TribalPages

Press Release

Where Did I Come From? TribalPages Genealogy Maps Have the Answer

Tampa, FL (PRWEB) November 27, 2007 -- TribalPages.com, home to over 175,000 family tree websites, today announced the Beta release of their new Genealogy Maps. These new tools take location information already present in GEDCOM or online family trees, and provide a unique graphical view of a family history to answer some fundamental questions:

  • Where Did We Come From? - The Ancestor Map shows all known locations from an individual's ancestors. Showing many generations at one glance, this map quickly show where a person's past lies.
  • Where Did This Family Live? - The Family Map displays where the Parents and Children of an individual were born, allowing the family historian to walk step-by-step through the family's past just by following the links to each family member.
  • Where Did They Go? - The Descendants Map provides a single view of how an ancestor's offspring spread throughout the world, and provides a fascinating view of how broad an impact a single individual can have.

TribalPages Debuts New Photo Tools For Family Historians

Tampa, FL May 8, 2007 -- TribalPages.com, a leading online genealogy hosting service, is now providing two powerful tools to help customers manage their family photos and genealogy records. Released today, their email upload tool lets family history buffs add photos and images to their family tree website as simply as they send pictures to their family.

"At TribalPages, we pride ourselves on how easy our free family tree websites are to use -- it's really what sets us apart. This new tool lets our users attach pictures to an email and send it just like they would to their parents or grandkids," explains Vandana Rao of TribalPages, "We also love the way it lets our site owners make the most of programs like iPhoto, Picasa, Google Earth and other great tools that let you send pictures by email very easily."

Custom Addresses For All TribalPages Members

Tampa, FL (PRWEB) January 30, 2007 -- TribalPages is now providing a Custom Website Address for each of it's 125,000 members. These new URLs, in the form http://username.tribalpages.com provide a simple new means for TribalPages members to share their family tree websites while keeping the security and privacy TribalPages is known for.
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Originally slated to be a paid feature, TribalPages has opened up the custom addresses to all of its members, free and paid alike. "When we saw the response to the initial testing, we knew we had to make this standard," explains Vandana Rao of TribalPages, "The sense of ownership is immediate--it really makes the website feel like it's yours. You can publish the site to your blog, email it to your family, or even put it on your Christmas cards and stationary. All without worrying about whether your family can figure it out."

TribalPages Eliminates Storage Space Limits

Tampa, FL (PRWEB) January 16, 2007 -- After years of tracking the disk usage of each of it's 100,000 hosted family tree websites, TribalPages has changed its approach.  Starting today, users can share up to 1,000 high resolution photos regardless of the storage space consumed.  By counting family photos, rather than megabytes and gigabytes, TribalPages allows users to focus on what's important: sharing their family's history with their friends and families.

TribalPages offers family tree website hosting for amateur and professional genealogists alike.  The new approach expands the capabilities of all three TribalPages plans which range from Free Sites with 50 web-resolution photos to the Premium Sites with 1,000 print-resolution (2.5 megapixel).

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