Entered CNET Catalog: 10/31/2008
SKU: 705381164517
Manufacturer: Encore Software Inc.
Manufacturer description
Family Tree Maker 2009 by Ancestry.com, the #1 selling family history software, can help you easily discover, preserve and share your family history. It can help you build your family tree, gather stories and photos and create charts and books to share with your family. The Essentials Edition includes a one-month subscription to Ancestry.com - the world's largest online collection of family history records with more than 7 billion ancestors’ names. Enter facts about your family and Family Tree Maker will automatically connect to the site. From there, Family Tree Maker 2009 will let you quickly add historical records and facts from Ancestry.com to your tree. Publish your tree online to share with the whole family. You can also preserve your heritage by adding photos, video and audio clips to your tree. Or use Family Tree Maker's interactive maps, timelines, charts and more to help bring your story to life.User opinions
Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3out of 3 user reviews
Don't Bother
Pros: It works with Vista and Explorer V8
Cons: All the rest. It does not perform as you would expect. Stick with your old version or.
out of 3 user reviews
Stick with FTM version 16
Pros: improved relational features and editing options. more online features
Cons: crowded, sloppy interface that repeats data without adding information. errors in installation. slow to load. slow to move around in. too heavily oriented to online databases with mechanical rather than analytical approach to data.
This is probably an OK product for beginners, but sophisticated users may find too many cumbersome features that aren't helpful.
out of 3 user reviews
Great program, but with too much left out.
Pros: Much easier to navigate and manage source information than previous versions.
Cons: What it does, it does well, but versions several years old have features that were left out of this one.
First off, with any genealogy program, there is much information to sort out. Names, dates, places, source material, and history. This can become overwhelming to the beginning genealogist, but FTM 2009 makes sorting through and putting the information together simple. Go to one person in the file, and you'll see at a glance four generations back from that person, their dates of birth, marriage and death, then click on "person" to get all the details on that person.
One small, but well appreciated feature, is the "home person." Designate one person as the "home person" (usually the one that's doing the research), click one button no matter where you are, and you're back to the home person.
The program works with most of the popular genealogy web sites, which can be accessed directly from the program.
In short, the pluses are its a very powerful, yet easy to use program.
Now for the minuses. What the program does, it does well. However, what was left out makes is big minus.
When upgrading from a previous version, the 2009 version is installed, without touching the older version. Which is not really all that bad, because you may need the older version to do things the new one won't. When I installed FTM 2009, importing the information from my previous program worked seamlessly, with one hitch: The "To do" list didn't transfer over. Two days of cutting and pasting later, its done.
Speaking of the "to do" list, version 11 (again a SIX YEAR OLD PROGRAM!) worked better. When printing the list, version 11 allowed the list to be narrowed down by category. FTM 2009 only gives the option of printing all tasks, or not completed tasks. This becomes a problem when, for example, I go to a library, and only need the list for that library. Previously, I could print just the list I needed, now I don't have that option.
The publishing feature has many reports that can be made and printed. However, the "books" publishing, rather than allowing the user to make a book on his own computer and print it out, takes the user to Ancestry.com where the book can be printed, for a fee, of course. A rather hefty fee at that. If the book publishing was in the program, I would still have the option of using Ancestry.com, but there are some good reasons why you may not want to do so. For example, if a family member wants a copy of what you've done, you can print it out without waiting for a book to be printed. And you may not want to bear the expense of printing a book when you know that your next big genealogy trip will yield more information, and want to hold up for that.
I feel that the pluses far outweigh the minuses, I would only hope that what was left out is restored in the next version, or given as an update. I hate to think that I have to keep a six year old program taking up space on my hard drive just to do what FTM 2009 won't.