Harald, a genealogical database, is the genealogical program you use to keep your ancestry and pedigree on. Everyone that are interested in genealogy and want to keep a record of their family, should have a genealogical program on their own private computer. Which one you choose is up to you, but only using Geni, or any other online genealogical program, is stupidity. You should always have a genealogical program on your own private computer that you can use offline. The online programs should really only be backups.
Harald, about the genealogical standards on how to write your genealogical data in your database, you can read the books "Våre Røtter" (Our Roots), 3. edition, page 196 about names and page 9 in the book ""Slektsgransking med dataveiledning" (Genealogy with computer guidance). Both are books in norwegian that helps a person to get their genealogy started, and they both start at the beginners level.
The only genealogical programs I know about for Linux is GRAMPS and LifeLines. I do not know any of them, but GRAMPS are probably the most known one.
Erica: I don't understand your paragraph "There is not a chance in the world that Mr. Molloy and I or Mr. Angel and I would find our connections if the ladies in our ancestry were delineated by maiden name only. Or. Mr. Shmuel Kam either, as his name relates to Cohens, and I have Cohens (by marriage) in *my* tree" What is the problem in finding the connections because the ladies are delineated by maiden names only? In my genealog,y for almost 30 years, I have never had a problem finding a womans ancestry or descendants though I have used her birth name as main name in my database. Her other "names" are ofcourse written in the alternate name fields in my personal database, and if her name as married is changed to that of her husband, that name is shown in her husbands last name. On the other hand, if I only know a woman by her married name, I will have a big problem finding her ancestry. If Ann Olsdaughter Smith is married to John Paulson Smith and I only know Ann's name after her marriage with John, the only thing I know about her ancestry is that her fathers name was Ole, that is not much to work with. The paths on Geni is a lot more readable to me when persons are written with their birth names. Then, when the path goes to the next person in his/her path, I can see at ones wether the path goes via her ancestry or via his/her marriage, just by looking at the names. Agreed with your last paragraph.
Pam, I agree with you completely. In my private program there are one main name andup to 19 choices of alternate names, with unlimited use of all alternates.
The first time you enter a persons name, you should use the name in the source you find the person, if you later in time find the same person in an earlier source, and he/she has a different name, you should change the name to that one, and this goes on until you find the name he/she is born/baptized with. This is the common way of writing names in a genealogical record, at least in the western hemisphere. Far and middle east I don't have much knowledge about.
Ben, in your paragraph starting with "But again, that reflects the naming convention in this area of the world, and not northern Europe." Which timeperiod(s) are you talking about? I hope you're not talking about the last 100 years or so, if so, what about the 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th century? And how do you know by which name your familymembers were known in these timeperiods, what does the sources say?
Malcolm, I do not agree with the american way. I don't live in the US (allthough I have for a couple of years) and Geni is international, which also means that Geni should be setup as an international platform. I will also leave the politics out of this discussion, but I have my thoughts about America, land of the free, (hmmpphh!!!) :-)
Thanks, Reg, it's good to be backed up by a genealogist in an english speaking part of the world. Maybe some will get their eyes up about how we wright persons names in our genealogical databases, even in the english-speaking part of the world. :-) And ofcourse we should have our own private genealogical database on our own private computer, and it should also be our prime database. Geni is absolutely secondary to my own private database.
Harald, I'm not quiet sure what you're talking about when you're saying databases, but it looks like you mean genealogical dataprograms. In my program, Brother's Keeper, I have one main name field, and the alternate fields for names are: Also known as, Nickname, Short name (for reports), Adopted name, Hebrew name, Census name, Married name, German name, Current name, Soldier name, Formerly known as, Religious name, Called, Indigenous name and Other name.I can choose as many of these alternate names as I want, as many times as I want. Ofcourse my program is both in norwegian and english (and lots of other languages), and I'm free to choose which language I want.
Ben, I linked to the wiki-page about the scots 6. oct. 2010 03.29 page 15.
Erica, ofcourse it's a data entry issue. Every profile, or person in a database, has a main name, that name should be the birth name as that is the genealogical standard. Name after marriage is called "Married name" in my genealogical programand it is an alternate name, thus secondary. And ofcourse precomputer genalogists had both maiden and married name in their records, maiden name, or name at birth as I call it, as the main name and the married name usually shown in the last name of their husband. I would like to see links to english/american genealogical books where the women are written with their names after married, please show me examples, Erica.
Ben, you are the exception that proves the rule, as the saying goes in Norway. And I agree with Reg.