Finding out what’s new and planned in tech at FamilySearch is a highlight of RootsTech. Here is an AI summary of comments posted by FamilySearch staff and attendees during the session, which should be available for replay.
– FamilySearch’s strategic shift — FamilySearch appears to be moving toward becoming an index/bridge to other online content rather than directly hosting data itself.
– Agentic AI integration — FamilySearch is incorporating agentic AI, meaning AI tools assigned to specific, designated tasks rather than generic question-answering.
– Full-text search — Full-text search is a popular new feature, with a “Simple Search” tool available in FamilySearch Labs for testing it.
– Guided merge limitations — The guided merge feature has a drawback: unlike the older merge process, you cannot remove parental links within it.
– Get Involved program — FamilySearch actively encourages volunteer participation via familysearch.org/getinvolved, which feeds into indexing and other contributions.
– FamilySearch Labs — Labs (familysearch.org/labs/) serves as a testing ground for new features before wider rollout.
– Records depth matters to users — Users expressed a desire for more localized, county-level catalogue browsing and specific state records (e.g., Wisconsin), reflecting demand for granular coverage.
– Diverse research breakthroughs — The full-text capability is enabling discoveries previously hard to find, such as post-slavery land purchase records.
– Tree import question — A user raised the practical question of importing a tree from Ancestry.com to FamilySearch, suggesting interoperability between platforms is a common user need.


Ancestry’s recently updated database, UK, Wartime Records and Material, 1914-1918, 1939-1945,
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