Nothing new in Q2006?

I just tried Intuit's link,

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and got nothing but a blank page.

Does that mean there's nothing new in Q2006?

Notan

Reply to
Notan
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"Notan" wrote

Worked 4 me.

Looks like a few new features. They say they've incorporated over 121 customer-suggested improvements.

Reply to
Rick Hess

It seems to be working, now. Maybe just an early morning glitch.

I still have a bit of a bad taste in my mouth, from the "forced" Sunsetting, but it looks like some of the new features might warrant a voluntary upgrade!

Notan

Reply to
Notan

This

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is a very good starting point - theQuicken blog.

Reply to
Mike

PC World review -

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Kudos to Intuit for not standing in place with its popular, if sometimes maddening, personal finance software. This year's versions of Quicken take advantage of the latest in electronic record-keeping in some clever and useful ways.

Unlike Microsoft's recently released 2006 editions of Money - a minor upgrade from the 2005 product - Quicken 2006 provides some compelling reasons to upgrade from older versions, or even to start using personal finance software, especially if you already patronize Web-savvy banks and other financial institutions.

My favorite of the new features in the shipping copy of the $80 Quicken Premier 2006 I tested: The ability, with a couple of mouse clicks, to attach electronic documents - images or PDFs of checks, monthly statements, or paycheck stubs, for example - to Quicken accounts or register entries. If you are ever audited, your records are easily accessible - a huge improvement over the previous routine (for my bank, at least) of having to figure out which documents you need and then paying your financial institution to photocopy and mail them. As an added bonus, the software allows you to encrypt these documents so they cannot be viewed from outside Quicken, providing a level of privacy you'd otherwise need special software to match.

Note that the ability to attach documents is not included in the $30 Quicken Basic, but it does come in the $60 Quicken Deluxe and the $90 Quicken Home and Business editions.

Another new feature integrates some of Quicken's impressive report-creation abilities into account registers. New buttons in the payee and category fields of transaction entries bring up mini-reports showing all transactions involving that payee or category within a customizable time frame (from the last 30 days to the last three years).

Speaking of reports, Quicken's renovated Reports Center makes it easier to create and access the reports you want. You now can choose customization options before the software generates reports (previously you got a report based on default options that you then could change). You can save favorite report queries in folders so you don't have to set the options anew whenever you use the software, and you can add queries to the Quicken toolbar so you don't have to go to the Reports Center to run them. You can export reports in PDF format for easy viewing by accountants or others. And you can edit register entries from within reports--a big time-saver if you want to change multiple entries.

I'm still somewhat irritated by Intuit's abandonment of the .qif format, which continues to be a problem for people whose financial institutions either charge for or aren't willing to support the .ofx format Quicken requires for data downloads. But I have to hand it to the company: The 2006 versions of Quicken are among the best Intuit has delivered in years, even if you're not being forced to upgrade by Intuit's sunset policies for support of data downloads (last I heard, you could only get automated bank downloads if your edition was three years old or newer).

Reply to
Steve

I see that among the "customer-suggested improvements" are the ability to edit investment transactions in the register (without having to pull up a pop-up window). The removal of that ability (in Q2003 or Q2004?) was certainly a cause of many complaints in this group. They allowing optional two-line display of transactons in investment registers. And there is also the ability to expand a register view to cover more of the Quicken Window. You could argue that these are all features that Intuit should never have removed in the first place, but you can't argue that they don't pay any attention to user complaints.

Although there seem to be some worthwhile improvements in Q2006, I'll be sticking with Q2004 until my two remaining financial institutions that only offer QIF downloads decide to upgrade, or Intuit disables QIF imports to Q2004.

Reply to
Blackwood

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