arkansasonline.com//news/202… Recently, a woman told me she was looking for her biological father. “I think your husband, Bob Schwabach, is related to him,” she said. She needed to know the name of Bob’s father.
So did her nine siblings, all of whom shared the same sperm donor. But Bob never knew his father’s name either, having spent his childhood in a foster home and orphanage. Sadly, the week before he died in 2020, he sent a note to a possible cousin, but never heard back. Now, thanks to Google Gemini, a competitor to ChatGPT, I may have found him.
Gemini focused on a genetic marker called a “centimorgan,” or cM. Looking at three names on Bob’s family tree, Gemini declared that “at 1,656 cM, there is zero biological possibility that they aren’t Bob’s close family. You have proven that Bob is a Tomlinson.”
I started my quest at
MyHeritage.com using the Google Chrome web browser. Each time I had a question, I clicked the Gemini button so Gemini could “see” the pages I was examining. When I reached a dead end, I turned to Bob’s account at
Ancestry.com. Gemini stayed by my side, telling me where to click whenever I got confused.
The possibilities narrowed until Gemini was 95 percent certain that John Leo Tomlinson was Bob’s dad. Then, without any promptings from me, it examined US Census data, discovering that Tomlinson was a broker at the Insurance Exchange Building in Chicago. It also looked at Tomlinson’s draft record, something I never would have thought of. Bob’s dad was described as tall, slender and blue-eyed with light brown hair. With this info, the woman who first wrote to me through the MyHeritage portal discovered that her father was related to Bob’s mother, not his dad.
Beware of QR Codes
The other day, a college professor and his highly educated wife rushed over to show me an official-looking text. They hoped I would scan its QR code for them, since only one of them had a smartphone.
“Delete it,” I said. For one thing, the text wasn’t expected. For another, it was too urgent. Had they scanned it, they probably would have picked up malware, lost money, or given away personal information.
Other kinds of QR code frauds abound. There’s parking meter tampering, in which QR codes are placed over real ones. In other cases, unsolicited packages containing fake codes ask you to register your gift. But the most common are QR codes sent by email or text claiming there’s a problem with your account. Just delete.
Going Incognito
When you’re asked for your email address, consider using a temporary one. Otherwise, your real address could get passed to marketing firms. Before you know it, your mail volume has tripled.
If you have an iPhone, try “Hide your Mail.” But if that option doesn’t pop up when you need it, go to “Settings,” tap your name and tap “iCloud.” Next tap “Hide My Email.” It will give you several temporary email addresses to use. Or you can create your own and give it a label, such as “junk mail.” All mail sent to these hidden email addresses will be forwarded to your regular inbox. But at least your real address won’t get shared.
To send a message with your new address, tap the Apple Mail icon, start a new email, then tap the “from” field and change it to your temporary address. The recipient will only see the temporary address, not your real one.
For Android and iPhone, another way to get a temporary address is to go to
incognitomail.co, copy the address they offer you, and give it to the company that’s asking for it. You don’t have to sign up or login. Any reply you get will be stored on the
incognitomail.co web page.
But since your replies are only good for two hours, these temporary addresses are best for short-term situations. For instance, you could use one when you’re asked to share your email in exchange for a coupon. But you wouldn’t want to use a temporary address in job searches or any other regular correspondence.
What about privacy issues? While Incognito won’t share your real address with other companies, it can read the messages you receive on their site. So it’s best not to use it for personal affairs.
Better Internet
If your neighborhood offers few choices for internet service, consider the new $199 StarLink Mini. Reviewers are impressed with its efficiency and speed. Starlink’s roaming plans work even in a fast-moving car.
The high-speed service starts at 100 gigabytes of data for $50 a month. But there’s also a standby option that offers unlimited low-speed internet service for $5 a month. No router is required in either case.
Alternatively, Viasat, though not portable like the Starlink Mini, is a good choice for streaming and browsing. It offers speeds of 150 Mbps with no long-term contracts. Equipment can be leased for about $15 a month.
Update: Cruise lines are not allowing passengers to bring the StarLink Mini onboard. They must buy the ship’s internet package if they want a connection.
📷Internut
“Insane! Researchers Can’t Beat This Tennis Robot.” Search on that phrase to watch a robot play tennis with a man. The robot’s movements really look amazingly human. Unlike other athletes, such as those that can do karate, box each other, or do parkour, it’s not remotely controlled or pre-programmed, according to PC World. Before this breakthrough, any real competition between man and machine was considered impossible.
(continued at
oncomp.com)