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Cloud Computing and Genealogical Collaboration

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Cloud Computing and Genealogical Collaboration

  1. 1. Birdie Holsclaw 1
  2. 2. The Birdie Monk Holsclaw Memorial Fund http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~coccgs/ Council-birdie.htm or http://bit.ly/birdie-fund 2
  3. 3. Cloud Computing & Genealogical Collaboration: How Technology Can Help Us Work Together The First Birdie Monk Holsclaw Memorial Lecture National Genealogical Society Family History Conference 2011 Jordan Jones 3
  4. 4. Roadmap • What is Cloud Computing? • How Can Genealogists Use the Cloud? • What Are the Risks? • Are You Already Using the Cloud? 4
  5. 5. Pupils of the Colorado School for the Deaf & Blind 5
  6. 6. Computing? What is Cloud “Cloud Computing,”Sam Johnston, 2009. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_computing.svg This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license. 6
  7. 7. Definition of the Cloud Computation Software Data Access Storage Services • The cloud does “not require end-user knowledge of the physical location and configuration of the system that delivers the services.” 7
  8. 8. In Other Words ... • Previously, everyone who wanted to host a website or manage a lot of data had to buy servers, configure, and maintain them, or arrange for someone else to do this. • Now, a layer of abstraction has been built, allowing servers, software, databases and storage to be commoditized, delivered, and maintained in bulk. • The cloud allows people to know less and less about the systems they use, because it “just works.” (Most of the time.) 8
  9. 9. Aspects of the Cloud • Accessible APIs (application programmer’s interfaces) • Cost containment • Device and location independence • Scalability • Reliability • Maintenance and upgrades 9
  10. 10. The Cloud Means Cloud Computing, unattributed, 2010. Device-Independence http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_applications.jpg, This file is made available under the Creative Commons CC 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. 10
  11. 11. How Can Genealogists Use the Cloud? 11
  12. 12. Genealogical Uses for the Cloud • Digital Memory • Collaborative Authoring • Remote Backup • File and Folder Sync • Voice Services • Operating System 12
  13. 13. Digital Memory 13
  14. 14. Digital Memory • Store multimedia • Quick and easy (digital audio, video, images, text, files) • access (platform ubiquity) • Replaces “taking notes” • web clipping • Annotation • note taking • Tagging • tasks and reminders • Privacy • social media 14
  15. 15. Digital Memory for Genealogists • Capture information where you are (courthouse, cemetery, interviewing family) • Quickly store that information and make it available on multiple machines, or even share it with other genealogists • Can completely get rid of paper notes you take in repositories, or it has for me • Can function as a research log and research plan • Can be set up to work with social media, or to be private 15
  16. 16. Evernote (Notebooks) 16
  17. 17. Evernote (Tags) 17
  18. 18. Evernote (Tags) 18
  19. 19. Evernote (Media) 19
  20. 20. SpringPad (Books) 20
  21. 21. Collaborative Authoring 21
  22. 22. Google Docs • Native editing • Create dynamic forms interface and surveys • Upload many file • http:// formats googledocs.blogspot. com/ • Upload entire folders • Share authoring and editing rights with one person or everyone 22
  23. 23. Google Docs 23
  24. 24. Zoho • Like Google, Zoho has • Meetings a suite of web tools • Project Planning • Chat • Wiki • Docs • Discussions • E-mail 24
  25. 25. Zoho Docs 25
  26. 26. Other Competition for Google Docs • Microsoft Office Live www.officelive.com/ • Apple www.iwork.com • Evernote • File Sharing (but not online editing): • Dropbox.com • Box.net 26
  27. 27. Remote Backup 27
  28. 28. Not Just Backup ... Remote Backup • If you backup your data only locally, a local disaster could destroy both your computer and your backup • Remote backup via cloud services • Mozy - Used to provide unlimited backup for a reasonable price. Continues to provide powerful backup features, but with a pricier model. • CrashPlan http://www.crashplan.com/ - My current favorite. Reasonably priced unlimited backup, plus “build-your-own-cloud” backup to friends machines over the Internet 28
  29. 29. CrashPlan • The software (Windows, Mac, Linux, Solaris) is free • Backup to a friend’s computer over the Internet - free • Backup your own computers - again, free • Backup to an attached drive - you guessed it, free • Backup to CrashPlan servers, or other cloud-based servers, such as Amazon Web Services - starting at $25 / year 29
  30. 30. CrashPlan - Shared Backups 30
  31. 31. File and Folder Sync 31
  32. 32. Sync • Keep files in sync between multiple machines • Windows • Mac OS • Linux • Mobile devices (iOS, Android) 32
  33. 33. Dropbox • Syncs with any single folder on your hard drive, and its subfolders • Automatically keeps the Dropbox folder synced to the cloud and then down to your configured systems • 2 GB of free; up to 100 GB or more in paid accounts • Windows, Mac, and Linux, as well as the iOS, BlackBerry, and Android mobile operating systems 33
  34. 34. SugarSync • Provides both sync and backup • Can sync any files or folders on your system (not just a single folder and everything below it) • Especially good with multimedia, such as audio and image files, automatically streaming audio and making images viewable in albums • 5GB free; up to 250 GB in paid accounts • Windows, Mac, and Linux, as well as the iOS, 34
  35. 35. Zumo Drive • Both file- and folder-level sharing is available. • Syncs photos with iPhoto, Picasa, or the Windows Pictures folder, and also provides a cloud-based photo album. • 2 GB is free; up to 500 GB is available in the paid plan. • Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, Android and Palm Pre. 35
  36. 36. Voice Services 36
  37. 37. Google Voice • Free account to receive visual voicemail (automated transcription) and actual phone calls, routed to one or more phones, as you configure based on day of the week and time • Make Internet calls to the US or Canada for free through 2011, with the ability to record incoming calls; perfect for recording research interviews • Now integrates with Sprint, meaning that Sprint users can change the number of their cell phone to be their Google Voice number, or vice versa 37
  38. 38. Operating System 38
  39. 39. Google Chrome OS • Operating System designed for the cloud • Minimal local disk drive • All content files saved to the cloud • Designed for the convergence of cloud and mobile • All your content is anywhere you can log into the OS • Completes the migration away from desktop machines that started with the first laptop in 1983 39
  40. 40. Google Chrome OS 40
  41. 41. What Are the Risks? 41
  42. 42. Security and Resiliency • Nothing in life (or on the Internet) is guaranteed • Servers can go down, even with planned redundancy and resilience, as we saw with Amazon Web Services in the last couple of weeks • Dozens of cloud-based websites rely on a small number of major cloud players (Amazon, RackSpace) • There can be privacy concerns, as have recently surfaced with Dropbox, Evernote, and others 42
  43. 43. However ... • You are much more likely to lose files because you didn’t back them up than because your remote backup service failed. • You are much more likely to undergo a catastrophic failure of your personal hard drive than that a cloud service will fail. Additionally, the cloud service will be more likely to have a working backup. • If you are concerned about privacy, you can encrypt your data before sending it to the cloud to backup or share. • In terms of managing risk, using the cloud is preferable to not using it 43
  44. 44. Are You Already Using the Cloud? 44
  45. 45. Do You Use? • Google Products: Google Docs, Gmail, Picasa, GoogleMaps • Yahoo Products: Yahoo, Flickr • AmericanAncestors.com uses Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Solution) to deliver records images • FamilySearch.org uses Amazon EC2 (Electronic Compute Cloud) and other Amazon cloud services to dynamically add servers during peak load times and to quickly deliver new versions of its website 45
  46. 46. Thank You These slides will be available at: www.genealogymedia.com/talks/ 46

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