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I’ve promised myself never to go on too much about social apps, but there is one app that I’ve fallen in love with, and I’d love to share it. I signed up to Geni purely by chance — I think it was to check out the flash tree visualisation — and my affinity to the app just grew.

Geni has all the photo-sharing, video-sharing and guest-booking functionality now de facto on social apps. However, the focus is on that one thing not seen that often on Facebook: family, and in particular the older members of one’s family.

A journey into the past

I added my mom and dad, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and siblings — as many and as far back as I could remember — to my tree. Then I walked away. Only thing is, I got a notification a week or two later that my tree was growing. My uncle added his extended family and they added theirs. My brother added his daughter, my aunt added my cousins. My parents figured out who their grandparents were and when they were born. At least, they figured out the circa. The tree, which started with only a couple of branches, is now standing tall. Next to my tree other trees are forming. We are growing into a forest.

It’s a remarkable experience; I’ve reconnected with long-lost family and I have an understanding of what ‘fourth cousin, twice removed’ really means. The tree visualisation works like a charm: you can zoom in and out, pan around to explore relationships, even expand and collapse other trees. I get notifications of birthdays and anniversaries that up to now I’ve never been able to keep track of. Best thing about the app is that I have my family right where I want them: at the click of a mouse and a thousand miles away. It’s pure genius.

Back to the future

My activity and the growth around the original seed made me think. What happens a couple of generations down the road with the data we’re seeding through social apps now? Will my grandchildren be able to explore my media and relationships when I’m no longer around? Even hook my then-defunct timeline up to theirs?

Is there more utility in a genealogy app than a purely social one, in the long run? Where, how and when do they all merge together? Will an app that manages the past be more future-proof than apps that manage the present? Time, and the propensity of the internet to remember all, will tell if blood is indeed thicker than water.




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2 Responses to “Blood and water, trees and forests”

Alan,

Thank you for featuring Geni in this wonderful write up. We really appreciate it.

Thank you,

-Keith-
The Geni Team

(Report abuse)

Keith on August 25th, 2008 at 8:25 pm

Hey Alan, I just stumbled across this post. I love the deductions you made. As you know your enthusiasm via this amazing web app (great work Keith and co) has infected the whole extended family. I cannot think of any time that I have felt such a sense of unity.

Time will tell whether this information will be lost. What I can say now is that you have managed to pull together a family with a mouse and a couple of Geni invitations. Powerful stuff.

(Report abuse)

Arthur on September 19th, 2008 at 10:28 am

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Alan is co-founder and creator of micro-site builder Tank: a simple content-management app geared towards making the internet a better place, one site at a time.

He kicked off his internet career at Armadillo Interactive, and was one of the original members of Ogilvy Interactive in Cape Town. He spent time at Radarboy Studios 'doing cool stuff', and joined Tinderbox and type01 just before the crash. Together with a couple of fellow re-trenchees he formed Six Million Dollar where they developed many sites and apps in the years following. After a stint at Generator Communications he paid his dues by building social investment platforms and marketplaces for the greater good.

He is now involved with Tank full time: he reckons he has executed enough ideas for other people; it's time to execute a couple of his own. Tank is the first web-app from 'thisarmy': a development house that builds stuff that builds stuff.
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