

It occurs to me that mine is the last generation that will be able toĬompile a history like this. Larger versions or expanded info, something that is not possible in a book. Hyperlinks that you can follow, and where you can click on images to see This, however, is still a digital edition with To have it printed because no digital media or encoding or markup language If you click on them, bring up bigger copies of themselves that can be widerĪnyway, for this document to survive for many generations I'll probably have Nevertheless, wider screens are better because some images, Smart-watch screens (or 12-foot wide TVs) are an improvement over the The optimum size for reading matter was settledĬenturies ago - there's no reason to think cell-phone or "phablet" or Wider screens because then the lines would be too long to read. It canĪlso be viewed on smaller screens, cell phones even, but although the layout The history is best viewed on a screen at least 740 pixels wide. Here is an index to the online material, which also includes an explanation The family history is online so family members can see it help with it. When the Family Echo tree has stablized, I will see if I can also put a copy Include a plain-text "dump" of the tree in GEDCOM Themseles, will eventually become obsolete, like 8-inch floppy disks.īut whatever digital form this history is distributed in, it will also

Memory card or DVD, the formats and encodings (HTML5, UTF-8), and the media If I distribute this history on some kind of removeable media like The public read-only version is stored in my Note to posterity: The online tree referenced just above was built at
