Archive for March 28th, 2008

It's Our Tree logo

It’s Our Tree is a genealogy service that lets people create very easy family trees using Adobe Flash. Like Geni (review) and Kindo (review), the idea is to get your entire family involved by inviting them to join and add family members they remember. It doesn’t offer some advanced services like DNA sleuthing using cheek cells, but it’s incredibly easy to get started, and the finished product can double as a Rolodex, birthday reminder, and private e-mail system for you and your family.

Like Geni and others, to get started you simply add family members using the directional arrows found on each person’s block. There’s support for divorces, first, second, and third marriages, half siblings, and any other oddly conceived (literally) member of your extended family. It also supports nine different languages, meaning if you’re trying to share your tree with your Italian grandmother she’ll be able to see it in her language, including the invite to participate. It’s a nice touch if your family is spread out.

Each family member you (or others) create gets his or her own profile in case you feel like turning the service into an updatable family phone tree. My one irk with this is that they don’t take advantage of a pre-existing contact-management service like Plaxo, Gmail’s contact list, or LinkedIn to save you some time of having to dig all that up. What does make these profiles interesting is that you can add all sorts of geo-data to your family members including the place of birth, death, burial, and present location. This information can be toggled on a large Google map, which can lead to some really great exploration if you’re willing to spend the time researching and inputting it all. Ancestry.com’s DNA service will do something similar, even though it actually shows you where your family is from based on cultural migration.

I’m giving this service a thumbs up, even though if you’re already tied to one of these services, its feature set is almost identical to Geni and Kindo, so give it a look before trying to get your whole family to convert. Grandma will state grazie.

Make your family tree swiftly and easily with It's Our Tree. It's got support for half siblings, deaths, and geo-location for where people were born. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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OK, this makes more sense.

CNET News.com reported earlier on a collaboration between crafts site Etsy and the NASA Ames Research Center on a new contest that encourages members of the Etsy community to design NASA-inspired handmade goods. The announcement was made at the PSFK Conference in New York …

Source [The social]

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Petroecuador Oriente Price $88.65/Bbl Mar 25; Napo $82.40/Bbl Last Update: 3/28/2008 12:41:35 PM QUITO (Dow Jones)–The average price of Petroecuador’s Oriente crude oil for export was at $88.65 per barrel on March 25, down 3% from $91.40 a barrel on March 18, Petroecuador said Friday. The price was 83% higher than an average of $48.37 per barrel in March 2007, Petroecuador […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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SimpleBucket.com

Looks like I’ve found a partial replacement for my beloved dead-pooled pic annotation tool 2view. Check out SimpleBucket, an aptly named photo host that lets you upload and share up to five photographs at a time, and let others mark them up with onscreen notes. It’s one of my favorite features in Flickr, and I’m glad to see it beginning to reach elsewhere.

Adding notes works just as it does on Flickr, even though there’s a nice option to toggle them off entirely, which means the accidental mouse over won’t make them appear (which can be annoying). SimpleBucket doesn’t show you who has left the note–which makes it far less social, but it also doesn’t require any registration from others to mark their territory. Unfortunately the notes you make on the photo pages don’t travel with the photo embeds, something that made 2View a lot of fun.

The service has an unusual method of having users upload their shots. There’s not a bulk uploader or any sort of system to group photos together into albums; instead, it makes you add pics one at a time (up to five per upload) as you’d do in a Web e-mail. You then have to plug in your e-mail address to get a secret log-in link to your account. SimpleBucket lets up upload up to 500 shots total with its free account. An upcoming pro service will give users unlimited storage, even though in its current state I wouldn’t advocate it over the myriad of other free photo hosts, including Flickr, which offers a much more social experience.

Add notes to any photo with SimpleBucket, a free photo hosting service.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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OK, this makes more sense.

CNET News.com reported earlier on a collaboration between crafts site Etsy and the NASA Ames Research Center on a new contest that encourages members of the Etsy community to design NASA-inspired handmade goods. The announcement was made at the PSFK Conference in New York …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

Win a “green house” that comes with a large SUV.

How’s that again? The green blogs are in an amused and outraged tizzy about a new contest from the folks at HGTV. In conjunction with the presentation of its annual green home, the network is holding a sweepstakes that you can enter to win the Hilton Head, South Carolina house, totally furnished with lots of eco-friendly goodies.

So far, so good. But guess what else comes in the prize package: an SUV. Now to be fair, the SUV in question is the GMC Yukon Hybrid, which, according to GMC, “offers a 50% improvement in city fuel economy with the performance, ability and comfort of a full-size SUV.”

OK, but the mileage is still only an estimated 21 mpg city/22 mpg highway, and that just seems uncool in conjunction with a contest that’s promoting green living.

What’s better are the appliances inside the house, such as the Kenmore HE5t Steam Washer, which uses 73 percent less water and 77 percent less energy than typical washers. That’s a green prize worth winning.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Commentary by Michael Lewis March 26 (Bloomberg) — On March 14, a Friday, the market believed that Bear Stearns Cos. was worth $30 a share. Say what you will about Bear Stearns on that day, you can’t state that it was flying below the radar. It was as intently scrutinized as a public corporation can be, by […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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