Collaboration with Dropbox

Dropbox, the file synching service, supports collaboration through its shared folders feature. When you are working with other Dropbox users on a research or writing project, this can be quite useful. Here’s how it works.

Setting up a shared folder is easy. It can be done through the Web interface or through the virtual drive in your desktop’s file system.

Dropbox Web Toolbar

Dropbox share web

Here you see my folders displayed via the Web interface. To the right of each folder is a drop-down menu and you’ll notice the Shared folder options item.

Dropbox Invitation

When you select that option you will be presented with this information pane. Here you can enter email addresses for the people you want to access this folder and add a short message that will be delivered with the invitation. Notice at the top of this pane is a second option called Members. In this case, I already have three people (I’m one of them) sharing this folder. If I click on that link I can see who they are and remove them if I wish.

Once a person accepts my invitation to share this folder, the folder will appear in their Dropbox account/virtual drive and they have rights to add, update and delete files within the folder.

Dropbox desktop view

This example shows how to share a folder from within the Dropbox virtual drive on my Mac desktop. Either CMD+click or right-click the folder and choose the Dropbox > Share This Folder . . . command. The rest of the process will be similar to the Web version.

Notice the folder icons in my folders list. My shared folders have a buddy icon on the folder while unshared ones are plain. There is also an icon identifying the public folders (aptly named Public and Photos).

Some important notes regarding shared folders. As I mentioned, any of your shared users can add, edit and delete files within the folder. They can also invite additional users to the share, however only the folder’s creator can remove users. When two people open the same file to edit, Dropbox will NOT try to merge those edits. Instead, it will save two separate copies of that file.

Dropbox is a very efficient and cost-effective way to share files with others. Take a look for yourself. I think you will be pleasantly surprised.

 

Flickr Studio

Flickr Studio [iPad - $4.99] gives you access to Flickr like you never imagined. Not only can it organize and upload images from your iPad to your Flickr account, it can also download batches of photos to keep on your iPad. And, it displays your photos to their best advantage. If you archive your photo collection at Flickr, this is a great way to upload photos while traveling and to have your entire collection at your fingertips whenever you want them.

Flickr Studio

View your sets and collections in list, grid or map view. All the metadata for each image is unobtrusive, but always within easy reach. If you’re looking for specific photos – in your archive or across all of Flickr – there’s an impressive search function to make it easy. You can even view videos and add comments.

For more information, visit the Flickr Studio app site.

Marion Scott

Marion Scott
MARION
Dau. of
C. C. & Maggie Scott
BORN
Feb. 15, 1890.
DIED
Jun 21, 1891

Mission of Nombre de Dios

WeRelate Portals

Some of the most fascinating information at WeRelate can be found in the portals. Portal pages are designed to serve as an overview for a section or topic.

WeRelate Community Portal

Let’s start with the Community Portal. This is probably the closest thing to a table of contents you’ll find on the site. Here you’ll find links to other portals, WeRelate projects and discussions, administrative information and lots of tutorials.

WeRelate Family Portal

Every namespace in WeRelate has its own portal. You’ll find links to them at the top of every portal page. Here is the Family Portal page.

WeRelate Cemetery Portal

The Cemetery Portal discusses how to set up your own cemetery page on WeRelate and link it to the portal. The cemetery portal has a growing number of cemeteries listed with history, photos and contact information. Like much of WeRelate, it is a fabulous source of information for researchers which will only increase in value as more of us add our own information.

Spend an afternoon browsing the portals at WeRelate. You’ll be amazed at the fascinating information you’ll find along with a lot of inspiration you can put to use in your own research. If you have a fact or suggestion to add to a page, please do so. Every little bit helps.

Marine Studios 1949

Marine Studios buildings

Marine Studios 1949. Photo courtesy of the Florida Photographic Collection

Marine Studios, later known as Marineland of Florida, opened in 1938 and was billed as the world’s first “oceanarium”. It is located on the Atlantic Ocean at the south end of St. Johns County. The road you see here is part of scenic A1A. The circular structure on the right was the dolphin tank. You could watch the dolphins from the top or from two levels of portholes surrounding the sides of the tank. You can see one through the door on the bottom right. To the left of the mast is the rectangular tank that showcased an assortment of sea creatures ranging from sharks to sea turtles to grouper.

Images of MarinelandThese buildings are gone now. A modern facility offering dolphin adventures has taken its place. The facility was recently purchased by the Georgia Aquarium.

I just noticed that there’s now a Marineland edition of the Images of America series. I can’t wait for my copy to arrive!

 

 

Awesome Screenshot

Awesome Screenshot in Safari

Awesome Screenshot in Safari

Are you looking for a quick and easy way to capture all or part of a web page? Then you need to check the Awesome Screenshot add-in available for Firefox, Chrome and Safari.

 

As you can see, the add-in appears in your toolbar as a camera lens. This example shows it in the Safari browser on a Mac computer. In other browsers, the icon appears in color and in a different location. Click on the icon and the capture menu appears. Now choose the type of selection you want to make.
Crop capture

Here I captured the visible area, then chose the crop tool. Notice that the tool also displays dimensions of the cropped area. Once I’ve got my selection the way I want it, I click the Crop button.

Annotation Tools

I can now use the annotation tools to add text and graphical highlights. There is even a blur tool to hide information you don’t want to share. When I’m ready, I click on Done.

Save image

From here, I can save the image on my desktop or share it via the Awesome Screenshot site.

If I choose to upload the file, I can then easily share it at any number of social sites.

Because it only captures web content, Awesome Screenshot can’t handle all your screen capture needs, but this free browser extension can sure make it easy to capture and share a bit of the web when you need it.

Oh, I forgot to mention . . . Awesome Screenshot comes from those awesome developers at Diigo.

Lost St. Augustine: Matanzas Theater

Matanzas Theater 1951

Distant Drums premier at the Matanzas Theater in 1951. Photo courtesy of the Florida Photographic Collection.

Many of us remember the Matanzas Theater next to the Exchange Bank building. How many Saturday afternoons were spent enjoying the air-conditioning while watching movies, cartoons and western serials. There were summer-long contests for bicycles and enticements to get you back. For our parents, it was a couple hours of peace and quiet.

This photo was taken in 1951 during the premier of the Gary Cooper movie, Distant Drums, a Seminole War story which was partially filmed here in St. Augustine. Notice the original Chimes Restaurant to the right of the theater.

The theater was torn down sometime in the early 1960s leaving St. Augustine with only a drive-in theater for movie entertainment. It would be a decade or more before St. Augustine had a walk-in theater again when the “mini-theaters” opened at the new mall.

Photo courtesy of the Florida Photographic Collection.

Trash It

Mail Screen

iPad users have probably noticed that some email services – Gmail, for instance – don’t offer a Trash icon in the toolbar. So, how do you get rid of messages you don’t want to keep?

Folders view

Just tap the folders icon to display your folders in the sidebar, then tap the Trash item there. You may want to check your mail service’s settings to see if there’s an option to automatically delete or empty the trash. If not, you’ll have to visit your mail site occasionally to empty the trash.

Building Bookmarks

A bookmark is a hyperlink pointing to another area within the same web page or document. They can be very helpful to the reader when used to create a simple table of contents for a long web page or to link to content within a book or paper. For family history projects that will be distributed in an electronic format like PDF, bookmarks can be especially useful.

Creating a bookmark is a two-step process. First, you select the text for the bookmark and identify it as as bookmark with a unique name. Then, you select the text that points to the bookmark and create a hyperlink to the bookmark. So, if you have a family tree graphic in your document, you can select the title of that graphic and create a bookmark named “Family Tree”. Now, if you want to reference that family tree anywhere within the narrative of your document, you create a hyperlink pointing to the Family Tree bookmark. When a reader follows that link, it moves the cursor right to the point of the bookmark.

Bookmarks in Documents

Creating bookmarks within documents is easy. This example uses Apple’s Pages word processing application, but the process is similar in whatever word processor you use. In Pages, you can only bookmark text. You cannot bookmark images, charts, text boxes or other objects. In the example below, my heading is a text box so I cannot use it to create my bookmark. Instead, I’ve selected some of the text immediately after the text box.

pages bookmark 01

From the Insert menu, select Bookmark. That’s it! Your bookmark is created.

pages bookmark 02

Now, make sure your Inspector pane is open then select the text that will be hyperlinked to the bookmark and choose the Insert > Hyperlink > Bookmark command.

pages bookmark 03

In the Inspector it shows you are linking to a bookmark. Below that is a drop-down box where you choose the Name of the bookmark you want to link to. In this example, you see a large number of bookmarks. Why? When you use the automatic Table of Contents generation feature, Pages (and many other word processors)  also create bookmarks to each of the headings used in the contents. This means the table of contents has links directly to the chapter or section the reader wants to view.

Now that I’ve shown you how easy it is to create and link to bookmarks, let me sweeten the pot a bit more. When you export your document to PDF format, both your hyperlinks and bookmarks are also exported. This means both the table of contents and any links you included within the narrative.

Bookmarks in HTML

Most blog platforms don’t include a facility to create bookmarks within the blog editor, so we’ll just create a hyperlink and modify it into a bookmark. Start by selecting the text that will be the bookmark, then click on the Link item. In this example, I’m bookmarking the Abbreviations heading at the bottom of the text.

bookmarks step 1

Notice that instead of entering a web URL, I’ve just entered the name I want to give this bookmark – in this case Abbreviations. Once that’s done, click OK.

bookmarks step 2

Now click on the Edit HTML tab to take a look at the HTML code for this link. In this example you see the hyperlink that was just created and below it is the changes you need to make so it will become a bookmark. First, change “href” to “name” then delete the “http://” and the slash at the end. That’s it!

bookmarks step 3

When you return to the normal view, you’ll see that the original hyperlink has identified as a link (underlined and blue text) but the bookmark is not. There isn’t any visible sign that text has been set up as a bookmark. You will need to remember the name you gave your bookmark in order to create a link pointing to it.

bookmarks step 4

Notice here that instead of a complete web URL, I’ve only entered the name of the bookmark preceded by a hash mark (#). This tells your browser that the link is going to somewhere on the same page rather than to another web site. You will want to check the link in the HTML view to make sure no other code has been included in the link.

When the post is published, click on the hyperlink and you will be taken down the page to the bookmark. In this example, both the link and the bookmark appear in the same screen view so following the link to the bookmark won’t change the view. To see it work, you’ll need the bookmark far enough down in your text to make the screen scroll down to display it.

Once you’re comfortable creating and linking to bookmarks, you’ll find any number of uses for them. They make larger projects so much easier for readers to navigate and give a professional edge to your work.

The Belleview Biltmore

Belleview Biltmore Hotel

The Belleview Biltmore Hotel is one of the last remaining symbols of the Gilded Age in Florida. While Henry Flagler was building a railroad and resort hotels down the east coast of Florida, Henry Plant was doing the same down Florida’s west coast. In addition to the Biltmore, Plant also built the Tampa Bay Hotel (now University of Tampa).

Built in 1897, the Biltmore is considered to be the largest occupied wood frame structure in the world, however it is currently closed as the owners struggle to finance the renovations necessary to keep it functioning. In recent years there have been attempts to demolish the hotel so the property could be developed. Preservationists have worked hard to keep the hotel intact. One look into the grand ballroom will convince most that this relic of days gone by needs to be preserved. In a world where multi-functional boxes serve most hotels, it’s worth preserving a storybook ballroom full of Victorian architecture and Tiffany windows.

The structure in the foreground of this photo is the spa with indoor pool and all the facilities you would expect in a luxury hotel. This photo was taken in 2005 when we enjoyed several days at the Biltmore for a military reunion.