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Additional tags for a person

paritchie
paritchie ✭✭✭✭
November 2, 2024 in Memories

Would like to suggest that we are allowed more than 1,000 tags per person. Thank you.

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Best Answer

  • AmberML1
    AmberML1 ✭✭✭
    November 4, 2024 edited November 4, 2024 Answer ✓

    @PABulfinch

    I understand your concerns. I'm happy to share this feedback suggestion with the team.

    One note. . . the Help Article entitled What happens to memories after the contributor dies? also recommends that you "Put the memories into albums, and share the albums with your family. Family members can bookmark the albums to access the items.

    It sounds like you know what you're doing, and you have already placed your Memories in an album; just be sure to then share that album with your family.

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Answers

  • paritchie
    paritchie ✭✭✭✭
    November 4, 2024

    Let me add some additional information. I am up to 999 tags on my own pictures. I have put all my picutres in an Album, but that does not guarantee that anyone will be able to see the untagged pictures after I die. I would like the pictures to be easily viewable after I die. Thank you for considering this.

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  • paritchie
    paritchie ✭✭✭✭
    November 5, 2024

    Thank you, Amber. I thought about sharing with family, but I keep adding more and more each day. Although I served as a FS missionary for about 10 years, I quit to serve a full-time mission at the Los Angeles, FamilySearch Center. I am devoting my time to getting all documents and pictures on FS. My direct line is not very interested in having these, so I want to preserve them for later generations when interest may pick up. I sure hope that this gets changed to at least 2,000—if not more. I have 4-5 bins of material.

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  • AmberML1
    AmberML1 ✭✭✭
    November 7, 2024

    @PABulfinch

    I discussed this issue with my team, and we think we have some good alternative suggestions for you!

    It is true, for now you can only have 1,000 Memories tagged to you. Because they are tagged, those Memories will remain viewable on FamilySearch after you die. Or you can add Memories to an Album and share that Album with family to preserve your Memories after you die. But if 1,000 tags aren’t enough or you don’t trust the option to share an Album with others, consider these two alternatives….

    • (1) You can add Topic Tags to any Memory. Topic Tags will remain after you die, and they are searchable with the Find tool under the Memories tab on your Homepage. You can select many Memories at once and add the same Topic Tag to them.

    • (2) You can also add you extra Memories to an Album, and then copy a link of that Album and place it on your own Person Page in Family Tree (in a Note) so anyone can access it after you die.

    Instructions are below as well as links to Help Articles that address this issue.

    Please note: You must make sure the Memories you want seen are marked as Public, not Private. Any Memories marked Private will remain private and will not be viewable after your death. Also remember to secure permission if you have details/images of living people in your Memories. See the Submission guide for details.

    Adding Topic Tags:

    • In your Gallery, roll your mouse over the top right corner of a Memory. Click the check mark to select it. You can select as many as you want.
    • Click the Actions button in the blue header.
    • Click Add a Topic Tag…
    • Provide a Topic Tag name.
    • You can also do this from the Memory Viewer:
    • Click an individual Memory.
    • At the top of the right side-bar, click the tag icon and add a Topic Tag.
    • (You might consider giving all the Memories you want viewed after your death the same, unique topic tag; example, Shirley789.)

    Suggestion: After you have assigned a Topic Tag to all the Memories you want, make a Note on your own Person Page. (Click the Collaborate tab in the header that also includes Details, Sources, Memories, etc. From there, click Add Note.) You can then tell any viewer they can search for your Memories by clicking Memories at the top of the homepage, then Find. Give them the Topic Tag name. You can make this Note an Alert Note (check mark the top of your Note) so that it will be seen when anyone accesses your Person Page after you die.

    Adding Memories to an Album and sharing that Memory:

    • In your gallery, click New Album from the left side-bar. Give your Album a name.
    • Roll your mouse over the top right corner of a Memory. Click the check mark to select it. You can select as many as you want.
    • Click the Actions button in the blue header.
    • Click Add to Album.
    • Select which Album you want these Memories to go to.
    • On the left side-bar, click the Album where you have placed your Memories.
    • Select Share from the blue highlighted options.
    • Click Copy to copy the link.
    • Then go make a Note (following the instructions above), and paste the link in that note.
    • The link remains active even if you add additional Memories later on. But the link will not remain active if you delete the Album or change the name of the Album.
    • Please note: If you have any Memories marked as Private, they can still be seen if they are in a shared Album.

    Hope this helps. Sorry about such a long explanation.

    Pertinent Help Articles:

    How do I add the same topic tag to multiple memories?

    How do I search the photos, stories, documents, and audio files in Memories?How do I add or remove topic tags in Memories?What happens to memories after the contributor dies?How do I add notes to a person in Family Tree?
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  • paritchie
    paritchie ✭✭✭✭
    November 7, 2024

    Thank you, Amber. I did not realize I could leave a link to the album on my Person Page so that it would be available after I die. That is when it will be most useful—after I die. I still think they should expand the number, though. The long explanation was no problem at all—I love thoroughness. Better too much than too little; right?

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024 edited November 11, 2024

    I also agree that simply person tagging a gazillion items to your own personal profile - may not be the best approach.

    Can you clarify if these items are items that only pertain you personally or are they items representing other living people - or items that represent deceased people? In many cases there is no need to link them to your own profile. but knowing example scenarios would be helpful in providing answers.

    You should be cautious in uploading items that represent other living people.

    One simple work around (for certain scenarios) is simply to place multiple photos etc in a single pdf file - all counting as only ONE item - it also allows you to control order and add additional text and related info.
    much better than a gazillion separate items - with no consistent order.

    1
  • paritchie
    paritchie ✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024

    Dennis—

    The pictures are of me. And it should not matter. I am taking pictures and scanning them in; tagging, titling, and putting them in albums. Amber talked about sharing the album, but that is not going to help when I die. I want all people to be able to see these photos. I am a huge picture-taker and have a lot of photos of people that I want on FamilySearch. Thank you. I think raising the limit is a good idea!

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024 edited November 9, 2024

    It actually does help - both now and when you are deceased.

    because instead of having a thousand photos all globbed together on a single profile - with no real order or groupings
    if you use albums - you can organize your photos into groupings of related subjects
    and people are not overwhelmed - by trying to look for a set of items among a collection of 1,000 photos.
    You can create various albums for related topics
    example include:
    Family Photos
    Baby Photos
    Marriage photos
    Family Reunions and more

    the one thing that is important is to keep them as public and not mark them as "private"

    Here are some links on related subjects

    https://yanceyfamilygenealogy.org/when_you_pass_away.htm

    https://yanceyfamilygenealogy.org/sharing_family_tree.htm

    https://yanceyfamilygenealogy.org/family_search_batch_processing.htm

    also as previously stated - if you create a pdf of file of various related photos and put them into a single pdf -
    that then only counts as one item - instead of 20 items for 20 photos and you can easily stay under the limit
    and this is another way to keep related items together (and in a fixed order) as well as adding text, descriptions and other content with the photos inside the pdf.


    There are valid "performance reasons" for not overloading a single profile/album with more than a thousand photos - and that is the main reason for the limit - keeping the system performing at optimal performance - instead of a system that bogs down because too many items are trying to be displayed in a single view. Software engineers set this limit with very intentional limits and reasons in mind.

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024

    another thing you can do is to create a story item under your profile
    that is a listing of all the albums you have created - and the links to them
    this way even when you pass - people will still have access to the url's of all your albums.

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024 edited November 9, 2024

    You should also consider the possibility that if you have thousands of photos
    you might consider the better option of putting these photos on a CD or Flash drive
    with them again grouped into meaningful folders
    which would also include videos and more - bypassing the various limitations and constraints on FS memories - such as file size.
    that you could then share with family

    This option also acts as a backup to your FamilySearch uploadsit also can be shared with people who dont even have FamilySearch accountsor used to share photos that also include other living people that you may not consider posting on FS

    You might also consider putting portions of your compiled items in pdf format - and submitting the items to Familysearch digital books - which doesnt have the 15MB file limit. and which could have certain access restrictions while you are alive that could be opened up wider once you are deceased.

    FamilySearch Memories is not the one and only solution to preserving thousands of Personal photos.
    there are also various supplemental/alternate solutions that (in some - but not all - aspects) are much better in handling a massive number of photos.

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  • paritchie
    paritchie ✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024

    I have them on flash drives, Dennis. The problem is, no one wants them now. I am preserving for future generations.

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024 edited November 11, 2024
    https://community.familysearch.org/en/discussion/comment/574975#Comment_574975

    so create various pdf files - of various subjects of your life
    and have someone in your family submit it as a "digital book" once you are deceased.

    https://www.familysearch.org/en/family-history-library/digital-library-donations

    and putting them in FS albums does keep them preserved beyond your death for future generations.

    with an item that you DO include in your profile memory - that lists all your albums with the url to each one.

    here is an example of a story item with links to various of my albums
    https://www.familysearch.org/memories/memory/210191704?a=1406004

    I can use this type of entry (hooked to my profile) to point people at albums of many thousands of items I have uploaded to FS Memories and this is available both now and when I am deceased.

    (you will need to copy and paste the link above to your browser)

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  • Dennis J Yancey
    Dennis J Yancey ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 9, 2024 edited November 9, 2024

    ILOVEPDDF - is a wonderful free online utility service that allows for various helpful actions related to pdfs

    https://www.ilovepdf.com/

    examples
    converting a set of images all into a single pdf file
    compressing a pdf so it takes up much less room (keeping you under the 15 MB limit)
    merging and splitting pdf files.
    and so much more

    Personally for so much of what I do - I prefer the pdf over a large number of disjoint image files.

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  • AmberML1
    AmberML1 ✭✭✭
    November 13, 2024

    @PABulfinch

    Thanks for posting this question. This is valuable information.

    We have added this discussion to the Memory Viewer Feedback group.

    We encourage you to click the link provided, and click to “Join” the group.

    The Memory Viewer Feedback group specifically manages questions, concerns, and discussions regarding the Memory Viewer (including the tagging function). It also provides access to Updates and Known Issues.

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