 All right, so welcome everyone. I'm Betsy Coe and I have Aowyn Walker, wiki tree forest elf and Steve has been regularly coming to these as well and it's very experienced wiki treeer. So I guess the first thing would be to see what questions you have, because this is really for you. So before I have things prepared, but before we jump into that, definitely questions. What if the things you've prepared will answer my questions? Well, what are you going to do? People always seem to be very interested in seeing a profile created from scratch. So I was going to do that with both. I don't know if you've seen in G2G that we have a new profile creation system that's a data testing right now. So it's not hugely different, but a little bit. I've been doing it all day with the challenge. So I can give my feedback. Yeah. So I'm actually prepared to create two profiles. One with the old system and then the other with the new system. One, I have a photo that I can upload. People always seem interested in seeing how that's done, talking about categories and stickers and also a little bit about the WikiTree browser extension. So that is what I have. What does that address your questions or what? Well, all that sounds wonderful. I will be wrapped. And if it's going to include the, oh, and I'm at a loss for the word. If I import... Jetcom? Yeah, the data that comes along with the Jetcom has a name and I can't think of the name. That compare? The what? That compare? Yeah, that might be it. When I first got on WikiTree, I did like dumped my entire tree on there and then I had to go through profile by profile and obviously I didn't get through everything. And it was very overwhelming. And I have all this stuff on my laptop. I use, what's this thing called? Family Tree. It's magic. I use it. So I've been trying to figure out if there's a way for me to export just one person and then import that one person and have all that data automatically populated. But it doesn't look to me like I can do it one by one. I have to do like a whole Jetcom file. And export from WikiTree or export from RootsMagic? Export from RootsMagic and then upload to WikiTree. I think you can do just one person. I have RootsMagic. I'll try while you guys talk. Okay. That would be the big question that I have for this evening. And then there's probably a hundred other little questions. But sure. But that being said, there's certain benefits to uploading one profile at a time, making sure that the data is accurate and Jetcoms can corrupt a little bit when they get uploaded to WikiTree. So if you are gonna do that, do WikiTree. So if you are gonna go one at a time, we would probably recommend just going into the actual profile editor or profile creator and doing it that way. Might save you some time because then you'll already have some stuff up at that point. Yeah. I think that would be a little bit faster than doing a Jetcom export and import each time. Okay. So do the profile creator as you're about to show me how to do. Right? Because then you have full control over what you put on that profile at that point. When it's a new person, yeah. Okay. Okay. And Stuart, what's on your mind? Specific questions that we can help you with? As I just wanna see how you're presenting the information. At one point in time, I was working on a training program for the Wales project, but that's got sideline but I'm still interested in, as a grader, I see questions all the time from new people that write to me directly afterwards after being greeted and asking a lot of questions. So our help pages have a lot of information but they get really rather technical at times. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Oh, so it's great that you're a grader. That's wonderful. It's such an important service for the community. All right. Well, we'll just welcome Sally and then maybe I'll jump into creating a profile. Answer her, Alice's question real quick. Yeah, go for it. So I just tried in Roots Magic and if you decide to do that, you are able to just do one person at a time. Oh, you're muted, Alice. Thank you for trying that. That's much appreciated. And if you need help, I can write out the steps for you. Okay. Great. Hello, Sally. Welcome. Hi. Hi. We're... When I was eating myself, I was eating my dinner. Oh. No worries. We were just about to, we were just finding out what everybody's questions were. My question, I had a question. I had a hard time finding you. Oh, okay. I had to go to the wiki tree and then ask the question to where this meeting was because I didn't know what the link was. I see. Okay. Yeah. We put up a G2G post the Sunday before these new member zooms happen and the zoom links are always in that. I think that's maybe what I finally found. Yeah. If you follow the tag new members, then you'll automatically see that post in your daily feed. Oh. Yeah. Yeah, new members. So it's new underscore members. Yeah. Well, I'm glad you found us. Me too, because I missed the last one because I couldn't find it. Oh, dear. Okay. I was afraid that I was going to have the same problem tonight. Okay. And do you have any specific questions about your wiki tree, Ying? No, I think I had finally figured out how to do the footnotes. Okay. The source. Yes. Inline subjections. Yes, the inline. Yes. Great. Okay. All right. What we are going to do is I'm going to create two profiles from scratch. One using the traditional way for profile creation and then the other using the new profile creation method which is in beta testing now. Ayo, any information on when that's going to officially switch over or? No, we're still getting feedback and just giving people a little while to test it out. Sure. Okay. No. Okay. Cool. All right. Well, I'm going to share my screen. So we're going to create, this is one of my grand, great grand uncles. And as you can see, I only got as far as creating his profile but not his wife or his four children. So I thought we could create his wife, Emily. She's actually got a very distinctive name, Emily Rosina Ruth Bignell, which is, yeah. And also helpful for identifying her in the records. So knowing that we were going to create this profile on the spot tonight, I sort of went ahead and did some leg work in this Google doc. So, what you would do is go to edits and then over here, I've got, I'm sorry, I got to move all of you so that I can see what I'm doing. We're going to add a spouse. So far as I know, she's, sometimes people you go to add may already be on WikiTree, but let's first type in all her information. So we got Emily Ignell. Her married name was Redwood. Her birth date was August 7th, 1897, certain. That date, I don't have a day, but I do know that it was in June 1970, female, certain. Okay. And then the system is going to tell you, okay, these are two possible matches, but I know none, these are not correct. If the name was extremely close, I would definitely take a look. And I'd also make sure to check it, to just to verify, yes, I've examined this and rejected this. Middle names, I assume I can put in multiple. Little, yeah, Rosina. Ruth, okay. And she did go by Rose. Birth location, Cardiff. Death location, Swindon Blastisher. Her marriage date. So you want to put in as much of this as you have available. January 1919, certain location. You don't know where she got married? Not off the top of my head. I didn't make note of that, but. But you can always come back to it later. Yes, I can come back to this. This is all, the only thing that's really hard to undo and even that is not impossible is the last date of birth. And that can be corrected if necessary. Okay. And the email address would be if this was a living person and then they would receive an email and be invited to become profile manager of their own profile. I don't have any notes. So now I'm gonna go to here. I'm going to use, since I'm creating her as the spouse of an existing profile, I'm gonna use the marriage record to create her profile. So you're not gonna build a small biography in what's the notes section then? I don't generally do that. I mean, I do this and then I work within the bio text box. Okay. Yeah, after it's been created. Yeah, exactly. I do my inline citations in the notes section. Oh, okay. Yeah, I suppose. Well, I don't do, I'm not gonna do that for a specific reason. Right, for this purpose today. You'll see why I'm not gonna do it in a second. Okay. And ta-da. There she is. Profile successfully created. If you look up here, you can see that her wikitree ID is bignell832. And now I can get out of that. I do like to try to at least put birth, marriage and death in initially. So I'm going, there's the marriage registration. I'm going to add in, there's birth, I'm going, and then I'm going to add in death. Okay, so the document that you're working from. Yes. That's a word document. It's just a Google doc that I, yeah. Okay, but it's a text doc. Where did, what created that format of that information? Okay, I will show that to you. Okay. Because that's the Sorcerer app, which is an extension. Okay, I'm just getting ahead of that. Yeah, no, no, that's, so I'll show you. Actually, yeah. Okay. Let me write this one. Subtension. Okay. Okay. So there, and before I proceed further, let's preview. And then all you can see, I've got a little formatting issue. So I go back up here. And I think if I just... The X space should work with that. Yeah. Just to make it pretty. And let's see if that fixed it. Yes. Okay. Yeah. Let me answer Alice's question about the Sorcerer citation. So I'm just gonna say I've added sources. And now I'm going to get out of there. Let's see. So let me, 11, 372. Okay. All of these out of free BMD, which I mean, you can also find these, these records on Ancestry or Family Search. But if you can, well, Family Search is free. And of course this one is free too. So if you can cite from free platforms, that's preferable. So I'm just gonna find her again, her birth record. Is that only for UK records? Yes. Okay. It works pretty well to just put in the surname. It's funny, that's where I'm working right now. 11, eight. Well, there you go. It's a great website, 372. 372, that pulled it up before. Okay. And boom, there she is. And we know it's her because of the names. So I'm just gonna go to info. And then if you can see on my screen up here, I have this little one in square brackets. Yeah. So this is a browser extension that you can add to your whatever browser you use. And so when I click on this, I'm gonna get this pull down menu. What I did was I did build source citation. Now it's on my clipboard. And when I go, then I'll add it again just so you can see. There it is. Yeah. And there's also, you see at the top of the pull down menu, a way it will search. You can say for this person, can you search family search or ancestry or find my past? So it's a really powerful application. And just to clarify that is different than the Wikitree browser extension. Yes. This one's called the Sorcerer extension. They're two different things. Yeah. This one, if they're, it's developed by Rob Pavey and he has a really good YouTube video that walks you through the whole extension and things you can do with it. So I watched it several times. I highly recommend it. Ewan, do you use Sorcerer or either of you? Do you use it? Yeah, I do. Yeah, is this? It's just, oh, sorry, go ahead. I was just gonna say the only thing that I find a little cumbersome is I always have to take out these BR. The brakes. Yeah. Is there a way around that? Because we don't need it with Wikimarkup. Right. Yeah, I don't think there is. I think that's something that Rob would have to change in the way he codes it. So that might just be something, I don't know what his reason is for doing that. Yeah. Other than maybe he just likes it on another line. Yeah. Maybe it's just something to bring up with him. Yeah. So. You could not decode it out. Yeah. Right, I mean, all I do is I just, I take these and I delete and I put in a space. So there's usually two or three of them. So. Yeah, because that's all one link. It's deceptive, but it should actually be right behind index. It should be like one space behind that when it prints out. You could just search your place for that. Right. That's your job. Yeah. Yeah. So this, you'll see me use Sorcer extension on Ancestry as well when I create the other extension. So, okay. So, okay, we've created Alice, Emily. And now, since she was born in Cardiff, I thought it would be nice to give her a sticker. And the stickers go under the biography line. Put that in there. And I'm not sure if we'll see the complete thing. Yeah. So what's in the preview, you can see this is what's gonna look like. It will have her name and yeah, just adds a little color. So, and then the other thing you can do is you can cat, you can and it's very helpful to the rest of other researchers if you categorize. You can categorize by places, birth, residence, death, occupation, cemeteries where the person was buried. So let's, the categorization button is right here. And what I'm gonna do is I'm going to search for Cardiff since she was born there. Alabama. On Alabama, yeah. Yeah. The one in Australia. Where did it go? Glamorgan. Yeah. Yeah, okay. So now that means she will show up if someone was looking for all the people on Wiki Tree who have some sort of association with Cardiff, she would be on that list and they could hop to her. Now the other thing that I'm gonna do with her for categories is I'm going to leave now and her bio is very, very thin, non-existent. So I'm going to use a personal category which I can walk everybody through. I just learned about these last month and I love them. So it's co-31 is my Wiki Tree ID number and I'm going to say co-31 needs bio. So now let me go to here and what I've done, well, I added a sticker so that's bio improvement and I categorized. Okay, so we can see there. And at the bottom we have her categories, Cardiff and then my little note. Now what this does is it's sort of my personal to-do list. These are all the 20 bios so far where I need to go back and do a bio for these people. But I know you just said, wow. Should we talk through personal categories? That's amazing. I'm actually working on her records right now too so I just saw that in your list here. Oh really? Oh, okay, fine. So funny that all these names keep coming back around. That's the thing I'm researching today. Maybe they will. But personal categories are great. I use personal categories myself and I have them broken down by sources and by to-do and things that need to get because cemetery is added to them and stuff like that. Right, right. So I have categories. Yeah, go ahead. Do you wanna show all the categories that are in your personal category? Sure, okay. So if I go back a level. Yeah, I have needs bio, birth, baptism, death, marriage or profiles created like William Redwood really should have had that category because I needed to create his wife and his children. So you can also put your free space pages on the same page which is kinda nice instead of going to your watch list to look for those. All you do is you categorize your free space pages with Code 31. So if I went to your wiki profile would I be able to see this stuff or is this just stuff that you can see in your wiki profile? Okay, so let me ask which browser do you use? I use Chrome. Use Chrome, okay. So Chrome is kind of handy in that it's very powerful. Like if I just go Code 31, it remembers and it can even if I didn't have the tab open it would be able to take me to my categories but let me take you the cumbersome way. So if we go find categories and then we go to... I know, this should be a while. Maintenance, yep. And then maintenance, personal categories. And then these are all the people in wiki tree who have personal categories. So you could easily go to, well, find me Kay and boom, there I am, blessed. We're right next to Thomas. Right. Yeah. Do you wanna walk through how to create personal, your personal categories? Sure. Yeah. So there is, maybe Steve, could you put this in the chat? This... Oh, yeah. Personal categories. There's a really helpful page. Good when help pages are helpful. And I can't, can either of you think of a personal category that I could add? Yeah, and I could create one. Do you have a cemetery creation category? So when you need to make a new category for our... I don't like, as in, well, that would qualify for most of my categories needs. So you have a need cemetery? Yeah. If I find a person is buried in a cemetery but there's not a cemetery for it, it's annoying. So I always have to remind myself with a personal category, go ahead and make it and then go ahead and add all those people to it. There should be the correct link for personal categories that's on the screen in the chat now. I'll double check myself. Make sure that is accurate. I'm gonna get out of full screen myself. Wait, maybe I did it wrong. Oh, I goofed because I typed it by hand. Disregard that link. Sorry. Here we go. Yep, that link is correct. Cool, thanks. So to initially start out, you have to be on your profile, go into edit mode and then at the top of your biography box, you're going to type, well, for example, co-31, but it would be whatever your wiki tree category is. So you can see it right here, category colon and then whatever your wiki tree ID is. Yep, and then you're gonna save your changes and this is the part that's a little bit like, when I did it, it was sort of like, uh-oh, oh, did I do something wrong? Because, but it warns you, it will be in red and what you need to do is click on the red category link and it's going to take you basically like a new profile page with complete, with a text box. And in that text box, you're gonna type double bracket category, personal categories. So remember when I walked through the categories, maintenance, personal categories, that's how we tell the system whatever your wiki tree that your personal category should go under personal categories. Yeah. So it's a colon in between category and personal categories. So it'll recognize it as a category, parent category. Okay. It's part of the wiki marker. Yeah. Then you'll see an option to save the page and this is a one-time thing. Once you've done it, then you'll never have to do it again. You can make some notes for yourself in the text box if you want. Like this is going to be my way to keep track of my research to do items. You don't have to. And then it would be the same thing with subcategories. So, but except that if you would do those from the profile. So let me go ahead and let me go to, let me go back to Emily. Oh, is she big nil? Eight, three, two. Okay. So now in edit mode, I'm going to go category, code 31, needs cemetery. Okay. And it's more about, because you can add to the cemeteries if they exist, but if the cemetery category isn't created, that's the category that I create. So it says, needs cemetery category created. And then it forces you to make that category and then you can go back and add them. So I just wanted to clarify that that's what I actually was talking about in that situation. Okay. All right. So I've been, I was categorizing full save. Okay. Then you get this warning box. Go ahead, save anyway. And now you'll see that when we go down here, it's in red. So when I click on that, then I get this text box and I'm going to, again, I'm telling the system that I want to nest this under my personal categories. One. And now it'll be a subcategory. I'm going to save the page and there you can see, I'll go back to my overall list. Now I have this new subcategory just with one entry. Whereas needs bio, there were 20 entries. And there you go. So any questions? Stuart, Sally, are you still with us? I don't know if Sally's still with us. Is she? Yes? Yes. Okay. Yes. Okay. All right, great. Any questions? No, I don't think so. Okay. But I'll probably have to watch it again because it goes so fast that... Right. It's hard to keep up. At my age. We have the option to go back and watch this again, right? It'll go up on YouTube on the WikiTru channel. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Okay. All right. So now let's create a profile with the new system. So if you're interested in Stuart and Alice and Sally, are you using the old way of creating profiles or are any of you beta testing the new system? Okay. I didn't even know there was such a thing. Okay. If you're interested in doing that, you're gonna go to my WikiTree and you're gonna go to your settings and then towards the bottom, okay, miscellaneous settings. So now I'm gonna turn this on and save. Okay. So the other profile that we're gonna create is one of my aunts who passed away in 2017. So I'm going to my grandfather. So edits and we're going to add. Create a new profile. Okay. So, ooh, not me. Okay. I'm going to, what I'm gonna do is add, she has a Chinese name and an English name and characters. So I'm gonna add in the characters later. It's very pretty. Yeah. Thank you. Yes, she was beautiful. Okay. So, and co, her married name was Lee. Her birth dates was March 19th, 1937, exact, born in Taipei. Wasn't Taiwan it? No. It was born in 37. It was Formosa. She can override that by typing in anything. You don't have to select the option. That's interesting. They may not have worked on that section of wiki tree yet for sample locations. Okay. Taipei, Taipei, sure. I'm gonna do this one. I can always change it later. And then her death date was 26th, March, 2017, certain. Unless she just turned 80. Yeah. Palo Alto, where's Palo Alto, California? San Alfredo, oh, sorry. I was just reading about Palo Alto. There we go. Okay. So here's one. I think this, well, this is different, you know, the pull down menu here. Okay, continue. Yes, my grandmother was the other parents. Continue. If there had been a possibility on wiki tree of somebody who could have been her, that would have shown up, but no. Now then the hard thing with Chinese Asian records is that there's not some, I mean, her birth record, for instance, is over in Taiwan. I don't have access to her death record, but what I do have is her naturalization record, which very helpfully confirms her birth date. And her name, although they did get the two letters wrong, her maiden name. So I'm confident that, you know, this is her document. She came to the States in the 60s. So it's not like I'm gonna find her on any censuses that are available yet. Oh, yeah. So she went by Yvonne in the States. So what I can do, this is where Sorcerer helps, is here's the record. I'm gonna go view, and then I'm going to use this. I'm going to build a source citation. And it's like lightning, it's so fast. Now I can go back and I can add this. I do want to take out the asterisks because that's gonna get added automatically. And create, so. It does take you back to this page, actually, when you produce the profile. Yes. Right, right. Thank you for that. It's just gonna be when I keep working on it. Right, which I do. You know what, so I guess. We can put in you have an honest or preferred name, right? Or is that not? Yeah, I would say that probably was Yvonne. It wouldn't count as a nickname because it was her accepted name in America, right? Right, it was her official name in the United States. Okay, so now we have this. I'm gonna go ahead and I definitely need to add a lot for her. So go 31. And I can go back later and add the other categories because she needs a lot. Then the other thing we could, oh, the two other things. Maybe the category needs a lot. Just put in your generic code 31 category as well. Yeah, yeah, sure. We can add a photo because I have a photo of her. But let's take my aunt as an example or an opportunity to talk about privacy settings because she did pass away within 10 years. So I was talking with Aylone about this earlier today. So it would be, I'm gonna set her privacy settings as public. So you can see this is, and again, maybe Steve, could you put this in the help page for privacy? Right. Yeah. We've got seven levels of privacy settings. So we have unlisted. These are living people who are not members. And presumed, maybe if you remember the first profile that I created had the email field. Maybe you create a profile for your sibling and they get an email and they are so excited about WikiTree that they join and become a WikiTree member. But up until that point, they would be an unlisted person because they're living and not members. And there are some exceptions for notables. Notables that have a lot of public interest. Right, right. Private, a limited amount on a private profile. Now there are always going to be two views to it. So there's, you can see, if you're the profile manager, you're going to be able to see everything. But if somebody just looks it up on, they're browsing, they're doing a Google search and they're not on the trusted list, then they're going to see very limited information only viewed by the trusted list. We have, it's just basically a gradient. So then the final two are open, which is what is required for people born over 150 years ago or who died over 100 years ago, must be open. Which means that anyone can work on it. But beneath that, you need to be on the trusted list to add or change information. So, so that's what we're going to do for my aunt. Let's see. So I go to privacy. Oh, wait, I better. You might want to save that first. Exactly. So I added sources. Privacy. So we're going to make it public. Now, if we want to add a photo, you click images. Click to upload. I have it ready on my desktop. There we go. Okay. This was from Family Collection. Wiki Tree is very conscientious about copyright and not just sort of pirating things from elsewhere on the internet. So this box is really important. And sometimes we get images from Creative Commons, which are all available copyright free for use. And sometimes you might see a really amazing photo of your ancestor on Ancestry or another site. What I do in those situations is I send a message to that person and say, explain, you know, oh, I'm creating a profile for this person or I have a profile on Wiki Tree. Give them the website address. Say, may I have your permission to use this photo? They, if they reply, they always say yes. I've never had anyone say no. And then what I would say is used here, I would say use with permission of Ancestry user, blah, blah, whatever their username is. So I'm just gonna title this Yvonne Ko. She was Yvonne Ko at the time this picture was made, done. So I'll use that. I pay. She was probably about 20. So I guess we could go with that. Certain. I'm gonna say 1957. Whoops, I'm not sure. So I'll leave that approximate and I'm gonna upload. Wow. Yeah. That's a great photo. Yeah, thanks. I could give that popularity. Let's get some popularity to that. So now I have, I think this automatically will become her, yeah, it automatically becomes her profile picture. If for some reason, if I didn't want that, then I could go back to the photo and I could. I'd select primary. You'd usually have a second photo in place and then you would set that as the primary. Exactly. Now sometimes you have photos that are, that have more than one person in them and you wanna tag the photo to all the people in the photo. So I have someone like that. So this photo was just discovered last week. Really, really exciting. We, it was like one of those photo box in the attic stories. My distant cousin sent me a Facebook message and she said, I just found this, my parents just found this photo. Do you know who the women are? And my jaw just dropped because I had a photo of the men only. Oh. All of a sudden it was like, it's my great grandmother and it's my grandmother and my aunt. So. That's cool. Yeah. Wow. So I had just right now put it, attached it to my great-grandfather and my great-grandmother that I was, whom I was sure about. But having talked to my mom and my aunt, I am now very sure that this is my grandmother. So what I can do is just go down and I can head to, well, these are, this is everybody in my list. Let me see if I can find her super quick. Redwood. Redwood, yeah. Redwood. Oh no, not finding her. Hang on. Code 31. So I'll just go to my tree apps and there she is. Okay, Redwood 529. So the other way, if you can't find them in the checklist is to just go like this. And then I'm gonna save. So now you can see that it's also saved to my grandmother's profile. And one thing that I probably should do with this image is because of the number of people in it is to go back to that text box and add in like a legend, you know, and just say who's who. Who's where? Yeah, exactly. So. And then it should populate, right? We have to go into view all. Yeah. Well, you have a lot of photos. I do have a lot of photos of her. So there it is. Yeah. Very cool. Yeah. I think I covered everything that I meant to. Oh, I didn't. I wanted to show you David Randall's is completed profile checklist. So as you're working on profiles, yes, do you, are you familiar with this Alice? No, but this is what I want. OK, all right. So, Steve, could you put this in? Yep, we're going to order it right now for you. OK, yeah. If you are doing the 15th or 15th challenge, there's this is one of the things you could do. And it basically just walks through. It's like a checklist of, you know, you can feel good about this profile when you checked everything off audience. I've actually ported this over to my 15 by 15 page. So I don't have to go back to this all the time. Right, right. Yeah, so when I talked about this last Saturday on the round, the Saturday livecast tip of the week. And I asked David, you know, how does he use it? And he said he's a traditional paper kind, pen and paper kind of person. So he prints them out and he has a binder with a sheet for each for each profile that's in progress. But he said, but I imagine that it could be very easily, you know, converted into an Excel spreadsheet. Greg Clark had the fantastic idea of, oh, print out a copy and put slip it into a clear plastic binder. And then you can check off with like an eraser. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I love that. Dry erase. Clever. Yep. So, yeah. Okay. So if you do happen to participate in 15 by 15, you know, I don't think it's still too late to be a part of that this year. Oh, you guys know what that is. I can put it into the end of that. Alice Stewart. Sally, do you guys know what the 15 for 15 mission is? You want to show them so they know what you're doing? Okay. Let's see. Are you participating? Okay. There's a G to G post. Do you want me to put drop that in the chat? I've got it. Sure. Please. Yeah, because it has the link to the help page. Okay. So wiki tree is turning 15 in November. So we have this community challenge to do. There's a whole list of things you can do. You only have to pick 15 of them, but if you want to do 30 or 45, you can. And let's see. Where here's a list of the missions. So there are a couple that are about you, like if you don't have a photo already, improve your bio DNA information, increase your CC seven. Then things related to working on profiles. And see the, here are the ones that apply to David Randall's checklist that we were just looking at. Try out some apps. The browser extension, which I don't know if we're going to get to talk to talk about, but send out e cards. Basically it's all these activities that will fluff up your tree and get you a lot more knowledgeable because you're sort of, you're going to have to explore more widely on wiki tree. Projects, join a project. And then these are sort of things related to the community. We have this botanical, pit shepherd does this wonderful weekend chat on G to G. And I highly recommend that as a way, you know, just basically you want to find your little corner where for me, when I first came to wiki tree, it ended up being the Saturday live cast in there was sort of a there's so many little rooms in the wiki tree palace where you can find your little group, social media. And then, of course, you get a sticker for completing 15 or 30 or 45 that you can put on your profile for some bling. And look, already someone's got 30? Wow, that's amazing. So, yep, cool. Yeah, so that's 15 for 15. And let me also show two G2G posts. It just came out that are super helpful. I was gonna point out this page for getting to this Zoom today, actually, because we will post it right there. Yes, right, because Sally was having trouble. Now I can't find the chat. Oh, dear. Where? What are you doing, Betsy? I don't know. The chat thing disappeared. I'm gonna stop sharing for a second. Okay, I still have it up. Do you need me to post it? No, I got it. Okay. I just saw it right before you made that go away. So it's there. For some reason, it might be hidden on my screen. Okay. Betsy? Yeah. But this has been great. Yes. Thank you for being here, A-Win. Thank you. Yeah, of course. To meet you, A-Win. Yes, thanks, A-Win. Thanks, A-Win. I'll see you Saturday. I promise. I'll see you Saturday. Just remember to stop recording when you're kind of done with this part. Okay, we'll do it. I'll remind her. Thanks. Okay, so this post I'll go back to sharing. Share. Is a terrific, like, day by day, what's happening on WikiTree with links that'll take you either to the YouTube link or the Zoom link. Yeah, there we are. Yeah. Yeah. And where do I find this? I just put the link in the chat, Sally. Oh, okay. Thank you. Yep, and so it's a G2G post that A-Win and the team is going to update. You know, if things come up. So I plan to just every few days just sort of check this. Now this one doesn't have the tag new members attached to it. I noticed that. So if they're looking for it using that tag, they're not going to find it. Right, right. They're going to use different tags to find it potentially. Yeah. In terms of tags, I think following announcements is really good events. So. I think it follows those. And there's our, we will rock you nominations that we're building up now. Yes, yeah. Very excited for that. Do you guys know about that? We will rock you. Rock, stay, let's see if I can. Oh, yeah, I did hear about this in the last... Random acts of wiki tree kindness. Yeah, that was in the latest newsletter. Right, right. So there are two posts. There's one looking for people who are going to help. And then there's another post to nominate people. So basically it's like the challenges, but it's for another wiki tree. To help them increase their CCC, their level of connection. Okay. Yeah. And then the last thing, this is something that was in my digest this morning. There. Okay, now I see why. Okay. Okay, just put it in the chat. And Tommy Buck did this, where it's kind of like just a consolidation of looking for what's going on and links. And so this is another good, really good one to bookmark. So. Oh yeah, he's been maintaining that since 2020. So it's been a long time. Yeah. 2000 views. It's a lot. So, okay. So I hope I didn't overwhelm or overload you guys. Well, I'm glad I can rewatch this video. Me too. It's a lot. It's a lot, but it's great. It's all good stuff. It's still, thank you. You're welcome. All right. Well, any last questions before we wrap up? Sally, Stuart. I maybe have questions after the recording has stopped. Okay. Let's do that. So we'll, oh, I will say this, if you're planning to come back next month, usually we do these on the first Thursday of every month, but the first Thursday in March falls during Roots Tech. And I'll be at that really excited. So we're going to do the second Thursday of the month for next month. And that'll all be in the G2G post. Okay. Okay. Let me stop screen sharing so that I can stop the recording. Thanks everyone for being here.