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Evil, Evil Intuit & Quicken
I love Quicken. Well, I did. I'm a long time user. Way back I was even one of Quicken's top beta testers for versions 3 and 4. I especially loved Quicken because it wasn't Microsoft. It was the one Microsoft product that seemed to survive and thrive. Well phooey on you, Quicken -- Microsoft, here I come. The issue is Quicken insisting that the QIF standard for importing data wasn't good enough and the open OFX standard wouldn't fly. Oh no, Quicken has to have its own special flavor of OFX, to try and lock you in. Well, Intuit -- here's what you did. I regularly upgraded until Quicken 2004 gave me that warning that QIF was going to die. See, I use multiple currencies -- dollars, pounds and euros. Since Quicken pulled out of the UK years ago, I went back to the US version that only believes there are US banks and that Americans live only within the 50 states. Ahem. Several million of us live outside. And see, we have to deal with banks that don't do no QFX / Web Connect files. So I stuck with Quicken 2004.
Sadly, this meant each month, I had to open the QIF file for my credit card here, then manually do a search and replace (several) to shift the date format from dd/mm/yy to mm/dd/yy for a proper import. I lived with this because I was just too busy to finally mess around seeing if a newer version of Quicken would help. Tonight, I'm bringing up a new laptop. Hmm. Do I get my old Quicken 2004 CD out? Nah -- let's try Quicken 2007. Sure, I have to buy it, but I get a 60 day refund. Time to test it out. It installed just fine. Now to see if I could import data. Neither of my two UK credit card companies pump out QFX. But they do OFX. I exported those, change the extension to QFX and tried to trick Quicken. I failed. A quick search, and Importing OFX Data into Quicken 2005/2006 told me I needed to insert some info to make Quicken think the files were from an authorized institution. So, I downloaded a QFX file from my US credit card company, looked for the right section and inserted that into the other files. Success! No. They started to import, then I got a "downloaded currency does not match" error. Bummer. Another search, and Hacking Quicken to Import QFX Files on OS X told me that Mac users are irritated too. I'm guessing it's because you can't get Microsoft Money for the Mac, so they discover this weird locked in world of Quicken for the first time. As it turns out, there are some further tweaks I might be able to try. But by this point, my download of Microsoft Money had completed. I fired it up. I imported Quicken into it. There's my accounts. I important my files. They came in -- no hacking needed, the dates all correct and WOW -- it's even guessed fairly correctly many of my categories. That's it Quicken, I'm done. I can see things I'll miss in Money in terms of how I can view my account list while working within a particular account. But Microsoft rocks -- and you totally suck. I'm with you only until I get my annual taxes finished in the next month or so, sticking with Quicken 2004, and then I'm outta Intuit country. By Danny Sullivan on Aug. 11, 2007 | PermalinkSee related posts in: Money
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