![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhppwqLL3ggJL1rgAR09vIXthEGnZIkvTaM45Bt8JdzkneL_u9ckipiR049meFlpjYBBfwQ32wG89dmvFInE-oKZQIgddvAt5IRn9XbA3aWXM4tlfTGNzcPTgDXJf0snyUkUWd0/s320/rootsweb.jpg)
What's happening? Is interest in genealogy declining? Is the mailing list moving out of favour as a technology as the blog and web 2.0 take over? Have all the questions been asked, with the answers available on the mailing list archive? Something else?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyrctJ9IxLdGH_1mNTAEBOMUaEJrNjebtW6oIHzWCuLJE6wLp14f8UnLcvJfW1y9CMyoEJpYX0-g8QsE-CtS2iG7G53ZnCfLsMgPdJon6MKbqwm0rlVJPxajj1p1Y-6pvDz2TT/s320/DNA+Rootsweb.jpg)
The chart in blue, postings with DNA in the message body, shows healthy growth as interest in this area continues to develop after commercial DNA tests for genealogy started in 2000. Lest we get too excited, that's still less than 3.3% of all postings in 2006.
Another emerging word is blog. There were nearly 5000 postings with the word in 2006, up from just nine in 2001 when the word first appears with its current popular meaning.
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