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Genealogy software - request for a Pupget/Petget

Posted: Tue 30 Jan 2007, 01:55
by davids45
There's only one Linux genealogy program I know of, called "GRAMPS". It runs under Ubuntu so I imagine should happily run with Puppy.

As more old computers are becoming puppified for older people like me, could a Petget or similar be made available for GRAMPS?

As a PS to anyone who's searched the Puppy fora for genealogical software and comes across this, has such an anyone had any success using any of the Windows programs such as Legacy, The Master Genealogist, Roots Magic, etc, etc, with wine?

David S.

Posted: Thu 01 Feb 2007, 04:22
by Henry
Roots Magic is a great program and one I would really like to use with wine. I tried several times, and it seems to be within a mm of working. In fact it does work in most respects except that if you try to do something with an associated photo it shuts down.

Henry

Posted: Sat 03 Feb 2007, 11:56
by mjg
There's not much software in Linux for genealogy. The easiest to run are probably Java based. If you have Java check this. I've got it running in Suse, but haven't tried Puppy.

Personally, I'm waiting for a web 2.0 browser-based solution. Geni will be the answer once it can import GEDCOM files.

Lifelines

Posted: Sun 04 Feb 2007, 06:49
by bushybill
Has anyone tried this program?
http://lifelines.sourceforge.net/
They have a Debian package...

Posted: Fri 03 Aug 2007, 15:12
by Trobin
Out of sheer curiousity, what programs, basic, would a genealogist need?

I've had Ftree working in puppy, haven't maagaed to get Geneweb working, or Gramps as of yet.

http://www.ftree.org/

Genealogy is something I've dabbled with, but mainly in Windows.

"Basic" genealogy software

Posted: Mon 06 Aug 2007, 02:47
by davids45
G'day Trobin,
As far as I'm concerned about 'basic' software, it all depends on what you mean by 'genealogist'.
My opinions as an amateur genealogist, or perhaps in your terms, a serious dabbler ......
A professional (someone being paid to do someone else's family tree) probably needs something like 'The Master Genealogist' - TMG - which focuses heavily on collating and listing sources of family history data and generating printed reports, and less on visual presentation, particularly onto your monitor or as a web-page.
More GUI appealing programs, and more suitable for the amateur, someone doing her/his own family tree, would be Legacy, Roots Magic, Family Tree maker and many similar Windows-only programs. Most are free to try with money needed for getting a full version going. The Mormons have PAF as a fully free but less belled-and-whistled program.
Mac users get Reunion (their usual(?) choice of 1, but it is a very good program).
Most programs supposedly help set-up a web-page of the family data, and all can export data as (text-based) Gedcom files so textural stuff can be swapped via the Net and between programs of all OSs.

No one to my knowledge has reported any Windows genealogy program to run in Wine with Puppy. Roots Magic nearly gets there (installs, imports data from Windows via gedcom) but crashes if I try to add images.
Legacy (my preference) almost installs but comes up with an error box just before opening. I have not tried TMG via Wine.

Gramps ran for me with Ububtu (deb version) and has a Windows version which also worked for me as far as I tried it.
As of last night, using Pet installation of the 2.2.6 tar.gz gramps file, I get no dependency problem (a nice green box) but I can't the program to actually run. The "successful installation" messages or pop-up menu icons to start the program do not appear on rebooting (2.16 & 2.15CE). The undeb Puplet did not work at all - red box everytime.

Puppy has all the peripheral progams (spreadsheet, word-processor, html composer, browser, scanner, digital camera reader) to otherwise digitally handle the raw stuff I, or an amateur genealogist collects. Printing on paper depends on your printer, as usual with Linux.

The beauty of the genealogy program is to put all this material together in a single data base.

It's a big pity that there's apparently nothing in Puppy Linux yet for the hordes of family historians.

Hopefully we may soon be more happily dabbling,

David S.

Posted: Mon 06 Aug 2007, 19:48
by Trobin
Then it wouold appear tht FTREE is the only genealogy program that will work in Puppy.

Edited to add:

At least out of the box. so to speak.

Posted: Mon 06 Aug 2007, 21:36
by HairyWill
I don't do geneology myself, has anyone tried GeneWeb?
http://geneweb.sourceforge.net/

Posted: Tue 07 Aug 2007, 00:08
by muggins
i had a quick look last night and it seems the already compiled geneweb-5.00 redhat rpm is the best option. (to compile from source it needs an ocaml compiler).

http://www.geneweb.org/ftp/Linux/RPMS/g ... 3.i386.rpm

the tricky part is the configuration bit, which you can do on the commandline, or using a browser and gwsetup.

Genealogy software - PAF 5.0

Posted: Fri 18 Jan 2008, 10:54
by helamen
I have managed to run PAF 5.0 in wine in Puppy 3.01 and Muppy.

I followed all the suggestions to run wine and then run PAF successfully with a database of over 3000 individuals.

Muppy has wine in it and runs well too.

I tried to run Legacy but at the last minute it says it had an automation error, I don't understand it. I wanted to run Legacy because Legacy has an automatic search of the IGI website.

So I am back in windoze running Legacy, only the one doze program that I like.

Posted: Fri 18 Jan 2008, 14:55
by canerigal
I've been a year long forum reader but info regarding genealogy has inspired me to finally post.

I have been a researcher and genealogist for many years and have done work for other people. I suppose the most important feature for me would be flexibility with reports and stability. I have only tried the live CD Ubuntu with Gramps. I looked at a few others and tried Ftree but they were not what I wanted and with no one currently developing most of them I didn't even want to try them out.

Gramps program is nice but it wasn't reliable enough for me at the time and again, no one actively working on the project.

My hubby (Caneri) had tried to set up Gramps but he ran into problems with all the required gnome libraries and dependencies. It has to work and work all the time for me to use it (genealogists are extremely protective about their information)

I have watched Caneri use Puppy exclusively now for about a year and I like what I've seen with the Puppy OS as well as it's development and stability.

I currently use Legacy and Family Tree Maker. FTM latest version is very web integrated and with all their online search functions make it hard to give up, but maybe their new versions will make it more compatible with linux/puppy (or more complicated)

I would like to be able to run Puppy and have a good genealogy program as well.

Looking at the Gramps site recently there has been a renewed effort in development and a new version coming out.

Below is what they say are the Linux Package requirements for Gramps to run in debian/ubuntu and fedora/redhat. Maybe this would be useful for those that know these things.
(Gramps website http://www.gramps-project.org/)

Linux package requirements
Debian/Ubuntu -
python,Required (needs version 2.3 or later) [does 2.3 include set()?]
pygtk2,Required (needs 2.6.0 or greater)
gnome-python,Required (needs 2.6.0 or greater)
librsvg2-common (required for building)

Additional package requirements for Fedora/Redhat -
librsvg2-devel, required for building
gnome-common, required for building
intitool, required for building
gnome-doc-utils, required for building
pytho-reportlab (optional)

Posted: Fri 18 Jan 2008, 15:12
by canerigal
Sorry for the long posts, but I've been saving up for a year lol.

I volunteer at a Research Library and do their website. Non profit thing so there is no money of course.

I've told the president of the group about puppy and caneri has loaded it for using on one of her machines and she likes it quite a bit. She would also love to use that os for the Library as we have old machines with Windows 2000 and they are very slow. (and can't afford to buy a windows license) using Puppy would be a great answer for us.

The only holdback with using Puppy are the genealogy programs / database requirements.

Would be great if someone could make a genpuppy :wink:

Posted: Fri 18 Jan 2008, 23:41
by cb88
hey good to see you finally post! many thanks to eric for teh hostage of mathpup! :-) ...long confuseing posts ....its what I do :-) no punctuation an absolutely no order or flow....and those LOL ellipses rulz

Posted: Sat 19 Jan 2008, 00:10
by canerigal
@cb88

Yes, I agree
...long confuseing posts ....its what I do
A joy to read :roll: ...and always kinda funny (the part I understand, that is)

Posted: Sat 19 Jan 2008, 01:10
by davids45
G'day Fellow Fogies,

And lovers of long posts.

Thanks for the feed-back on the continued difficulties of finding a comprehensive genealogical program that would run with Puppy.

Or a popular Windows program to run under Wine on Puppy, with no more risk than running this program normally under your chosen Windows flavour.

With each new Wine version put out, I try to get firstly this latest Wine to work with my Puppies, ..........................

then if successful........................

see if I get any further with loading up Legacy (my chosen Gen. program). Continues to fail just when I think it's going to start up. Oh well, back to XP, like everyone else.

PAF5 worked OK for me too, as far as I took it. But for me, PAF5 is a bit boring, limited and cumbersome compared to Legacy. Just the devil I know, I suppose.

The Linux native, ftree, takes a Legacy gedcom with several thousand families but just doesn't appeal in features, or work the way I'm used to with Legacy. So no good as my main life-storing program.

Roots Magic is very close to working completely under Wine and is stylistically close to Legacy, and runs with my full Legacy data import. But I just can't commit to changing over.

Still need to try her-indoors's TMG with Wine. Not my cup-of-tea really though (TMG, I mean.)

Given all this difficulty, I have begun to think that I should try to set up Virtual Box or VMPlayer and see how Legacy runs in XP as a Puppy virtual machine. I started with Puppy on a retired 1996 HP in the attic just for something to do while my GB-RAMmed, hyper-threading and dual core XP machines did my daily stuff. But Puppy became contagious and escaped from the loft so now it's only genealogy that really keeps XP afloat (and once I sort out how Puppy has to work the various tv cards in these computers).

But I thought that data could not be written to a storage device by a virtual machine so a virtual Legacy (or FTM or Roots Magic) would not be much use beyond a bit of learning how things work.

So can I ask the wider pack who happen to read this thread, if this virtual machine in Puppy is feasible, for a data collection and processing activity like genealogy? We need our hard disk access.

David S.

Posted: Sat 16 Feb 2008, 00:46
by hillside
I downloaded ftree, extracted it, stuck it in the right directory and shazaam! it works like a charm. The learning curve was fairly shallow and I was able to use it almost immediately.

I don't expect this is the program for really serious genealogists, but for rank amateurs, like me, it works really well and I've been having a lot of fun messing with it. I'd kind of like to get some of this information saved before any more of the older generation die off. Time is VERY short. As far as older generations go, I guess I'm getting close to being about next in line -- kind of spooky.

I have some old data that was on paper that traces parts of the family back to 18th century Germany and Scandinavia. It was easy to get it put into the program and now I think I have it saved so that most genealogy programs can open it.

What fun.

Posted: Fri 11 Jul 2008, 01:37
by davids45
G'day,
A brief follow-up on the latest wine (they've got to version 1.0 at last) and Windows family history software.

The commercial Roots Magic 3 ($30US but the free trail version - 9MB download - can do quite a lot by way of evaluation) now appears to work fully with Puppy and wine 1.0. The Wine testers have given Roots Magic a "platinum" rating.

Running the trial version, I can add people pictures which had previously been reported as causing the program to crash.
Modifying or adding data opens a non-full-screen window which becomes the working window leaving an inoperative full window behind. The new window has to be full-screened to keep going - switching back to the original window was not successful.

Some dialog boxes were slow to do their thing, but eventually did so.

I found Roots Magic 3 fairly similar to PAF5 but without the font problem of PAF5. A Roots Magic 4 is promised by the programmers to be coming soon.

David S.

Posted: Thu 02 Oct 2008, 15:55
by Dinor
As a newcomer to both linux and puppy I was disheartened to find little here for the serious genealogist. I have been a long time user of Legacy family tree which I feel is the best. I tried to get it to work with wine but it just won't! I don't know if Gramps will work with puppy yet, anyone else know? I have looked at Ftree but think it is way to lightweight for my needs, Rootsmagic is a possibility but I am not sure yet, still evaluating it. PAF won't accept my gedcom for some reason so that's out. What am I missing here! Don't tell me I will have to go back to XP please!

Geneweb: a candidate

Posted: Thu 02 Oct 2008, 19:40
by zgp152
This is one strong contender, since it uses browser interface as the user GUI. It has also many localisations.

http://www.geneweb.org/en/download.html

I do not know how well it would work with Puppy, since the dB part of it will be configured as a local host. Probably quite well after some tweaking by a Linux expert.

I have used it in MacOSX and Windows.
It doesn't crash and handles large amounts of data.

(Continued 29.October).
I have tried to install it to Puppy with no success. The package is downloaded and is extracted well. The obstacle is getting the gwsetup to work properly. An installer would be required for persons with modest knowhow like me.

The idea of Geneweb is to launch first "gw service" which is a compiled executive running in RAM. After that you need to run "gwsetup" at least once. When run, and after databases have been defined, the rest will be handled by a browser. Anything going to the database(s) is input via the browser UI, or imported via GEDCOM files. The importation, exportation and report generation are all possible with the browser GUI. That fits very well with Puppy ideology. The gw service reserves maybe 1 or 2 M RAM: It is not a heavy application.

Posted: Tue 28 Oct 2008, 14:52
by esmourguit
Bonjour,
Here is OhmiGene 2.21 linux version (special offer for Toutou Linux and Puppy linux users by the owner). It is a french localized program. I know it exists an english version for Windows and Mac.
I've made a Pet package for french people. Download here
The package creates two entries in the menu Personal. One for the application, the other for the help (Aide in french :oops: ).
Here is the English web page of OhmiGene.
Cordialement ;)