![]() We both enter transactions (receipts) at the point of purchase and it goes in the right budget. I also love that my wife and I both have the mobile iPhone app. Helping you make better choices BEFORE you spend, because you know how much allocation you have for that particular category, etc. They tell you what you have in all your accounts, and certainly help you reconcile with the bank (in the case of Quicken).īut most do a poor job of proactively BUDGETING your money. Most of the others are more "financial tracking" softwares. Personally I think none of the Mac Personal Finance software are solid enough to replace Money. I bought my first house last year, and I took the opportunity to upgrade my Quicken Deluxe to Quicken Rental Property Manager. It is in many ways similar to Money in terms of usability and functionality. In the end I explored Quicken Deluxe, and boy I love it so much. I bought VMware Fusion, installed Money and I realise Money does not support import of backups from other software (not even CSV). Used for 6 months until I got fed up with the lack of development.Īt that point of time I really wish to go back to Money (can't find any Mac personal finance close to Microsoft Money). Developer took ages to come out with updates. iOS sync is buggy and doesn't sync most of the time. Feature wise it is comparable with Money but interface is still bad. Primitive design, lack of customisable reports. I have been using Microsoft Money for over 8 years, made the jump to Mac 3 years back and I have continued using Money on Parallels until I got tired turning my virtual machine on and off whenever I wish to record my expenses.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |