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A Diamond in the Rough
Embla Family Treasures is a genealogical software gem—but it still needs polishing.
By Rick Crume
American genealogy software, like our movies and music, has garnered many fans overseas. But foreign programs remain popular
abroad, and it's useful to see how they stack up to our homegrown products. One of those foreign programs, Embla Family Treasures,
was originally developed in the United States, but later sold to a Norwegian company. Now the top-selling genealogy software in
Norway, Family Treasures will run and print reports in English and Norwegian; Danish and Swedish versions are in the works.
Aside from its multilingual capabilities, Family Treasures stands out for its novel user interface and an unusual pricing plan.
Sparkling setting
Instead of the pull-down menus typical of most Windows programs, Family Treasures makes functions easily accessible in a
small panel on the right side of the screen. The program also uses an unusual—but handy—drag-and-drop system. To
link a source to an event, just drag the source to the event listing with your mouse. You'll need the Power Pack add-on (see below)
to easily reuse source citations.
GEM dandy
The $9 Power Pack, an essential GEM for most users, lets you attach more than one photo to individual and family records, and
add to-do notes. The Family Treasures Gift Pack CD-ROM includes the main program as well as the Power Pack, Hourglass Charts,
Calendar and Colorful Reports GEMs, all for $29. Or you can opt for a one-year membership that gives you $100 worth of GEM points
to spend on the GEMs of your choice. At $49 a year ($35 for existing users), a membership saves you 50 percent or more off the
normal GEM prices. Updates to the core program are always free.
Rough around the edges
Family Treasures' attractive Ancestor Tree Chart shows four generations with pictures, and you can customize it with your
choice of colors and fonts. GEM add-on programs expand the range of graphical charts, but family group sheets sometimes don't
include all events and sources. Book-format reports use the Henry numbering system instead of the more popular New England
Historical and Genealogical Register and Modified Register formats. And the program improperly formats footnotes,
which remain unnumbered.
Although Family Treasures has some rough edges, Embla's continually improving the free core program and developing new add-ons.
The unique user interface and unconventional pricing plan give you a real alternative to American programs. And if you'd like to
print charts for relatives in Scandinavia, Family Treasures makes it easy. The program requires Windows 98 or higher.
For more reviews of genealogy software and other technological tools, see the
December 2004 Family Tree Magazine.
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