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Family Tree Maker 2012 Syncing feature |
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Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Software: Family Tree Maker 2012
In October I purchased the upgrade for Family Tree Maker 2012 from Ancestry.com for $27.99 plus $5 shipping. I have been working well with the 2011 version, but the price is fair and genealogy is one area in which I prefer to be up-to-date. (Ironic, I know.) I think that the main new feature of the 2012 version is syncing trees with Ancestry.com. With older versions, once you publish a tree on Ancestry.com, additional changes to the tree must be made on both your computer and on the website, which can be slow and tedious. With the syncing capabilities of the 2012 version, you can sync a tree from your computer to the website and vice versa. (I do not recommend copying someone else's tree from a website to your computer. Your research should be your own.)
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Family Tree Maker 2011, part two
Following up on my previous post concerning Family Tree Maker 2011 software, I have been alerted by Ancestry that there is a way to upload media from the software on your computer to the Ancestry.com website.
With the program on my computer, I can view media for an individual. Media is of two basic types: media images merged from Ancestry and images that I have added, usually of gravestones and vital records, such as death certificates. Uploading the tree as a gedcom file produces a no frills version without any media images, but keeps names, dates, and locations. I was manually uploading the visual media files.
There is an easy button for this situation. It is the SHARE icon located in the upper right corner of the Family Tree Maker program.
After pressing the share icon, a few different boxes appear to guide you through sending the tree- along with the media images- to Ancestry.com.
Here is the result on ancestry.com for a small tree I uploaded to try this out. This is the Haefeli family, originally from Switzerland, who came to Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, in the 1850s. They are buried at Woodland Cemetery in Newark.
The picture of the gravestone in the media row is the one picture that I added for Franz. The listings for residence next to the years are for census entries and tax lists. Although "add media" appears with each listing, the media that I can view with the software is viewable online with two clicks. Click on residence and you are brought to a new screen with the link to the media.
With the program on my computer, I can view media for an individual. Media is of two basic types: media images merged from Ancestry and images that I have added, usually of gravestones and vital records, such as death certificates. Uploading the tree as a gedcom file produces a no frills version without any media images, but keeps names, dates, and locations. I was manually uploading the visual media files.
There is an easy button for this situation. It is the SHARE icon located in the upper right corner of the Family Tree Maker program.
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Family Tree Maker 2011. The media files viewable in the program do not transfer when exporting the records in creating a gedcom version of the tree. |
Here is the result on ancestry.com for a small tree I uploaded to try this out. This is the Haefeli family, originally from Switzerland, who came to Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, in the 1850s. They are buried at Woodland Cemetery in Newark.
The picture of the gravestone in the media row is the one picture that I added for Franz. The listings for residence next to the years are for census entries and tax lists. Although "add media" appears with each listing, the media that I can view with the software is viewable online with two clicks. Click on residence and you are brought to a new screen with the link to the media.
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Click this source citation to see the media- the family of Francis Hafle in Newark in the 1860 census. |
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Software: Family Tree Maker 2011

As a method of organization, I name women by their birth name, not a married name. If I do not know a woman's birth name, I give her a last name of "Unknown." This indicates to me that I have not uncovered all of her vital information yet. Family Tree Maker sometimes locates appropriate records based on name changes, sometimes does not.
You can upload your tree to Ancestry.com fairly easily by creating a no-frills gedcom. Your pictures will not travel with your tree. If you want photos in your online tree, you need to add them one by one. With the software on your computer, you can view any census page that you have saved. In the online tree, viewers will see a listing of locations and years, but not the actual census entries. Any revisions you would like to make after posting your tree must be done step by step.
A fluke that I noted with the 2011 version that was not in the 2010 version is saving media. My media was not saving in spite of a merge. I think I figured it out. When merging records from Ancestry.com with an individual, you need to be on the page that lists the potential matches. The final page of the dialogue box detailing the merge needs to show the actual media image, or the image will not become part of the media in the tree.
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Sample page of Family Tree Maker 2011. The media displayed in the column on the right will not appear if the record is not merged from the records page. |
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If this (non) image appears in the dialogue box just prior to merging records, the media will not display in your tree. |
Other than the media issue, the software is running great so far. You can create complicated charts to share your research or print family stories- bunches of facts. I would recommend Family Tree Maker to anyone who is interested in pursuing family roots.
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