It does not appear so, yet. It is the same records as with the old version, at least as far as I can tell. A tad easier to navigate in some respects, but far from perfect.
Antenati security issue..?
- MarcuccioV
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
Mark
If you ignore your foundation, your house will soon collapse...
Surnames: Attiani Belli Bucci Calvano Cerci Del Brusco Falera Giorgi Latini Marsili Mattia Mezzo Nardecchia Pellegrini Piacentini Pizzuti Pontecorvo Recchia Topani Ziantona & Zorli
If you ignore your foundation, your house will soon collapse...
Surnames: Attiani Belli Bucci Calvano Cerci Del Brusco Falera Giorgi Latini Marsili Mattia Mezzo Nardecchia Pellegrini Piacentini Pizzuti Pontecorvo Recchia Topani Ziantona & Zorli
Re: Antenati security issue..?
How did you accomplish that? I've been trying for hours to duplicate. I have found the way to access the manifest by opening the three lines at the left top of the image and opened the manifest but can't figure out how to find individual page codes.bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 12:44You can still download individual images but you have to access through the manifest. Awkward to do, but at least the ability is there. Looking for an easier workaround. Here is an example of a page on the new site linked that way.Biff83 wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 01:49 The "save as" function now only will save the image size as it appears on the window. If you try to enlarge, you can only save the enlarged piece that is in the window. When you save the images show in the window, they are small and when blown up after saving become almost illegible.
Biff
https://iiif-antenati.san.beniculturali ... d0pQd-NkRI
Thanks,
Biff
"Mintammicce impizzu mpizzu ca pue largu minne fazzu sule!"
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
Working right now. Will try to post something tonight. By the way... I know a few people who tied their research not to downloaded images, but to links to the antenati images online. (Bad idea.) If you're one of those, the wayback machine stores images of websites and very likely has the ability to get at some of your old links. (Don't use it to link to, but it may be easier to download your old images than trying the workaround for the new site downloads.) http://web.archive.org/
Researching Gibellina, Sicily surnames Bivona, Bonafede, Zummo, Ponzio, Bevinetto, Beninati, Fontana, Cipolla, Bruno, Manfrè, Lanfranca, and Navarra
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
Ok, here goes.Biff83 wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 21:34How did you accomplish that? I've been trying for hours to duplicate. I have found the way to access the manifest by opening the three lines at the left top of the image and opened the manifest but can't figure out how to find individual page codes.bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 12:44You can still download individual images but you have to access through the manifest. Awkward to do, but at least the ability is there. Looking for an easier workaround. Here is an example of a page on the new site linked that way.Biff83 wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 01:49 The "save as" function now only will save the image size as it appears on the window. If you try to enlarge, you can only save the enlarged piece that is in the window. When you save the images show in the window, they are small and when blown up after saving become almost illegible.
Biff
https://iiif-antenati.san.beniculturali ... d0pQd-NkRI
Thanks,
Biff
1. Once you have found the page you need, do as you did, accessing the manifest by opening the three lines at the top left.
2. A bunch of options will appear at the left of the image. At the bottom, clicking on the address for the IIIF manifest will bring up a page of source code. The individual address of every image in that particular group of documents is buried in there.
3. Go to the address for the particular page you need by searching for the page. For example, page 20 will be on there as "pag. 20" and you can search (in windows) by clicking ctrl F and typing in pag. 20. That takes you to a line that has an address in it. Look for the term "resource" on the pag. 20 address.
4. Once you find "resource" for page 20, a few characters to the right is an address right after opening quotation marks that begins with "https:" and ends with "default.jpeg." This is (almost) the address you need. Copy the address with a right click, everything from "https:" to "default.jpeg" but nothing before or after.
5. Paste the address into your browser. Before hitting enter, eliminate each back slash (\). Once you have eliminated all the back slashes, what remains is the image address and you should be able to hit enter and go directly there, accessing the full high-resolution image. From there you can right click and save.
Not an elegant solution, but it works. It gets easier once you have done it a couple of times. I'm sure some folks will write some scripts that make it easier. It is probably easier with the .json viewer in Firefox or the .json extension in Chrome.
Researching Gibellina, Sicily surnames Bivona, Bonafede, Zummo, Ponzio, Bevinetto, Beninati, Fontana, Cipolla, Bruno, Manfrè, Lanfranca, and Navarra
Re: Antenati security issue..?
Got it to work.bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 23:58 [
Ok, here goes.
1. Once you have found the page you need, do as you did, accessing the manifest by opening the three lines at the top left.
2. A bunch of options will appear at the left of the image. At the bottom, clicking on the address for the IIIF manifest will bring up a page of source code. The individual address of every image in that particular group of documents is buried in there.
3. Go to the address for the particular page you need by searching for the page. For example, page 20 will be on there as "pag. 20" and you can search (in windows) by clicking ctrl F and typing in pag. 20. That takes you to a line that has an address in it. Look for the term "resource" on the pag. 20 address.
4. Once you find "resource" for page 20, a few characters to the right is an address right after opening quotation marks that begins with "https:" and ends with "default.jpeg." This is (almost) the address you need. Copy the address with a right click, everything from "https:" to "default.jpeg" but nothing before or after.
5. Paste the address into your browser. Before hitting enter, eliminate each back slash (\). Once you have eliminated all the back slashes, what remains is the image address and you should be able to hit enter and go directly there, accessing the full high-resolution image. From there you can right click and save.
Not an elegant solution, but it works. It gets easier once you have done it a couple of times. I'm sure some folks will write some scripts that make it easier. It is probably easier with the .json viewer in Firefox or the .json extension in Chrome.
Thanks,
Biff
"Mintammicce impizzu mpizzu ca pue largu minne fazzu sule!"
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
Hi, you can choose a page using thumbnails (top right).MarcuccioV wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 00:13 Found & bookmarked the new site -- works more like FamilySearch now, where you can scroll through images. Unfortunately, you can't choose a page number to directly go to it seems.
There will no doubt be a learning curve, but hopefully the page error issue is behind us (just when I learned to get around it)...![]()
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 23:58Ok, here goes.Biff83 wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 21:34How did you accomplish that? I've been trying for hours to duplicate. I have found the way to access the manifest by opening the three lines at the left top of the image and opened the manifest but can't figure out how to find individual page codes.bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 12:44
You can still download individual images but you have to access through the manifest. Awkward to do, but at least the ability is there. Looking for an easier workaround. Here is an example of a page on the new site linked that way.
https://iiif-antenati.san.beniculturali ... d0pQd-NkRI
Thanks,
Biff
1. Once you have found the page you need, do as you did, accessing the manifest by opening the three lines at the top left.
2. A bunch of options will appear at the left of the image. At the bottom, clicking on the address for the IIIF manifest will bring up a page of source code. The individual address of every image in that particular group of documents is buried in there.
3. Go to the address for the particular page you need by searching for the page. For example, page 20 will be on there as "pag. 20" and you can search (in windows) by clicking ctrl F and typing in pag. 20. That takes you to a line that has an address in it. Look for the term "resource" on the pag. 20 address.
4. Once you find "resource" for page 20, a few characters to the right is an address right after opening quotation marks that begins with "https:" and ends with "default.jpeg." This is (almost) the address you need. Copy the address with a right click, everything from "https:" to "default.jpeg" but nothing before or after.
5. Paste the address into your browser. Before hitting enter, eliminate each back slash (\). Once you have eliminated all the back slashes, what remains is the image address and you should be able to hit enter and go directly there, accessing the full high-resolution image. From there you can right click and save.
Not an elegant solution, but it works. It gets easier once you have done it a couple of times. I'm sure some folks will write some scripts that make it easier. It is probably easier with the .json viewer in Firefox or the .json extension in Chrome.
THANK YOU bbivona! Your instructions worked perfectly. Hopefully there will be an easier way to do this in the future, but for now, this works.
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- Location: Texas e Sicilia, provincia di Trapani
Re: Antenati security issue..?
If you use the .json extension in Chrome the back slahes won't appear and you won't have to delete those. It's easy to add in the using the extension button on the tool bar.Rcdimambro wrote: 28 Nov 2021, 21:51bbivona wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 23:58Ok, here goes.Biff83 wrote: 16 Nov 2021, 21:34
How did you accomplish that? I've been trying for hours to duplicate. I have found the way to access the manifest by opening the three lines at the left top of the image and opened the manifest but can't figure out how to find individual page codes.
Thanks,
Biff
1. Once you have found the page you need, do as you did, accessing the manifest by opening the three lines at the top left.
2. A bunch of options will appear at the left of the image. At the bottom, clicking on the address for the IIIF manifest will bring up a page of source code. The individual address of every image in that particular group of documents is buried in there.
3. Go to the address for the particular page you need by searching for the page. For example, page 20 will be on there as "pag. 20" and you can search (in windows) by clicking ctrl F and typing in pag. 20. That takes you to a line that has an address in it. Look for the term "resource" on the pag. 20 address.
4. Once you find "resource" for page 20, a few characters to the right is an address right after opening quotation marks that begins with "https:" and ends with "default.jpeg." This is (almost) the address you need. Copy the address with a right click, everything from "https:" to "default.jpeg" but nothing before or after.
5. Paste the address into your browser. Before hitting enter, eliminate each back slash (\). Once you have eliminated all the back slashes, what remains is the image address and you should be able to hit enter and go directly there, accessing the full high-resolution image. From there you can right click and save.
Not an elegant solution, but it works. It gets easier once you have done it a couple of times. I'm sure some folks will write some scripts that make it easier. It is probably easier with the .json viewer in Firefox or the .json extension in Chrome.
THANK YOU bbivona! Your instructions worked perfectly. Hopefully there will be an easier way to do this in the future, but for now, this works.
Researching Gibellina, Sicily surnames Bivona, Bonafede, Zummo, Ponzio, Bevinetto, Beninati, Fontana, Cipolla, Bruno, Manfrè, Lanfranca, and Navarra
- Italysearcher
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Re: Antenati security issue..?
Try this: https://angelresearch.wordpress.com/wp- ... ction=edit
Less cut & paste for the image
Less cut & paste for the image
Ann Tatangelo
http://angelresearch.net
Dual citizenship assistance, and document acquisition, on-site genealogical research in Lazio, Molise, Latina and Cosenza. Land record searches and succession.
http://angelresearch.net
Dual citizenship assistance, and document acquisition, on-site genealogical research in Lazio, Molise, Latina and Cosenza. Land record searches and succession.