Uncategorized

Today’s Cataloging Puzzle

I’m currently cataloging a set of books on the economy of Argentina. Easy peasy, right? Except, when looking for a call number, I noticed that “economic history and conditions, Argentina” is not just broken up by general time periods, but specifically into “early” and “later,” with “early” including “Medieval.” WTF?

Yes, there were people in Argentina during what most folks would recognize as the Medieval period, but Medieval in this sense refers to a European cultural construct. Meaning, there really wasn’t any such thing as a Medieval period in Argentina. And, anyway, colonization of Argentina by Europeans roughly coincided with the end of the European Medieval period, so why include Medieval in the “early” time range. Wouldn’t Precolumbian make more sense?

Genealogy, Letters to Esther

Experience Bliss

I’ve wasted the entire weekend (where on earth did it go?!) working on Esther’s family tree. I was able to make some progress with one line. I also found a bunch of census and land purchase records for some of the Munros. In all the research I did this weekend, I came across a few really wonderful names:

Experience Bliss
Nataniel Toogood
Content Wales
Pelatiah Mason

They’re all good, but the first one is my favorite. She was born in 1649, in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. Those wacky Puritans sure knew how to conjure up an awesome name.

[Addendum: And yes, this means that I got Cumberland Family Tree up and running with 64-bit Windoze. Yay!]

Crankypantsing

Decisions, Decisions…

Friday night (it always happens on a weekend night), I was on the computer and heard splishy-splashy noises coming from a room that had no business making splishy-splashy noises. Hmmm. I went to investigate, and there was water dripping from the overhead light in the bathroom. Water + electricity? Fun! So I went upstairs to tell my wonderful neighbors that it seems like their shower is leaking. Again. They apologized, as if it were their fault Mr. Fix It didn’t actually fix it the last two times he was here.

They called the emergency repair number, and were told someone would be out Saturday ayem, and that I would need to be around as well, so that they could get into my apartment. What for, I can’t imagine. There’s not actually anything broken here, and as soon as the leak is for real fixed, the light should be fine. I mean, it’s not like they’re going to replace the light or wiring. They are too brimful of slackertude for that.

I got up early Saturday morning, just in case. At about 3:00, there was a knock on my door from one of the upstairs guys. Maintenance had called and weren’t going to come out until Monday, because they’d decided that water + electricity was not, in fact, an emergency. Huh.

So apparently, I got up early on Saturday and wasted half the day waiting around, for bupkis. And now, I have to decide whether I’m going to stay home tomorrow, go in to work and leave early, or just go to work as normal and let the maintenance guys figure out how to navigate the dog. I know that if I go to work for the whole day, they’ll show up, and if I stay home, they won’t.

Decisions, decisions…

Art, Crankypantsing, Doodles

Staff Meeting Doodle

Staff Meeting Doodle
gel ink in steno pad
7 1/2 x 6 inches

This was a week of meetings and training sessions. Today’s horror was a 3 hour long workshop on using Outlook’s calendar. Three. Whole. Hours. The less said about it, the better, I think. Even though it was hands-on, I had plenty of time to doodle, and thank goodness for that, or I may have had to poke someone with sharp, pointy objects. It was only slightly less traumatic than Wednesday’s hour-long presentation on libraries in Second Life.

Genealogy

Sweet Success

You can file this under D for Duh.

I figured out the problem with Firefox and Ancestry.com’s image viewer. It was the stupid Norton toolbar that automagically installed itself with FF. I really don’t appreciate that Norton did that, without any instigation from me. I uninstalled its sorry ass, and now all is well in vital document viewing land. w00t! This means no more Internet Explorer BS, which makes the baby Shelly very, very happy.

Now, if the databases I exported from the earlier copy of CFT on the old machine will load properly with the new copy of CFT on this machine, all will be well. The first one is taking its sweet fancy time, and I am not the princess of patience.

Genealogy

Hallelujah!

I have spent the entire day playing around with Family Historian. It is Just Fine. I even ran a few reports, to see how the source citations looked, and they are Just Fine, too. But, it’s still not the program I love with all my heart, and it is going to cost me $60 when the free trial is over.

Sooooo. I tried one last time to track down the problem with Cumberland Family Tree and Vista. Apparently, it’s something to do with CFT changing file names and Vista being a big meanypants about it. I found a message board post from the guy who wrote the program, written in early 2008, saying that he’d released an updated version for Vista. Huzzah! Except, he’s taken down his website and is no longer selling the program. But, I now had a reason to think that there might be a version out there, somewhere, that’d work. A couple of hours of trolling through message boards and I found a saintly soul who was hosting the new version on his own website

I win!

It took me all damned weekend, but I now have CFT back up and running. I feel like a three year old who just found her security blanket. Now I just have to get the back-up databases off my other machine.

Oh! I did actually get something accomplished, though. I found a bunch of census records for Esther’s family (1900-1930). Apparently they were living in Ohio in 1910. I had no idea! Asa’s mother, Emma, was supposedly born in Ohio, so that might help narrow down the search. Or it could just be a coincidence. I also found Asa’s family in the 1860-1880 census, living in Massachusetts. Still no trace of Robert Cooper, because it’s such a common name, and I don’t have a starting point. I expect I could get info on him from Ball State’s archives, though. Surely they’d know something about him, since they named a building after him!

And now, I’m going to go watch mindless teevee, eat ice cream, and maybe even have an adult beverage, because my brain has turned to mush.

Genealogy

Family Historian

Alas, my beloved, horribly out-of-date, and no longer updated genealogy program just plain will not work with Vista. It is for to weep. I spent a good chunk of last week and most of the weekend trying to find a reasonable alternative. The two most promising, My Heritage Family Tree Builder and Legacy both ended up being hugely disappointing.

MHFTB is clunky, ugly as hell, and in my opinion does not handle sources very well. Legacy was even worse. It was horribly un-intuitive, and worse, it’s source input menus kept leading me around in circles, until I wanted to cry. It’s worse than user-unfriendly, it’s actually user hostile. Oh, and it popped up a nag notice every time you tried to use a feature that is only available in the for-pay version. Why not just grey those options out, instead of making me click multiple times? What a pain in the ass! And no, I will not be upgrading to the full-featured. Why the hell would I want to give you money for making me cry?

So, I decided to try Family Historian. It’s kind of pricey (around US$60, I think), but the trial is full-featured. I’d much prefer a time limit than a feature limit. And the 30 days they give you is more than enough to give the software a good trial run. Which I’m doing right now. So far, so good. It seems to handle sources pretty well. It can actually copy events from one individual to another (yay!), and best of all, it works the way I think it should work.

There’s an FH upgrade planned for sometime this spring, but they are promising that anyone who buys now will be able to upgrade for free.

The other thing that is making me cry was that Firefox now seems unable to work with Ancestry.com’s proprietary image viewer. Ancestry has a work-around, but that only managed to crash Firefox. So I’m stuck using IE, which makes me feel like stabbing things with sharp, pointy objects. It’s not just my natural aversion to all things IE, either. The damned browser has security settings that require it to throw warning messages at you every time you try to view an image. And, as if that weren’t enough, when you try to save an image to a specific folder, it (un)helpfully overrides your decision, and puts it in a security threat folder. WTF?! And if you try to add Ancestry.com to IE’s trusted website list—in order to stop the insanity—it then starts popping open a whole new browser window every single time you click a hot link. That’s just plain not reasonable, when you’re doing a lot of searching.

I am doomed to be frustrated.

Crankypantsing, Meta, News & Politics

From the Special Moderation Queue

If you leave comments like this, I am not likely to approve them. Especially if you don’t even have the testicular fortitude to leave a real email address.

the earth, the moon, the stars, liberism, abortion, gay marriage, free sex, killed unborn children, 50 million dead, no problems.

That was left on the Bill O’Reilly-Christian Bale mashup video post. Funny thing is, I had almost made a comment about how much I fucking loathe Billy-O, but decided against it. So whatever this anonymous troll was responding to, it wasn’t anything I actually said. Maybe she and/or he is psychic, in addition to addle-brained?

Seriously, liberism? I am not, nor have I ever been, an ancient Roman. And to wingnuts, isn’t “killing unborn children” the same thing as abortion? So he is not only illiterate, but repetitious. I don’t know what the 50 million dead refers to, but I’m pretty sure it’s not my fault. Gay marriage? Why should straight people have all the misery? The best part, though, is that Trolly McTrollersons seems to be advocating sex with prostitutes. Again, WTF?