POSTS
Review by Tall Timbers
The 2014 version started out with quite a few bugs in it. Now that they’ve finished the patching, I think there is still a little bugginess left. I understand that the 2015 version is also buggy so I’ll probably just continue to suffer along with this version for another year or two. I have to stay with Quicken because I have 25 years of complete financial history on it and wouldn’t want to lose that. I currently track 32 active accounts varying from property to investments to simple savings, checking, and cash accounts on it. I got my first exposure to Quicken when I purchased a different software product and the store gave me Quicken for free… it was a promotion at the time. That giveaway paid dividends to Intuit as I’ve purchased many versions since.
Quicken is a very good way to keep track of all your finances in one place. One word of caution: Make frequent backups of your Quicken file. They will, on occasion, become corrupt.