jesusvilla.blogg.se

Icompta forum
Icompta forum








icompta forum
  1. Icompta forum for mac#
  2. Icompta forum mac os#
  3. Icompta forum Patch#
  4. Icompta forum license#

I don’t use a smartphone, so I don’t care about mobile apps.

Icompta forum mac os#

What I get from using the subscription Quicken is software that keep up reasonably well with the Mac OS and the banking system, so I can download most transactions and only have to enter a few manually. In the end, I was able to import almost everything else going back to 2000, which is good enough. I was disappointed that the new Quicken could not import some parts of my investment records, but that may have been due to how I had set up the old records. I really didn’t want to wind up locked out of my old personal and business financial records. I had that happen with a word processor, a database I used for keeping my business accounts, and web site software (twice). The main reason for my decision was the number of times I bought software with files that could not be transferred to other software when the company shut down or when MacOS no londer ran it. It was not a pleasant transition, but I decided it was the best option. I switched from Quicken 2007 to the subscription version of Quicken in April 2020. I’m using it on my iDevices via TestFlight. The good news is there is a developer that has the rights to the 2013 version of PocketMoney and he is working on a modern version that will run on current iDevices and eventually on Intel & Apple Silicon Macs. Yes, it may sound cumbersome, but it beats anything else out there for me. Both iCompta & iFinance are fall backs in case I lose PMD. I can sync PMD to PocketMoney on my iPad Mini 5 running iOS 14.4.2 and sync the iCompta & iFinance desktop applications to their iOS versions.

icompta forum

I use Q4M2007LC to convert QIFs from PMD to a QIF that can be imported into both iCompta 6 & iFinance 4 on the iMac.

Icompta forum for mac#

So, my PRIMARY application is PocketMoney Desktop for Mac (PMD) on my mid-2011 iMac running High Sierra.

Icompta forum Patch#

BTW, Intuit had released a patch to Quicken 2007 to make it compatible with Lion and that version, Quicken for Mac 2007 Lion Compatible (Q4M2007LC), works up through High Sierra. I found both iFinance & iCompta but neither are up to Hardy’s PocketMoney in my opinion, but are way better than Quicken. So once again, I looked for replacements. But unfortunately Hardy passed away in May 2013, and his cousin was unable to continue the Catamount Software applications. Fortunately, Hardy released a desktop version of PocketMoney so I switched to using it with Lion. Meanwhile, Intuit had depreciated Quicken for Mac after the 2007 version, but it still worked on MacOS Leopard and Snow Leopard but not on Lion when it was released in 2010. Once I had PocketMoney for the iPhone, I was able to retire my Palm PDA. He had written PocketMoney for the Newton, Palm and PocketPC so it was easy to port it to iPhoneOS 2. I searched the App Store and found PocketMoney from Catamount Software owned by Hardy Macia.

Icompta forum license#

I expected Standalone to come out with an iPhone OS version of PocketQuicken but Intuit refused to extend the license to do so and thus I had to find something else. So I was still happy carrying both an iPhone and a Palm PDA until Apple opened up the iPhone to applications in 2008. And then Apple released the iPhone in 2007 which I bought. I used Quicken for Mac for years and when Standalone released PocketQuicken for Palm, I got it and happily used both for years, while still having a cellphone. Why do you use multiple apps for you personal finance? Do you track different things in each one of them?










Icompta forum