Jordan Jones, current President of
the National Genealogical Society, was interviewed by a writer at Evernote a few
months back. They asked for a photo and some screen captures of how he uses
Evernote for genealogy, and created a post about this.
... In this day and age, more documents are becoming digitized and the
challenge is figuring out how to find and organize them. I use Evernote to
capture documents, images, and PDFs I find online, and later add descriptive
notes to these pieces of information. Serious genealogists try to keep a record
of everything they find, even if it’s full of lies and conjecture. (For
example, if you suspect that a document might be fraudulent or inaccurate, you
can make a note of it. If you come across it again, you will know that you
already saw and evaluated it.) Using Evernote, you can add your own notes,
questions, and task boxes to the images of records you find in your research...
Do you use Evernote for your
genealogical research? Do you have other
tips for those already using Evernote for family history research? Or, for those not yet using Evernote for their
genealogical research, how would you “sell” using it?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright
© National Geneal ogical Society,
3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington, Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS
does not imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing
in this blog.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Republication
of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for
non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS .
Please drop us a note telling us where and when you are using the article.
Express written permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles
for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission
to [email protected].
All republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the
copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think
your friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog
post interesting? If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with
NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions for topics for future UpFront
with NGS posts are always
welcome. Please send any suggested topics to [email protected]
I use Evernote daily as my PC's data storage and retrieval system of preference! It shines for family tree building.
ReplyDeleteI'm a 'source document' fanatic - I love images of original documents and photos and such to help bring my relatives back as people from my past.
With Evernote any image I see on my computer monitor I can capture with the press of a button. I can file that picture of a gravestone or that image of a scan of gr-gr whoever's obituary from an on-line newspaper - and - I copy and past the link so I can go right back to the original webpage site anytime.
Evernote beats old papernote books and 3 ring binders with colored section divider tabs!