Geni

I’m having a lot of fun with a Web2.0 startup that was just launched: Geni. From the about page,

Geni lets you create a family tree through our fun simple interface. When you add a relative’s email address, he or she will be invited to join your tree. That relative can then add other relatives, and so on. Your tree will continue to grow as relatives invite other relatives.

In about ten minutes, I was able to add thirty of my immediate family. As I get further and further from my immediate family, I couldn’t recall details off the top of my head. I have family with whom I’ve talked and chatted over IM, but never seen in person.

Some observations:

  • It doesn’t seem to be able to keep track of last names as I add nodes. This shouldn’t be a very hard feature to implement.
  • My family tree isn’t actually a tree, it’s a graph (in the mathematical sense.) It happens when you have nine kids with about thirty years between the first and last child.
  • I don’t have a last name in the traditional sense. My last name is my dad’s first name and so on. Though that stops pretty soon up the hierarchy.
  • I have just one word in my first name. My brother has two words in his name, but the second word isn’t his middle name.
  • One fine ancestor of mine decided to stop using his family name, because it was uncool to do so back in the day. As a result of that I don’t have one too.

It should be interesting to look at my tree in a few years from now. I’ve heard that I have a lot of relatives in North America – let’s see if I can track them down. Maybe there’s a few in Vancouver!

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3 Responses to “Geni”

  1. amy Says:

    Genealogy, I am doing!
    We have read posts related to genealogy on your blog and have just launched family based social network- Kincafe. We would like you to particpate in beta release of Kincafe and provide feedback.
    Thanks
    amy

  2. ganesh Says:

    I’ll try it out when I have some time.

  3. Divya Says:

    Hola. Long time. No see.

    My surname isnt even my dad’s name (its a shorter version of it!). And my dad actually has his village name, grandfather’s name, and his father’s name before his.

    And apparently, it was common in those times to have the sister of the groom to marry the brother of the bride etc. So, there is a lot of confusion on who is related to who on whose side in my family.

    But thanks for the link tho, I think I will start clearing up the confusion :)

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