That sounds really cool and I wish I had more time right not to check it out. I'll have to study the GEDCOM format and concepts. Do you now a good source for info? It looks like Wikipedia has some good stuff. Mike On Thu, 5 Sep 2013, Michael Moore wrote: > I'm not sure if there are any genealogists on here, but I'd like to toot my > own horn for a moment. > > Over the summer I wrote TreeTrumpet, some Open Source genealogy software. > > TL:DR: Demo -- http://treetrumpet.com/demo/ , Code -- > http://github.com/stuporglue/TreeTrumpet > > > TreeTrumpet is meant to be extremely simple to use and search-engine > friendly. There's no database setup and no required config files. > > To install it you simply upload the code and upload a GEDCOM* file. The > site parses the GEDCOM file to create the pages as they're requested. > > It features a pedigree-tree view, a map of where ancestors lived, a > sortable/filterable table of the ancestors and individual pages for each > ancestor and family. There's also a contact form, a link to download the > GEDCOM file. The site generates a sitemap.xml file and pings Google and > Bing when the GEDCOM file is updated. > > Anyways, if anyone is interested, check it out. I'm open to suggestions, > criticisms, complaints, bug reports, bug fixes, etc. > > Thanks! > Michael Moore > > > * GEDCOM is a text-based genealogy database format. It's something like > CSV. Like CSV it's not the best format to store most data, but it is the > lowest common denominator and almost any genealogy program can export a > GEDCOM file. >