The limit of 5 per day has been removed but I still do approximately 5 a day similar to Jim's process. On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 1:41 PM, [email protected] wrote: >Diana > >I've found a couple dozen atCousins at 23&Me. Here's the process I used. > >1. Make up a standard message. I encluded links to my two ancestors-only trees on line; my name ans email; my desire to share my info, and hope to look at other's trees, my plea to at least accept the invite and/or share emails because some names drop off after 1,000 are posted - all under 1,000 letters-spaces. > >2. Click on Relative Finder and then click on "send invitation" and highlight the standard message and copy in your message; click send, then close; then repeat four more times. Limit is 5 per day. I've now sent messages to over a thousand matches. About half eventually reply. Make your brief message as inviting and easy as you can to get a good response rate. > >Jim - Sent from my iPhone - FaceTime! > >On Apr 4, 2012, at 10:00 AM, "Diana Gale Matthiesen" <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Yes, I'm looking for SNPs in a certain haplogroup, I1, and I'm >> familiar with the SNPs. When I ask for a "List of Mutations" for I1, >> it gives them to me, but when I click on one, it only gives me my >> result (nc of course). What I'm trying to find out, ideally, is the >> haplogroup-relevant SNP status of all the I1 men in the database. Is >> there a way to do that? What does it mean to have access to the raw >> data? I think that must be what I need because some people are >> talking about some "obscure" I1 SNPs being readable/available there, >> ones that are not on the List. >> >> I really mean it when I say all I've ever done at 23andMe is look at >> my medical data. I suppose there's a tutorial I should walk through, >> as in, "If all else fails, read the instructions." >> >> Diana >> >> >> >> >>> From: Ann Turner >>> Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2012 9:22 AM >>> >>> You're speaking of cases where you don't have access >>> to the raw data, but you know the haplogroup? You can >>> use the Haplogroup Tree Mutation Mapper (under Ancestry >>> Labs) and enter any subclade into the query box. The >>> subclade label may very well be different than the one >>> assigned by FTDNA, depending on nomenclature and how >>> deeply the FTDNA customer has been tested. Take a note >>> of the most derived SNP (the one at the top of the >>> results list) and look it up in http://isogg.org/tree >>> under the major haplogroup label. >> >> >> >> >> ______________________________ >> For answers to Frequently Asked Questions about mailing lists, please see: >> http://dgmweb.net/MailingListFAQs.html >> >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > >______________________________ >For answers to Frequently Asked Questions about mailing lists, please see: >http://dgmweb.net/MailingListFAQs.html > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >