Is there a QB file reader program?

Also the proprietary nature of the file has been broken in recent years. So know you can get Acrobat clones.

The more people use Acrobat files the more they will sell full versions of Adobe Acrobat.

Reply to
Barnabas Collins
Loading thread data ...

I have it here somewhere, it stinks.

I have cute PDF and it doesn't let me print to a file like Abobe does.

When I hit print, Abobe comes up as a printer choice. Cute PDF doesn't do that.

Reply to
Barnabas Collins

That is not my experience. Cute FTP comes up as a printer choice on my computer. It also comes up as a printer choice on our terminal server.

Reply to
Brian

I never said anything to the contrary. You stated that QB could only be installed on one machine. I followed up with the appropriate phrase from the license which shows it to be untrue. The user part is irrelevant as I wasn't arguing it.

Yes but here again you're addressing something different from what I'm stating.

I never have and have registered my quickbooks versions on 3 or more computers at a time before.

I really don't get why you're arguing with me. I'm not saying anything that isn't tried and true.

Reply to
scfundogs

Since the purpose of CutePDF is to print to a file your post makes absolutely no sense at all.

Reply to
Allan Martin

If it is supposed to do that it ain't doing it in my installation. (Windows 98SE).

But then I gave up on CutePDF long ago.

Reply to
Barnabas Collins

Windows 98?

Reply to
Allan Martin

Yes i'm one of the 65 million who still use Windows 98.

Reply to
Barnabas Collins

Oh, you are the person who has the computer that sends me spam. If it wouldn't be too much to ask, UPDATE THE DAMN SOFTWARE SO YOU WON'T BE HACKED!

Reply to
Golden California Girls

I haven't been hacked. Zonealarm still works, Norton still works, the ad ware programs stil work.

Reply to
Barnabas Collins

Quickbooks is not a "graphics" program, its a database. Everytime you pull something up, its using it's database guts to do that.

If its just your one company using it, and just one person doing your books, I wouldn't worry about it.

If you are the owner of the company, you purchased the program. You hire somebody to do your books. This is how I would suppose 90% of the users of Quickbooks are. An owner (or director) should have every right to peek into Quickbooks to see what's up. Whether for information or to check on the quality of the bookkeeping.

Just be careful not to screw things up for your bookkeeper when you look at things. It sounds like you know your way around enough to not do that.

I would say to just call Intuit and ask, but don't take the person's answer as the final word. I called Quickbooks once as I was first getting ready to purchase it to find out what their policies were regarding installing on different machines, as I was going to be doing that. One at work, a desktop at home, and my laptop. The person I talked to did not seem to understand their license agreement. The lady was telling me I automatically needed a new license for every computer I installed it on, even though I was the only user.

In contrast, when I called Autodesk about the same thing for Autocad, the lady was very helpful, and explained exactly what their policy was.

GC

Reply to
Chips

BeanSmart website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.