![]() I understand one is supposedly better, but it still doesn't work consistently. I've been down that rabbit hole in the past and they are both unreliable. Is there any plausible argument for using Quicken these days? I'm not interested in hearing about manually importing csv files on a regular basis or manually entering transactions because, (looks to bottom corner of screen to check calendar) it is 2022 and not 1992 and we are actually paying for this software. ![]() I've read that they don't really offer real support for crypto, and in the case of BlockFi, they show they have a connection for it, but they don't actually pull transactions for the credit card or the savings account, despite supposedly supporting these as traditional banking products. Over the past few days I have been unable to reliably get transactions from USAA, Capital One, Ally, Axos Bank, Coinbase, or BlockFi. Now, less than half of my accounts actually sync / download transactions. So I figured I'd give Quicken another shot, hoping that maybe they hired a competent developer or product manager in the past year. PersonalCapital did a decent job, but just wasn't the same. ![]() ![]() After nearly 20 years I ditched Quicken about a year ago because, well, it's just utter garbage software that can't reliably complete its most basic functions (download transactions and keep track of them.)ĭoing some end of year accounting, I found that going through all of my bank websites is a pain and I missed having everything in Quicken. ![]()
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