Monday, September 3, 2012

Evernote~Your External Brain


This summer has been a wild and crazy time.  We have been gone more than we have been home.  But now things are settling in a little and I have to tell you I am beginning to love conferences.   The summer held two excellent ones for me.  I attended the 4 day Family History and Genealogy Conference at Brigham Young University in Utah and The Evernote Trunk Conference in San Francisco which was just one very full day.  

There are several things I'd love to share from the 4 day conference at BYU but the syllabus is several hundred pages and waiting patiently on my desk for me to get to it.  If you are interested in genealogy you can see some of the posts on this blog.  {http://alegacythat matters.blogspot.com}  So let me just tell you a little about Evernote today.

Evernote has been around and being developed since 2007-08.  It is a life management system.  It is yet another way to organize and store information.  As we are continually barraged with more and more vital information via the Internet and other places, these types of programs are emerging to help us cope with it and organize it.  Organizing on a new level just makes sense so we can be more productive and efficient. Remember the days when a big calendar would pretty much cover life events for us?  Those days seems to be gone forever.  Remember the Old Franklin Day Planners we lugged around?

 Well Evernote is the new and improved, electronic version and so superior to the old methods, and obsolete ways of keeping on top of our lives.  With the advent of the computer age we soon had the world at our finger tips and the largest library in the world on each and every desktop.  Now we not only have all of that but with Evernote  we can pick and choose to store and massage anything on the Web and everywhere else via scanning.  We can organize them in our own private storage notes and notebooks and they are completely searchable by keywords and tags.

You see an article you want to read later or save?  Evernote.  You can delete anything once you no longer need it.  You want to save photos and videos or music...Evernote.  You want to keep your own notes from a conference or meeting or your study notes for any facet of your life...Evernote.  You want to write or save blog posts, emails or documents...Evernote. You want to plan and organize events, projects, etc...Evernote.  This is just the tip of the iceberg of what Evernote can do for you.  Do you hate sorting and organizing receipts and expenses for business deductions or your personal income taxes?    I  do.  Scan all receipts and categorize them and you have everything you need long before you visit your accountant. The possibilities are endless for how Evernote can help you manage your life.

I personally think it is the best system out there for staying on top of your "beautiful" life.  (Evernote's phase!)  Evernote is for individuals not for big corporations.  It can easily make small business ventures much more efficient with 500 or less employees and they are working on going bigger.  Their goal is 10,000 employees right now.  It has a 100 year business plan.  They plan to be around a long time  and I think they will be.

They call Evernote your external brain!  So there is a tremendous business application to using Evernote but their customers are you and me; just ordinary people that want to be on top of their lives. I think it is great when we just want to de-stress and not have to remember so many things day and night.  I have been using it for a few months and already I feel more relaxed because I can get to what I need in just a few seconds anywhere I am.  Now that I know so much more about it I am really ready to use it more.

For me the practical application for it with genealogy is keeping searchable research notes that don't have to be keyboarded or scanned in from my hand-written notes and they are searchable.  Oh and did I mention you can also share with others and collaborate with them on various things should you wish? That has great family history application.

You can read about Evernote and sign up for free as long as you are inputting less that 60 megabytes or less per month.  If you go over you will want their premiere subscription which is unlimited and has many more features for $5.00 per month.

The program is cloud based like Dropbox or Google Cloud but it has one feature that makes it better.  It is not just a place to store things in a cloud but you can actually create notes for yourself by writing right on the site.  It is compatible with all operating systems which is a big advantage to everyone who uses mobile devices or stationary devices that start with an i.  iPhone, iPod, iMac, MacBook Pro and iPads.  It is compatible with all windows bases computers and all mobile (non-apple) devices as well.  It also is in beta testing for feature phone users which is about 3/4 of the entire world's cell phone users.  (Feature phones are the old Nokias, etc. we use to have or in some cases, still do.)

The other outstanding feature of Evernote to me is you can write your notes on the computer or any of your mobile devices and then they become available to you anywhere when they automatically sync on all your devices.

 So no more notes scribbled in a notebook and never found again without inputting as a document and filing electronically or printing it out and paper filing.  Yay!  I am in love.  This is a solution that I have struggled with for day one in genealogy.  I never could fit my narratives into those tiny little boxes on research logs.  So I used spiral notebooks.  Don't do it for genealogy.  Use Evernote so you can actually find your notes!  Imagine that!  And just in case you have some hand-written notes you want to keep you can just snap a photo with your digital camera or smart phone and save it on Evernote with the Evernote App!  They have even partnered with Moleskine Notebooks and you can draw or write notes or whatever you like, add an identifying sticker that comes with the notebook and Evernote will file it for you!  I am really excited about their product and their company.  The employees just exude happiness, one that cannot be feigned. 

In my opinion, the best way to get started is to do the tutorials on the website @ http://evernote.com or YouTube.  Love to watch someone demo it...I never could follow the geek manuals.  Too dry and confusing and now too heavy!

Well, I hope I have gotten you excited about just thinking about looking at it to see if you could benefit from Evernote.  I know there are lots of places for storing info these days and it can be overkill.  And some of you are just totally fine with your own systems.

What I love about Evernote is it is easy, and effective.  And there is room for all of my interests and activities and goals and the like.  I can see that it is aptly called "an external brain" and I know I need this as my internal brain is pretty much fried these days, just trying to become better at genealogy.  I need all the help I can get!

Won't you just go to evernote.com and see for yourself?  And let me know what you decide!

Thanks!
Bonnie

Friday, August 31, 2012

Unselfish Service




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qwjc9T4Rd98

The Things That Matter Most


Thursday, August 23, 2012

"Quote"...UnQuote


"When you long for blessings that you may not name,
and when you grieve knowing not the cause,
then indeed you are growing with all things that grow,
and rising toward your greater self.~ Khalil Gibran♥"


I have always like Khalil Gibran, We even had one of his poems read at our wedding back in 1968. I have usually agreed with all he has written so I like to think I can adopt this as well.  In the past when I have gotten these feelings I would feel kind of restless and unsettled.  But now I will just relax and go with it and think I am growing and becoming my greater self.  What an awesome way to view something that use to feel negative to me... I am grateful to have found this today.

My sweet friend, Marie, posted this on her Facebook page today
 and I just loved it so much and wanted to keep it. 
 So I am filing it here and sharing it with you.
 Please visit Marie @A Year At Oak Cottage. 
She is wonderful writer, chef and painter. 

Monday, August 13, 2012

A Simple Woman's Daybook~August 13, 2012



Just for today~Monday, August 13, 2012
 ,
Our lives pass swiftly by! I want to do something to remember
the everyday moments and my thoughts about them.  
That is what this daybook is all about.
Focusing on the little things that become my life.
One week at a time.


 

Outside my window...It is sunny and warm.  I can see our American Flag just hanging on its pole on the side of the house and the hydrangeas on the porch look a little pekid.  A little water should fix them right up again.  They are pink and so pretty. Laura and the boys just went to the trampoline center for a couple of hours leaving me a few moments to create a daybook entry this afternoon.  We have had several hot days in a row and with no a/c I am beginning to get grumpy about it.  It is actually very pleasant until about 4:00 pm when suddenly it gets very hot and stays that way until midnight.  Ugh.




I am thankful for...The wonderful past three weeks while we have been in Utah for two weeks and now home with Laura and the boys for another week.  It has been wonderful.  I must admit I am pretty tired.  Just not use to being busy 24x7 in spite of the fact that this entire year has been like this.  As Jen says, "2012 is not one I want to do over!"  There has been so much going on and most of it very good stuff...just non-stop.  Some where in the midst of it all I turned 65 and am feeling it.
 
From the learning room...So so much and that is another reason why I am bushed.  I went to a four day conference at BYU and it just blew my mind.  There are some amazingly intelligent people out there in the genealogy and family history field.  I have a two and half inch thick syllabus to go over.  Not sure when that is going to happen.  I just hope I don't forget everything by the time I get the chance. But I am just so thankful for all we have been able to do with our family this year.

I am reading...Sacrificed for Honor, an amazing historical research piece on infant abandonment in European countries for centuries (17th, 18th and 19th) to maintain the honor of unwed mothers.  Very interesting, very sad, very eye-opening.  It was recommended to me and I got it on Amazon.  Italy had the highest rates of abandonment over 37,000 babies in one year in the 1800's.  Interesting links to religion, economics and politics and other societal issues.  Still reading this in bits and peaces and now sharing it aloud with Jim.

From the kitchen...I made my mom's famous potato salad for a dinner we had yesterday.  I peeled 12.5 pounds of potatoes and added a dozen eggs and other stuff and it was immense.  It took me 2 and a half hours.  There was plenty to go around and I sent my brother home with a bowl of his own.  We also had strawberry shortcake with Laura making the shortcakes from scratch, garlic bread, Tri-tip and skewered mushrooms on the barbie, fruit and green salads.  I also made a dill dip and that is the most I have cooked in I cannot tell you how long.  Laura and the boys and Jim helped too so it was a big group effort.  But as far as I can see I am outta the kitchen for a few days.  I do have to make a salad for tonight as we have been invited to Jim's mom's for dinner.  


Laura had to stand on a chair to get this
 gianormous bowl in the photo

I am missing...normal, we have been on the go for so long.  And Robert he will be home from Afghanistan in the not too distant future.  God bless him and protect him until he is home safe and sound....and beyond.


Some spiritual thoughts I have been having...I am just so happy we share common beliefs, standards and values with so many family members and good friends.  It is like a large comfort zone of like-minded loved ones.


I am hearing...Aida by Sarah Mc Lachlan...love her songs.

One of my guilty pleasures...writing.  I truly have missed it and am trying to jump back on with all my might.  5 posts on the blog this week!  Miraculous.

Pet Peeves...How fragile things are sometimes.  We just have to keep constantly nurturing all the good in our lives.  I wish it could just come flowing to us without the constant work sometimes, but life is not like that.  Only Christ's gifts are free and everything else takes working continually.  It is nice to have that oasis in Christ..knowing he always loves us purely, always treats us fairly, always listens and understands.  It makes the rest more doable.  Where others let us down we can be assured he never will.


I am going...to go and make that salad for dinner in a few minutes.

I am quoting...this picture



We are huggers around here
 and that makes me very happy!
 
An enjoyable movie we have watched lately...nothing lately.  Gotta fix that!


I am curious about...The upcoming election.  Most people have probably decided by now and will vote according to their conscience.  The people that are so annoying are the ones that have to keep being critical of other people's opposite choices by badgering and throwing it up in their faces.  I like the approach of respecting each other and keeping differing politics out of relationships. Now if you happen  to agree with each other...go for it.  Just don't disrespect someone else's choice in a rude way. But the perplexing part is this election is just not like that.  Curious, indeed.  We are going to war ourselves right out of our freedoms if we continue on as we are headed now.


If I could change one thing it would be...that things that seem to never change no matter what you do...would.


Plans for the rest of the week...tomorrow delivering a few gifts to people that I keep missing, hanging out with Laura and the boys and Jim and going with Laura and the kids to the Farmers' Market in the morning, tomorrow night going to the Family Search Library with Laura to work on some stuff while Jim takes the boys to a swimming party.  Wednesday we are having a jewelry party here so have treats to get organized.  We are looking forward to having some friends come to see Laura while she is here.  Thursday Laura and I are going overnight to a small town near by for some unadulterated girl time.  Just the two of us.  We have some fun plans including a massage, high tea luncheon and who knows what else?  I adore having them here it is the best.  We are having a great time.  They will not be back on the west coast for two years. So that means we'll be going back east because there is no way we cannot see them for that long.  Sadly they leave on Saturday.  Then it is back to business as usual.  Bittersweetness!


 One of my favorite things...fresh cherries and my sweet Ross just brought me a little bowl of them accompanied by a huge hug and sweet talk for his Gramma. I am in love with being a grandmother.  Is there anything sweeter, I ask you?  Life is good!

Some photos I am sharing this week... this is our buffet dinner from last night.  Wish you could have joined us.  I forgot to take a photo of the strawberry short cake. (One of our favorite desserts.)




Green Salad with lots of cherry tomatoes, red and yellow!


Garlic Bread


Fruit salad Thanks Emmy!)


The Potato Salad


Bob and Beth's fresh off the vine cherry tomatoes


The Steak


My cousin Bob and his wife Beth.


Spencer and Ross our grandsons


Emily, Jim Laura, Gloria and Steven
We missed you Gary and Marilyn.

We had so many bottles of sparking drinks, 
it was hot out there.  The fans helped a lot though!
Hope your weekend was as much fun!  

❤♡♥♡❤♡♥♡❤♡♥s,  B



Love is...

“Love is like a flower and like the body, it needs constant feeding. The mortal body would soon be emaciated and die if there were not frequent feedings. The tender flower would wither and die without food and water. And so love, also, cannot be expected to last forever unless it is continually fed with portions of love, the manifestation of esteem and admiration, the expressions of gratitude, and the consideration of unselfishness.”
-Spencer W. Kimball
 
I want to be better at always remembering this. It is easy to get careless in our loving.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Dad's Trilogy of Childhood Memories

My Dad left us three amazing stories from when he was a child.  I love these...they seem to come out of a very, very long time ago.  So long ago in fact, it is hard for me to fathom life at that time for someone that I actually knew as well as I knew my Dad.

Baby Food or Aunt Agnes' Answer to Gerber's

Google image baby

"Aunt Agnes, my Dad's sister, was a very resourceful person and I have vivid recollections of her feeding her babies.  This was the time before canned baby food so she improvised.  When her children graduated from milk to solid food she would take small bites of food, generally meat, potatoes and bread, put them in her mouth, chew well, roll into a little ball in the palm of her hand and pop it into her baby's mouth.  It seemed to work well because the little ones would anticipate it like a baby bird and would relish each morsel.  It didn't seem to harm them any as she had at least six and they were all very healthy.

My mother's reaction to this was one of disbelief and she abhorred the idea.  She preferred a knife and fork to get the food fine enough.  I am kind of glad Mom took this position!"



Chewing Tobacco or How To Get Sick In A Hurry


"I recall one incident that I shall never forget!  It was my first and last experience with chewing tobacco.  My Dad was going to take two loads of wheat to the grain elevator in Ventura, North Dakota.  I was about six or seven years old and my job was to drive a team and wagon load of wheat.  It wasn't a hard job and kind of fun.  I followed my Dad and his load.  The horses were gentle and followed his lead with no trouble.  The so-called roads were dual ruts worn by other wagons before us. 

We left early in the A.M and arrived and had unloaded our wheat by about lunch time.  There were no restaurants in the little town and the local butcher capitalized on that by provided local farmers with a place to get a snack.  


Liverwurst..possibly the wurst all right.

He had liverwurst and other sausages along with bread, crackers and cheese.  The real treat was Nehi Pop.  My Dad had malt liquor (this was before the day of 3.2 beer and sometimes I suspect home brew was also available to him.)

After our feast we were about to head for home and my Dad took out his plug of tobacco and whacked off a chunk with his pocket knife.  I must have looked rather wistful because he looked down at me and said, 'You think that looks pretty good, huh?'  My reply was affirmative so he gave me a piece about the size of a dime with the admonition, 'Don't tell Mama!' I really felt like a man as I climbed up on the spring seat of the wagon and headed for home chewing my chow.


Now wagons in those days didn't have rubber tires, but ran on steel rims.  So in spite of the spring seat it was a very rough ride in the empty wagon.  Dizziness reared its ugly head and I soon had to wrap the reins around the seat and let the horses follow the team ahead and lie down in the wagon bed. The ride got rougher and rougher and I got sicker and sicker.  I finally lost my good lunch and Nehi Pop.



I recovered before we got home but evidently my color wasn't too good because my mother questioned both of us about my condition.  I was ashamed to tell her I couldn't chew tobacco like my Dad and he was afraid to tell her what he did!  My Dad's reaction was of concern and some amusement.  He said, 'That can be lesson to you, son, not to chew tobacco.'  And you know I learned that lesson well.  I haven't had a chew since!"


My First Job Or The Saga of Ballinger's Bull


The first recollection I have of working for pay was when I was about eight years old.  I was living with my parents on my grandparent's farm in Mc Intosh County, North Dakota.  My cousin, Virgil, also lived in the area about four miles from us.  He was eighteen and made a deal with Mr. Ballinger to drive his old bull to market at the nearest rail head at Lehr.  The price to be paid for the ride was $1.00.  Virgil asked me if I would like to drive the animal with him and he would split the fee with me.  We started early on horseback one morning to drive that dumb bull 16 miles across open country.  (It was more like 26 miles 'as the bull runs!') 

It was in the fall of the year so crops had been harvested and there were few fences so the old boy had plenty of room to run.  It was a hard day's ride to the rail head and back but as I look back on it it was exhilarating fun in the outdoors and quite an accomplishment for a couple of kids.  I think some of the neighbors were laying bets we'd never get the bull to market.

We did it though and then sat back and awaited our pay of $.50 a piece.  For me it never came to pass and to this day I don't know if Mr. Ballinger got he bull to market for free or if Virgil reaped the full benefit.   I guess the moral of the story is you can drive a bull to market but you may not get your just reward!" 

Here they are, Daddy...1925! 
Virgil is in the clear!