launched in April, called the Pro Gold Archival Media series (CD-Rs and DVD-Rs), that has some pretty beefy claims, including upto 300 years for CDS. No word on prices, but I’m sure many genealogists will be interested to see that lineup once it hits store shelves. We, of all people, realize how important data retention is.

Cemetery Photography Books – Clarke County, Virginia

This is an older story from August of last year, that I came across recently. The Clarke-Times Courier (Virginia) had an article about a retired couple who photographically documented every cemetery in a county and assembled it into a book. That is something I’d love to do in my retirement years. Never the same thing twice, outside, and your helping out a lot of people.

Ancestry.com’s Simplified Subscriptions

James M. Beidler, a genealogy lecturer in Lebanon, PA, has put together a nice little article detailing the changes that Ancestry.com recently made, in regards to their subscriptions, in the Lebanon Daily News. For those just starting out, and thinking about such a subscription, you should definitely read the article.

Want Your Family Tree Researched For Free?

If you have no problems sharing your family information with the world (or rather making it easier to find/see, since the information is already available), Kimberly Powell over at Genealogy.About.com will research your family history online for free – she’s looking for people to do a case study on.

TV-Branded Genealogy Software?

Can you imagine genealogy software branded with the name of a popular TV show? That’s what happens when you combine the hit BBC TV show, ‘Who Do You Think You Are?‘ with Family Tree Maker. Genealogy Software News has information on a review of the software.

I’m not surprised considering the popularity, and it looks like it’s only for the UK market. It’s interesting. The reviewers that Genealogy Software News points to complained that it felt like it was trying to pull them into subscribing to Ancestry.com (or Ancestry.co.uk in their case). Hmmmm…didn’t see that coming….