User:MannAE

=  Alan Mann, A.G.®  =

Alan E. Mann, AG, is an accredited genealogist in England, Australia, and the Channel Islands. He is a community manager for the FamilySearch Community Services team, a workgroup in the Family History Department, Corporation of the President, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Alan was formerly the Information Services manager for the Family History Library. He teaches British Research (History 412, 413, and 481) for BYU and various computer courses for Salt Lake Community College. Alan writes columns, reviews, and articles for several magazines, and presents around the country on the Internet and British research. Alan is a director of the Utah Genealogical Association, was program chair for GenTech 2000 in San Diego, and is co-founder and co-chair of the BYU Annual Computerized Genealogy Conference (1998-2002,2006-).

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Organize and enable department staff and initial community authors for England barn raising
See England Barn Raising Tasks

Replacement for portal template
The place portal pages (those titled "Portal:[place name]" use a MediaWiki template to create and lay out the boxes on the page. This template is problemmatical for two reasons. First, the content of each box on a portal page is actually a sub-page, so none of the content in the sub-pages is considered by search engines to be on the portal page itself. So although a portal's sub-pages may contain a lot of great content, search engines don't attribute any of that content to the portal page itself. That means words within in the sub-pages cannot be used in a search engine to find the portal page. As far as search engines are concerned, then, the Denmark portal page is just an empty shell with some code, not a content-rich page on everything you need to know about Danish research. This problem is common to external search engines like Google as well as the wiki's own search engine. To solve the problem, we need to find a more search-engine-friendly way to lay out boxes in our place pages. Mollie, Fran and Michael have all tried different solutions; have a look and see which ones you like.


 * 1) Mollie's England/Test1 page
 * 2) Michael's Pennsylvania page