I found quicken to be pretty lame for the minute I tried it with a former accountant, and found it really didn't do anything I couldn't get in Xero accounting suite, a web-based product. Far better integration as well with other apps like expensify and freshbooks. I ended up with both Xero and Freshbooks as both have ups and downs, where freshbooks is awesome for invoicing, accounting, creates customer portals automatically to view work history, bills received/paid, etc, Xero is better at general ledger management and methodology. Quicken seemed more like the old slug GM-like company product that is too big to fail (doing everyone a favor), as using even the enterprise version I wanted to stab myself in the eye. There was nothing I missed from Quicken, and a whole lot more to love with others. I've operated as a consultant in dozens of orgs across the years with linux, and I never found anything that couldn't be accomplished in linux really, minus a good visio replacement. The only problem is when they just use garbage like lync and quicken is that is a vendor lock-in to micro$oft anyways. Solution: Replace them. I did, it is possible. -mb On 08/24/2016 08:22 PM, Eric Oyen wrote: > who was screaming that the post was irrelevant? I certainly wasn't. :) > > At the end of the day, Linux still needs a lot of work to be > considered to be a viable desktop production environment. > > can you get quicken for linux? what about Peachtree? How about a full > office suite that can do the same things that MS office can do? what > about some of the other mainstream office and production apps? are > there many equivalents or direct replacements? THis is the primary > problem I have seen with linux over the years. great OS support, but > lousy where it counts. > > -eric --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss