Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
I’m sure I’ve seen that before, but worth repeating.
The Importance of Not Being Earnest
A panel discussion (audio mp3) from the LSE on what’s philosophically interesting about comedy. Both have a lot in common: showing up the ordinary as odd, critiquing the status quo, hecklers… But can humour be a source of knowledge?
Group-think: what it is and how to avoid it
Genealogical, family history, library and archive organizations aren’t exempt.
Royal archives that we pay for but aren’t allowed to read: a brief history
The examples are for Australia and the UK, but undoubtedly relevant for Canada.
TheGenealogist now has Image Archive pictures pinned to maps
See the video explanation and example at https://youtu.be/Mt5f-mAyJ5Q
Newspapers.com adds The Evening Standard and The Independent
Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Celia Lewis, Douglas Wallace, Jo Stanbridge, Judith H., Michael Harrison, Robert Halfyard, Roger Thomas, Unknown.


Starting on Monday there’s a gradual build-up to a full weekend of lectures during the annual OGS conference, this year all online.
At Friday’s BIFHSGO social I was asked about the BIFHSGO logo, specifically the colour. I recalled it was originally black and white with a rustic hand-drawn appearance. Over the years it changed to a more uniform shape and the colour varied. I’ve forgotten the details.
The Archives annual report, available at the time of writing as Document 1 at
This database now has 320,053 records, up from 160,030 when I looked in March last year.
Expect a new capability to appear at MyHeritage today. As I write it’s embargoed. Watch the space below for an update or go to
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