


None of this is news to anyone familiar with Quicken by the way. So I figured while I was choking on this issue, may as well upgrade to the current in case there were other problems when I upgraded, which there were. That one I replaced because it was unable to recognize that financial institutions might have passwords longer than 11 characters! Required a cumbersome and unclear workaround guided by the financial institution making best effort to help its customer overcome the poorly engineered software. This is for me the replacement to my 2014 Deluxe. There are many open source finance programs for Linux, but I haven't tried them.Buggy, typical offshore support long hold, cost more in wasted time than saved On cellphones there is Mint (not the Linux Mint) which is lame, according to my children. It doesn't really help to know how much we spend on Starbucks coffee because, even though it's too much, we will continue doing it. We never paid much attention to the budgeting stuff because it is boring and useless. Now that Amazon tracks all our purchases, we don't really need to track them ourselves. I think she's getting sick of recording everything, however.

She went to W10 from XP, having skipped W7 because her darn Dell Precision laptop lasted so long. My wife still uses the old version because she likes it better. If you no longer use Quicken what are you using instead? Those of you who still use Quicken, have you moved to the time limited versions or are you still on one of the old versions? I have my copy of Quicken 2016 on disc tucked away and updates saved for when the time comes. I'm still on Quicken 2010 for a lot of the same reasons I'm still on Windows 7. Revisiting this thread I started around this time two years ago.
