On 1/2/23 21:32, Charles Dennett wrote:
Awesome setup. What features in Quicken are most useful that are not in
open source financial applications that could be or are packaged for
Fedora?
I track my retirement and other investments, bank accounts, charge
cards. Use the tax planning feature and consult with my financial guy
to make sure I'm ok. I've got probably 2 decades+ of data in there.
I've looked at apps like gnucash, kmymoney and a couple of others I
found. There was no way to easily transfer all that data. I tried it
one account at a time but I couldn't make it work. I'd have to start
from scratch. So for now I'll keep using Quicken under Windows.
Have you tried HomeBank (http://homebank.free.fr/en/)? It's a bit simple
compared to Quicken, but it supports all of the Quicken features I had
personally used. I managed to convert my Quicken data a few years ago,
and I haven't looked back. The one big thing that it doesn't support is
direct downloads from banks, but in my experience, that never worked
correctly with Quicken anyway (things would time out, require disabling
2FA, somehow miss transactions or even duplicate them, etc) but it can
easily import QFX/"Web Connect" and OFX files and most banks support
those formats.
Anyway, I hope this is useful to someone.
-Adam Batkin
_______________________________________________
kde mailing list -- kde@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe send an email to kde-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Fedora Code of Conduct: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/project/code-of-conduct/
List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/kde@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Do not reply to spam, report it: https://pagure.io/fedora-infrastructure/new_issue