Personal Finance Software for Unix? 322
pstreck asks: "I'm trying to find the best personal finance software for Unix. I've been using Quicken for a while, but unfortuantlly it won't run under Wine. I've tried gnucash but it just isn't up to par with what Quicken offers. What do you guys use?" While the free software versions may not quite be up to par with the current commercial offerings, it won't always be the case. The turning point can start now, of course. What finance software are you using now, what features do you like and what features do you think these software packages need?
Not applicable to /. (Score:4, Funny)
Doesn't this question assume that we have money? Considering the huge numbers of high school and college students on slashdot, that seems like an unfounded assumption.
That said, I currently use a free-as-in-beer napkin, which I scrawl down my balance on periodically.
Re:Not applicable to /. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not applicable to /. (Score:2, Insightful)
Use Gnumeric to do your calculations (and always have a worksheet open when you're on the phone to your bank to write notes in) but it's a lot easier to find things if you put the results back into the text file when you're finished.
The alternative (one spreadsheet for each thing) looks pretty for a while, until the next time you change software and find that copies of OpenOffice or Excel at university or on your windows partition can't read them.
This sort of data is what the "platform independance" argument is all about (c.f. Peru). It's stuff you'll still need to access long after your current software, computer, and operating system no longer exist. Need I even say that proprietry accounting software is out of the question.
Re:Not applicable to /. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not applicable to /. (Score:5, Insightful)
[Gak! That sounds highly responsible, no?]
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I want (Score:5, Informative)
One hitch (Score:5, Informative)
Exactly right.OFX is slated for inclusion into Gnucash.
There is one hitch, however: download method. Some financial institutions require your application (MS Money/Quicken) to download the information from your bank, while others provide a browser-based hyperlink download of the qif/ofx file for you to import into your application. As long as your app supports the file formats provided, no vendor/financial institution is needed.You can curently import qif files into Gnucash.
The setup in which you download the files with your fincance application requires your app to first connect to the vendor's "branding" server, which then redirects you to your financial institution to begin the download -- this is where vendor involvement with the financial institution gets involved.
I suppose that if someone knew the address to their FI's download servlet, their application could be written to go directly there and bypass the branding servers. However, I don't think that FI's usually publish the URI for their download servlets so getting this info could be a challenge (though tech support should be able to tell you).
I've found that this interactive download method is more error-prone and resource-intensive (for the FI) than the browser-based options.
Here's a comment on building an OFX parser found on the Gnucash project goals pags [linas.org]:
Re:One hitch (Score:3, Informative)
I've been meaning to get organized and look at putting my finances, mortgage, bills, etc online - I keep them all for years so I'd be able to see where my money goes
After reading this I decided to download GNUCash - imagine my suprize: 15Mb!
root@hell:/home/skx# apt-get install gnucash
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
The following extra packages will be installed:
bonobo defoma dialog gs gs-common gsfonts guile-common guile1.4
guile1.4-slib libbonobo2 libdate-manip-perl libdigest-md5-perl libefs1
libfinance-quote-perl libgal19 libgdk-pixbuf-gnome2 libghttp1 libgimpprint1
libgnomeprint-bin libgnomeprint-data libgnomeprint15 libgtkhtml20 libguile9
libguppi16 libgwrapguile1 libhtml-parser-perl libhtml-tableextract-perl
libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-tree-perl libltdl3 libmime-base64-perl liboaf0
liburi-perl libwww-perl libzvt2 oaf slib
The following NEW packages will be installed:
bonobo defoma dialog gnucash gs gs-common gsfonts guile-common guile1.4
guile1.4-slib libbonobo2 libdate-manip-perl libdigest-md5-perl libefs1
libfinance-quote-perl libgal19 libgdk-pixbuf-gnome2 libghttp1 libgimpprint1
libgnomeprint-bin libgnomeprint-data libgnomeprint15 libgtkhtml20 libguile9
libguppi16 libgwrapguile1 libhtml-parser-perl libhtml-tableextract-perl
libhtml-tagset-perl libhtml-tree-perl libltdl3 libmime-base64-perl liboaf0
liburi-perl libwww-perl libzvt2 oaf slib
0 packages upgraded, 38 newly installed, 0 to remove and 1 not upgraded.
Need to get 15.7MB of archives. After unpacking 47.2MB will be used.
Do you want to continue? [Y/n] n
Abort.
15MB aint sh*t. (Score:2, Funny)
Wait.
I know.
I'll erase that Chumbawumba album I got and then hated.
# du -s Chumbawamba\ -\ Tubthumper/
61589 Chumbawamba - Tubthumper
Re:15MB aint sh*t. (Score:2)
Re:One hitch (Score:2, Interesting)
And that is why free software is failing on the desktop; if each package uses different terms for the same functionality is it any wonder that users are put off.
Bitch about Microsoft, logo-requirements and usability guidelines all you like, but if software written to those standards is usable by people without much computer knowledge then it is going to be used.
Again, there are copywrite/trademark issues (Score:2, Interesting)
I work for an online brokerage firm, and a new feature slated to me rolled out is a "trading wizard". That's a generic enough term, you'd guess. Guess again.
We had to figure out a different name for it as the term has been trademarked/copywritten by another firm.
I don't know if this is the case here, but in addition to product differentiation, it's a good strategy to call a feature something other than the generic term that might first come to mind -- an open source project really can't afford lawsuits.
Re:One hitch (Score:2)
It wouldn't be too difficult to simulate a user logging in and screen scape the needed data. It's be pretty easy to do in Perl actually, where there are already a ton of moudules doing some similiar. Granted it's a bit hackey, but for cases where the FI won't cooperate with the Gnucash project and set up OFX, it's preferable to having nothing.
The Gnucash project is also in a good position to define an abstract class for how the interface to each institution should work. Then different programmers could go about implementing that class for different institutions. (Much like how DBI or ODBC establishes an generic database interface each database drivers handles the specific for each type of db.)
Anyway, my two cents.
-Bill
Re:I want (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd feel better if I were running a bootleg copy. But I stupidly paid retail for it.
Re:I want (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I want (Score:2, Interesting)
But it sounds to me like you are looking for a convenience. If the only reason you aren't using GnuCash is because you can't directly link to all those sources (401k, bank, CC), then it would seem that you are just a little lazy. Can't you just manually enter it? Yeah, I know, computers make things easier, and once you get used to them (lazy) then it is harder to do things for yourself. But I suppose that is why Windows is so popular.
Re: (Score:2, Redundant)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Reports (Score:2)
The real problem is entering the data, and not all banks record enough information about the transaction. When you download the data, the transactions might report the company processing the transaction for the company you actually purchased from.
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
Having been a Quicken user since version 2.0 (no that's not a typo, that's really version 2.0), I can tell you that Quicken didn't always do all this direct linking stuff.
So to answer your question, 'Why use GnuCash at all?' Because it does do all the reporting functions so that you can make a sensible budget, because it does make reconciliation a LOT easier, and because it helps you fill out your taxes easier. (Which is another point in favor of Quicken, it has links to TurboTax
So you could say GnuCash is where Quicken used to be and is playing catchup. The latest versions of Quicken are nice, but not entirely a necessity. Personally, I'd rather do a little extra typing using an application that I have the source code to and can modify and recompile to my whims than a closed-source program like Quicken, even with all of its extras. (Which is precisely why I stopped using Quicken the minute GnuCash got to a usuable state).
That's of course my choice... you made your choice already. But you asked why, so I told you.
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
2.0 for DOS, that is.
I'm typing this really really slow to avoid the stupid 2 minute rule, btw.
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
<AOL>
Me Too!
</AOL>
There's another reason... so what if it doesn't link your accounts, it does the ONE THING that computers are good at... MATH! Checkbook reconciliation became soooooooo much easier when I didn't have to worry about errors in kitchen arithmetic...
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
Argh! It's NOT math...it's arithmetic.
Most of us stopped calling spelling "english" when we were in grade 5. Why do people still call arithmetic "math" ??
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2, Insightful)
Because I took Advanced Mathematics 1 and 2 in high school? Because I took MATH 166, MATH 167, MATH 266, MATH 267, MATH 312, and MATH 314 in college?
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
Furthermore, computers are absolutely lousy at both. Sure they can compute with integers and approximations to floating point numbers, but the limits are appalling. Or maybe I'm just bitter, because I have to fight these stupid limits every day to get my work done (I'm a math/cs grad student studying AI).
-Paul Komarek
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
At any rate, the calculator is doing arithmetic. If you're thinking about solving a problem while using the calculator to reduce your arithmetic load, then you might be doing math (or engineering, or physics, or
Even automated theorem proving algorithms aren't really doing math. What they do is a *LOT* of very simple deduction. We're still a long ways from (non-biological) thinking machines, in my opinion. Not everyone would agree with me, of course.
-Paul Komarek
Re:I hate it when I forget to close an html tag (Score:2)
> Me Too!
Newbies!
I started with the original version of checkfree. What a disaster--it sent payments to the wrong place more than once (I got a call from the wall street journal asking why I'd sent them a $500 check. Fortunately, it came in time to pay the office rent manually!).
Then I got quicken. I think I skipped version 2 of quicken and upgraded to 3, but it's been a lon time . . .
My taxes got to the point where it became easier to use a spreadsheet than to wait for final versions of the tax programs that imported from quicken. Eventually, I dropped back entirely to pen, paper, and spreadsheet. I'm sure I *could* run my old versions of quicken on one of my old macs (assuming I find both), at last if I lied about the dates, but my finances just aren't complicated enough to bother any more.
hawk
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I want (Score:2, Insightful)
Has anybody tried to run Quicken with WINE? How does it work?
Adding Quicken support to CrossOver Office could make it more interessant since there's no equivalent in Linux. Anybody from CodeWeavers here?
Andrea
Re:I want (Score:2)
Re:I want (Score:2)
Re:I want (Score:2)
Maybe I'm just lucky, though.
-Paul Komarek
Check out MoneyDance (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Check out MoneyDance (Score:2)
But I second that MoneyDance has been a good product up until this point, with the notable exception of the Java headache it imposes. I'm still looking for a decent way to take my data from MoneyDance and input it into something like GnuCash, but haven't had much luck with it.
Re:Check out MoneyDance (Score:2)
On the bright side, get an accounting package worked up that will handle stuff the same way, and Kiosaki would probably be willing to cross license their name and marketing power with your program.
Matter of fact, shouldn't be too hard to tweak double entry book keeping to do the same. Have to think about it some more.
hanzie
generally... (Score:2, Interesting)
now not only do they not know how to use a pencil and paper, they cant even use a CALCULATOR! they need special software to do EVERYTHING for them
QED
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Personal Finance Tools == Tools of Terror (Score:2, Funny)
I urge the Right Honourable President George Washington Bush to pass a bill outlawing the use of Linux as tools of terror.
Thank you for your support.
Try Kapital (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.thekompany.com/products/kapital
My girfriend loves it, I prefer a good spreadsheet (Applix)...
JB
*Grumble* (Score:5, Informative)
The main page of Christopher Browne's "Finances, Linux, and Stuff" is here! [hex.net]
Click to that little "2. Linux-based Financial Software" you can find what you need.
*grumble*
Pro's & Con's of Grumbling (Score:4, Insightful)
This is an area that I am interested in, but not so much that I would have spent my own time researching them. I too would like a open source offering that is like quicken and that runs on Linux.
It would be nice if there was a topic here on slashdot for folks to share information on specific topics that they have researched. Not with the intent or pretext of asking a question but with the intent of generating further discussion on the topic. Or perhaps all that is needed is a new name or subtitle for "Ask Slashdot".
Hopefully this would allow everyone involved to expand their horizons in a collaborative fashion.
Re:Pro's & Con's of Grumbling (Score:2)
I'm with you. You can find anything in the world via google, as the first few posts in an Ask Slashdot usually tell everyone, but that doesn't always help. Discussion, experiences, insights. Getting the feel of the /. attitude on something. It makes it a little more of a community.
Re:*Grumble* (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: [OT] *Grumble* (Score:2)
Well, personally... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Well, personally... (Score:2)
*Dons asbestos kit*
;-)
In an unrelated note, I think gnucash 1.6.x has support for MySQL and PostgreSQL, in case flat files don't cut it.
Re:Well, personally... (Score:2)
Ha!!! Postgres is TOO SLOW to compute my AWESOME WEALTH!
Python? The CONSTANT INSERTION OF "L" BEHIND MY DOLLARS OFFENDS!
Fie!
Re:Well, personally... (Score:2)
Re:Well, personally... (Score:2)
Best thing about Perl (Score:2, Funny)
It would really help... (Score:2, Interesting)
If there are specific features you're looking for, you should have mentioned them. Right now this is just another in a series of useless "Ask Slashdot" questions that indicate the poster didn't do any footwork on their own or even think very hard about the question.
Do you really need it? (Score:2)
Personal finance software brings several tool together into one package. But most of those you can easily recreate with other software.
freshmeat had a feature on this a while ago (Score:3, Informative)
Checkfree for dos? (Score:2)
I've been using the program since about '92 or so and its quite happy except for a few stupid questions about thinking the date is set very far ahead and a few y2k sorting bugs.
I looked into the data format of the file and it looks very easy so if someone is looking at writing a program that talks to chcekfree, I might be able to dig up the code that decodes their packets. They build a small file and then xmodem it off to some connecion on the old CIS network so its not big on security but at least it works unlike my banks payment system (which uses some new shiny interface to the same backend and might just use the same CIS interface)
Kapital (Score:5, Informative)
Somewhat ironically, I'm using GnuCash [gnucash.org] until I can afford to buy it.
Both Kapital and GnuCash claim to be able to import Quicken data files, which is a very handy feature.
Kapital is reviewed here [linuxplanet.com].
Freshmeat also has a brief review [freshmeat.net] that compares many Linux/Unix financial products.
If none of these seems sufficient, maybe Quicken runs under WINE. Has anybody tried doing so?
Re:Kapital (Score:4, Informative)
Because my wife and I have some real estate investments, and she runs a sole proprietorship, we need to make use of a "real" financial package. Quicken's use of single-entry bookkeeping used to drive me nuts at times, because some things were very complicated to set up. Gnucash is a true double-entry system.
As for getting your bank statements, unless the bank is using the newer Quicken format, downloading is trivially easy. Quicken developed the QIF format, and this is used still by a large number of financial institutions. Gnucash will sort out the duplications for you, and allow you to classify entries it cannot identify.
I won't go back.
Quicken = Personal Finances (Score:4, Informative)
Complaining about Quicken's single-entry bookkeeping is the most retarded complaint, no offense. You're complaining that the personal finance stuff doesn't do business style accounting? That would be a valid complaint except the SAME company offers a business version cheaply (it's less than $200) that does what you want.
I use Quicken Deluxe for my personal finances where I don't want double-entry and other garbage. I use Quickbooks for my corporate accounting where I need to do invoicing, credit memos, various accounts, etc.
My personal accounting consists of a checking account, investment account, and some credit cards. My corporate accounting is more complicated and needs to be more complicated.
Alex
Re:Quicken = Personal Finances (Score:2)
Has that changed in the last few years? ISTR my CPA sister ranting about people who used Quickbooks (not merely Quicken, definitely Quickbooks) instead of a real double-entry system like Peachtree.
Applications? (Score:2)
A Pilot fine point pen and my checkbook.
Hah! Finally being poor is advantageous and saves me hassle!
--saint
Quicken (Score:5, Informative)
But seriously...
I used to work for Intuit, and at one time there was an initiative to do an online version of Quicken. Some of that work seems to have shown up in their My Finances [quicken.com] offering:
"Track checking, savings and cash accounts here. You can download balances from your financial institution..."
I just guess. (Score:2)
Quicken on Unix (Score:2)
Mac OS X costs $800 (Score:2)
I run Quicken on Unix. I use Mac OS X.
So you use Mac OS X. That operating system may implement most of the Single UNIX Spec, but I don't see it listed as a UNIX system [opengroup.org].
Either way, I don't see "go out and buy a Mac" as a cost-effective solution to the personal finance software problem. The original poster (pstreck) mentioned Wine, implying that (s)he used an x86 computer. For the price of Mac OS X (and its $799 hardware key [apple.com]), pstreck could just go out and buy a hard drive and a copy of Windows XP Professional and install Quicken on that.
Re:Quicken on Unix (Score:2)
my 'must have' feature (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, I'm not too bad writing bits of code and what-not (it's a tangential part of my day job), and I appreciate that, to some extent, linux money applications can be scripted and stuff; maybe I could roll my own forecaster this way, but I really don't want to feel like I need to kludge together such a relatively 'big' feature when I don't have the time and interest after getting home. (Maybe it's just me, and, yes, I'm a bit lazy once I'm off the clock.
I probably haven't looked into all possible alternatives for a linux-based financial program, but so far I haven't noticed one that really handles this.
Best personal finance software... (Score:2)
When tax time, submissions for refunds from my employer, etc. come around I simply photocopy my statement, black out the lines they shouldn't see. For the truely paranoid photocopy it again (so you can read through the page).
The only item that doesn't appear on that statement is rent. But if I could, I'd do that too.
Oracle Small Business Suite Works Well (Score:2, Informative)
They provide a complete small business package which includes accounting, sfa, cms, employee expenses, time and billing, scheduling and clandars, online file cabinets, payroll, online bill payment, web store/site, and customer care features in their product.
See them @ Oracle Small Business Suite [oraclesmallbusiness.com]
Give KMyMoney2 a try (Score:2, Informative)
Why I don't like Quicken (Score:5, Insightful)
Strike 1: Intuit charges me for the software--then has the audacity to attempt to force me to give up personal information to use it (astalavista.box.sk to the rescue again).
Strike 2: Intuit spams me with sales pitches based on information entered into the program. I already paid once, thank you.
Strike 3: Using the online services requires me to go through Intuit as an intermediary, rather than keeping the relationship only between me and my financial institution. Given their proven propensity to bother me with ads, I don't exactly trust them with my financial details.
Yer out!
My advice - avoid these programs in general (Score:3, Insightful)
In general I have found this not to be the case. If you simply want a category breakdown, your credit card should already provide it - mine does. Otherwise, a simple check of your accounts once a week should give you a simple idea of how your spending is going.
Simply put, the only way to reduce expenditures is to not buy things. Also, watch for monthly fees you start incurring for this service or that - these monthly fees constitute a huge drain on most people's cash, and our economy is moving more and more to a rental model where it will be hugely important to control recurring service fees.
Added to which, most banks charge for the pleasure of automagically syncing Quicken with your account (although you can still manually update Quicken with a download file for free with most banks). So you could be losing money while trying to save it.
Re:My advice - avoid these programs in general (Score:2)
Good post! Let me add:
In general, if you're alreay not wasting money, it's better to focus on inceasing revenue rather than cutting expenses down to the bone. You can only cut expenses down to $0 - but your income, potentially, has no limit. I find it easier to make money, than to ferret out an extra penny by farting around with my expenses. YMMV.
Re:My advice - avoid these programs in general (Score:3, Funny)
So you are suggesting that instead of debugging his financial source line by line, he should do some run-time analysis using profiling? I suggest optimising some of those tight loops, for instance repeated withdrawals from the cash machine on a Friday night. I'd also run TrussFinance to locate any cash leaks, for example that AOL subscription they told you they had cancelled. I wouldn't, however, use a step-by-step debugger as this can be embarrassing for company in restaurants.
Phillip.
Tracking does save (Score:3, Informative)
Knowing where/how you spend your money is the first step on spending less.
Re:My advice - avoid these programs in general (Score:2)
I've been using Quicken/Money since 1994 and as a result on any given day I know exactly how much money I have in any one of my accounts, how much I owe on any one of my lines of credit, as well as a general estimate of what bills I will be expecting to pay over the next several weeks. It's nice to have an estimated loan payoff figure at your fingertips without having to call the bank.
This allows me to forcast and budget appropriately.
While I don't do the automagically syncing thing(I do prefer to enter transactions by hand), I am subscribed to my banks online banking and bill pay service. This is $6.95 a month, but considering that the service allows me to schedule payments to be sent for any bill I might have, the convenience more than pays for itself. On top of that is the cost savings of no longer having to buy checks, as well as no longer having to buy stamps. When you figure that it costs about 45 cents to mail a check(cost of stamp + cost of check)... sending 15 bills in a month using the automated service breaks even.
Furthermore I no longer have late fees on credit cards because the bill is sitting in my pocket while I wait to find some time to hit the post office to buy a bloody stamp.
While Quicken/Money is not going to be a substitute for good financial management, the automation that they provide makes the job a hell of a lot easier. I highly recommend either of these packages.
up to par (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes it will. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but writing software like that is BORING. Take a look at the best open source software out there and you'll see that it is "interesting" software: operating systems, window managers, development tools. Financial software is the kind of boring crud that nobody writes for fun, and so something like GNU cash will progress until the easy features are done, and then the authors will realize they don't want to spend any more time on such an uninteresting piece of software, and they will move on to something more interesting. Some software is just so utterly uninteresting or unprestigious that nobody works on it for fun, you have to PAY them to work on it.
I use gnucash for my business (Score:2)
I've never used finance software before, but when I started my business I knew I needed some way to keep track of finances. I've been using gnucash and it seems to fit the bill. Although I don't know if I'm missing anything by not using Quicken or whatever.
I think people need an actual understanding of accounting to use gnucash, whereas with Quicken you can just answer all of the pretty questions. I've talked to some people who use Quicken to manage their finances and they really don't get accounting at all.
What am I missing by only using gnucash?
How to run Quicken on Unix (Score:2)
Overkill, what's that? (Score:2)
How about web-based services? (Score:2)
Keep it simple - use CBB (Score:2, Informative)
If you need features along the lines of online banking, mortgage finance calculators, etc. -- then go to the web. If you need the features of a business bookkeeping package, cbb won't fit the bill. But otherwise, do yourself a favor and keep it simple. Use CBB.
Quasar Accounting Software! (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.linuxcanada.com/quasar.html
I've installed on my Mandrake box but haven't really used it much yet.
My experiences with trying GnuCash (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, GNUCash works on a double entry accounting system. That means every time you take money away from one account it goes into another, and vice versa. In some sense, it depends upon the idea that money just can appear out of nowhere, and it just can't disappear into the void. Supposedly it is a very powerful system of accounting. However, the problem that I ran in to was setting my accounts up. I have several different debts (student loans), and several different investments (401K, personal investments), as well as the balances in my checking and savings accounts. I just couldn't figure out how to reasonably set up my initial finances, let alone creating special accounts for things like payroll and taxes. I have a degree in Mathematics, but GNUCash tries to be a serious accounting program. Quicken and the like are different, and single entry accounting is much easier for a beginner to use. Apparently it is much easier to lie, cheat, and make mistakes with single accounting systems.
I finally settled on just keeping a sort of ledger. Pen and paper. I track spending in my budget with it, my current checking account levels, and I update the value of my savings and investments from time to time. It serves me well and keeps my finances on track, which is all I really need. It is also very portable, which makes it easier to account for things like grocery bills and ATM withdrawls.
What GNUCash really needs is a _good_ step by step tutorial on how to set the software up, and I'm not refering to the
dual boot (Score:2)
Better yet, vote with your money. Don't buy Quicken, because it only works on a crappy OS.
Re:dual boot (Score:2)
Early on, you needed bits from a real Windows installation to get WINE to work. Last time I looked, you could get many Windows applications to run in WINE without any part of real Windows. Remember, WINE is a reimplementation of the Windows API, not an emulator under which Windows runs.
So, no, running WINE doesn't imply that you have a Windows license, nor that you should have one.
Money (Score:2, Informative)
Expertise (Score:3, Insightful)
Where the real value of Quicken lies in the financial and legal expertise that it describes. For this they need the expertise of accountants and lawyers and economists etc..
If you want to develop a good open-source personal finance program, you need to find some good accountants (and tax lawyers, and financial advisers, etc) to help out in distilling their expertise, working with the programmers.
And because laws and finance are such ever-changing areas, especially at the margins, constant updating is necessary.
One big hurdle with open-source financial programs (please keep responding flames articulate) is a lack of accountability as well. When I buy turbotax, I know there is a company behind it that must take some responsibility with the program. Just for that reason, a good lawyer or accountant may be hesitant to contribute on open-source. If the software fucks up, he may be professionally liable.
I do wish at least a polished proprietary financial and tax software were available on Linux. My guess is that Linux just doesn't have the market penetration yet to justify the port.
Because of the need for updates, I even think that proprietary software might have some viability on a limited, non-transfereable, open source basis.
I haven't tried gnucash, but if intuit came out with quicken and turbotax for Linux, I would be one step closer to wiping my windows partition. Incidentally, I still wouldn't buy the linux version right away, because I still need the windows partition for other things, and my windows quicken works fine.
Re:The superior linux finance application. (Score:2)
Simon
Re:The superior linux finance application. (Score:2)
Re:The superior linux finance application. (Score:2)
The point was that it was hard to tell what you were saying - a couple of blank lines before the ad would probably help...
Simon
It's not initials (Score:2)
It was probably posted on comp.sources.unix or some such place back in the mid-80s.
Re:It's not initials (Score:2)
What I couldn't figure, is why the one guy almost modded it down, and then several afterwards actually did so. At first, I thought it might be some abbreviation for windows software I wasn't aware of (which would make it flamebait). Crackmoderation again.
Re:It's not initials (Score:2)
You should have added a little more information in there, maybe even a link.
Or were you simply focusing on speed in hopes of a first post?
Re:The superior linux finance application. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:online banking (Score:2, Informative)
Re:GnuCash (Score:2)
But they won't port to Linux and it supposedly doesn't run under Wine....
LoB
Re:GnuCash (Score:2)
Re:Quicken runs on UNIX (Score:3, Funny)
Second, please re-read my post. The sentence you quote was written specifically to circumvent inane comments like yours. I've read enough of
It was suggested that the individual take a look at the OS X platform "at some point in the future", not "run out and drop down $1200 for a used g4 based powerbook right now just so you can run Quicken and Steve Jobs rules!" Hopefully, the omission of blatant pro-Apple/RISC drivel in my post, with a soft suggestion that indeed these apps are running under the platform in question (UNIX, not Linux) was designed to temper such soft-trolling that amounts to "OS X isn't Linux" and "It doesn't run on x86", both of which quickly devolve into how cheaply the supposedly enterprising geek can build a dual athalon monster machine for the price of an Apple platform that runs comparable GNU software to the commercial application in question (which makes one wonder how many actually have performed this platform gymnastic they're so quick to advocate).
As far as answering your post, either it's a whining piece of self-answering troll, or you somehow believe that I'm privy to the OS X product roadmap. I tend towards the former, which actually suggests that you're actually unhappy with your platform (x86) choice and the commitment you made in that investment, or you wouldn't have wasted the electrons complaining. My guess is "don't hold your breath" for an x86 port. If you really want the breadth of applications and UNIX that OS X offers, then you'll likely need to save several hundred bucks for a used powerbook (Which would be an answer to your "space" issues. If you can't afford the footprint of a laptop, you need to invest in more real estate, not a new platform).
IMHO: Quicken is poorly developed software. (Score:2)
I used the latest version of Quicken that came with TurboTax. I was amazed at how undeveloped the software was. There were numerous ways that it could have been improved. Maybe the company is preserving some shortcomings so that it can make money on later upgrades.
Plus, the company believes that you are a fair target for numerous money-making schemes.
That's why I like open source software. It's not adversarial. I don't want to play games with stupid people who believe that I am stupider than they are.
Re:Use Crossover Office (Score:2, Informative)