Sunday, January 24, 2010 - 06:05 PM - 42 years, 1 month ago - Genealogy - Ancestry Insider
After the data center, Ancestry.com loaded us back into black vans and whisked us down south of Salt Lake City, past Stonehenge, to Ancestry.com headquarters in Provo, Utah. I was hoping for fake motorcycle cops ahead and behind us, but no luck.
When we arrived, Laryn Brown, senior director, document preservation operations, gave us a presentation about Digital Presentation Services (DPS), followed by a tour. DPS is the Ancestry.com equivalent of the FamilySearch Digital Pipeline, but with a less imaginative name.
Data Preservation Services (DPS) - Our aim is to preserve family history records across the globe and to make them searchable online.
DPS operates globally
* 20 locations around the world
* Permanent offices in Provo, Washington DC, and London
* DPS branch operations in Ancestry.com offices in: Sydney, Paris, Munich, China
* Domestic DPS operations are in: Worcester MA, Albany NY, Atlanta GA, Montgomery AL, Savannah GA, Topeka KS, and Kansas City MO.
The DPS process consists of
1. Discovery & Licensing – the process of finding archives and libraries willing to share their material.
2. Acquisition
- Even public domain material takes permission to physically access.
- Took 4 years of negotiation permission to digitize at one British archive
3. Preservation/stabilization
- Some material in lesser archives needs to be stabilized prior to imaging
In 2008 Ancestry.com arrived at an archive and found the records soaked and piled in a restroom. “If we hadn’t been there at that moment,” says Brown, “about 1.2 million pages of birth and death records would have disappeared.”
4. Imaging
- Document forensics are required for Special problems. As we got to see last year, Ancestry.com developed a special digitization camera employing a technique usually called Multispectral imaging (although Brown didn’t use that term). Below are examples from the 1851 England Census in the Manchester area that were water damaged during storage, but were restored using lighting outside the visible spectrum. The examples below show how three example documents appear under normal lighting conditions, and how the documents appear when digitized using multispectral imaging.
Visible Light Alternate spectrum light
[It’s worth noting that prior to Ancestry.com, the Manchester & Lancashire Family History Society used volunteers and multispectral transcription to produce legible transcriptions of these same records. Read more on the project’s website where some of the information is available at no cost.]
5. Indexing – more about Indexing tomorrow.
6. Result is posted online, live to customers.
Next time we’ll finish the remainder of Brown’s presentation.
Laryn Brown, senior director of document preservation, is a ten-year veteran at Ancestry.com, working as a product manager, development manager, and now in Document Preservation Services. He has a background in imaging and spent two years in London establishing the global imaging group that is currently photographing records in nine countries. He graduated from Brigham Young University with a masters degree in business management. An avid genealogist, Laryn spends most of his time doing Scottish research.
Notice: The opinions expressed herein are those of the Ancestry Insider, not necessarily those of Ancestry.com or FamilySearch. All content is copyrighted by the Ancestry Insider unless designated otherwise. See http://ancestry...blogspot.com for other important legal notices.Photos
Genealogy Quote
Member Login
Upcoming Events
7:30PM - 9:00PM
7:30PM - 9:00PM
7:30PM - 9:00PM
7:30PM - 9:00PM
5:00PM - 9:00PM
7:30PM - 9:00PM
Online Now
40 Guests and 0 registered users online.
You are an unregistered user or have not logged in. You can register here.


