Watch out what gedcom files you run through t he ged-it program, however. Looks like it also saves the file for all to see under History, including the name of the contributor. I wonder how Richard W. Eastman would feel about the program if he saw his family pop up on one of the trees saved under History? And what is all the trouble this saves? He says that using your own program on your own computer is "slow, tedious, and even risky if you accidentally import someone else's GEDCOM file into your own genealogy database." That's nothing compared with opening the file on the web, finding it's your family and now it's saved publicly for all to see. John