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Product Details:
Package Length: 7.4 inches
Package Width: 5.3 inches
Package Height: 1.4 inches
Package Weight: 0.15 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 122 reviews
System Requirements:
Platform: Windows 2000 / Windows XP
Media: CD-ROM
Item Quantity: 1
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:2.5 ( 122 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

81 of 82 found the following review helpful:

3From A Converted MS Money User....  Jan 10, 2007
By BB
I just migrated from MS Money 2007. I've been a user since 2002 (versions 2002 & 2004). I was very happy with Money 2004, but was forced to upgrade to 2007 to continue online services. Some features that were important to me were removed (bill multi-selection with immediate account balance projection and Money Express as a bill reminder). So I decided to finally make the jump to Quicken.

The bad: My first impression, after coming from Money's clean interface, is the busy clutter of the home page. Money didn't use windows (how ironic) like Quicken does. If you keep opening reports, and jumping to other areas, you'll find yourself with piles of windows at the bottom of your screen. I found the navigation clumsy and it was difficult to see the whole screen at my preferred screen resolution of 800 X 600. And, why no option to keep Frequent Flyer Accounts for the very common rewards programs that are out there?? It can be done with an "Asset" account, but I thought there would have been an option for it. And I think the cash flow projection can be improved. Although I like the calendar that shows my upcoming transaction and the impact on my checking account, in the last version of Money (NOT 2007-it's why I left) in the Bills screen I could multi-select several bills and get a projected outcome of my balance. That was a GREAT feature! I hope Intuit considers something like that on its calendar or in the bill screen (I've already written twice to suggest it).

The good: Reports, reports, reports. You can print from practically any screen. Beautiful reports. And you can attach files to your transactions. And, far more customizable than Money. I like the weblinks right on the bill pay screen so I can go right to my payee's website. (Money made that a two step deal to try to get you go with its MSN Bill Pay service. Why should I if I get it from Citibank for FREE!??)
And, the Bill Reminder is okay (Money did away with its "Money Express" for security reasons, yet another useful feature that I grew to depend on). But, I don't like that the Bill Reminder program does not require a password and will show anyone who cares to click on it all my upcoming transactions. Why no password protect?? And, it doesn't run on the taskbar, so once you close it after startup, it's gone until you (or anyone else at all, as I already said) cares to open it again.

And did I go through hell to convert my Money 07 file! I had already researched the reasons why the data converter that Quicken provides on its website would not convert my Money file and what my options probably were before contacting Intuits "Live Chat" support. After being annoyed by having to repeat everything I already typed to the techie and finding he was just going to the forum and doing the reading I had already done, I made a request to be elevated to higher tech support. After reiterating what I had read on the forum, the tech gave me a link to get the Quicken 02 version that I knew I needed. I then had to shorten all my Money account names and categories, export the .QIF files for EACH account. Install Quicken 02. Import each .QIF account. Start Quicken 07 and convert the Quicken 02 file. My data was a little quirky because I some categories became payees and detached from their transactions, but so far my balances look right. I downloaded my transactions from my bank and credit card companies in little time.

Overall, I think I've decided to keep Quicken. I sure went through a whole day or two trying to get the data converted and looking right, so I already feel commited. It does seem to be ahead of Money somewhat and I'll get used to the interface. Anyone looking to try either product, don't forget to backup your data file somewhere that is not in the original directory, so it is not over-written. Several backups are wise.

Hope this helps.

Update: January 12, 2007

I am sticking with Quicken for sure. After constant "tweaking" I have become accustomed to the home screen and the navigation and would not switch back to Money even if it was free. I love the "go" links that are on my bill page making it easier to go to my payee's website. The only convenience Money provided in its update centered on you signing up for its online bill payment service. The calendar with the optional running balance is very handy at-a-glance, especially the ability to add notes to it. I am glad I took the time to convert my file. It was worth it and I would now give this product 4 stars (because of the difficulty with the data converting).

Updated 01/23/07:

My earlier review was premature. Although I do like the customizability of the software, it has alot of problems downloading transaction. Sometimes it will get your transactions from your financial institution and bring them home, and sometimes they just disappear. Even importing files is difficult. It is very quirky. And I am computer literate. I went and downloaded an MS Money 2007 trial (I was originally running Money 04 and upgraded to Money 2007 on January 1st with 30 days money back refund. Not being thrilled with it, I tried Quicken a week later and liked Quicken better so I got my money back from Microsoft). Although I had issues with Money 2007 removing some features, it at least was dependable and kept my accounts up-to-date. I am giving Quicken another 30 days (and have spent hours on its forum) to figure out its issues (it has a 60 day return policy). In the interim, I am updating my transactions in both programs. (I should add that to convert my Quicken file to Money took all of a minute. Not so to convert my Money file to Quicken -- that took over two days and required downloading a prior version of Quicken!) I will update one more time. Hope this helps someone.

Updated 2/3/07:

Last update. I have come to a complete understanding of Quicken. One not so immediately apparent difference between it and Money is when you download your transactions via web connect (when you go to your bank's website yourself, as opposed to direct connect, where your program does background banking for you) Quicken will NOT let you re-download transactions that it already imported. Even if you deleted a transaction something by accident. It "remembers" it had already imported that transaction. Money will let you import as many times as you want to. If you really had to re-download to Quicken, you would have to delete your cookies first. Overall, this is not a problem. Quicken allows you to very easily manage your data files with backup, copy, rename options right from the program. I find it a far superior product than MS Money 2007.

UPDATE: 07/25/08
Still with Quicken Deluxe 2007. No complaints. I will be upgrading when they tell me my internet services have expired, which will probably be 2009.

45 of 46 found the following review helpful:

1Worst quicken release in the last 4 years  Dec 05, 2006
By Greenband
I've been a very loyal quicken user since 1998. I've been generally happy with the product. However, similar to Microsoft Office, Quicken hasn't really added additional useful functionality for most users the past several years. I rate this one star, although I would give zero if it were an available option.

I invest heavily in equities and options plus use have a variety of online accounts. The online services for Quicken 2007 are slow, buggy, don't work sometimes, and occasionally cause spontaneous shutdowns. I work for a software company and this looks like a product rushed out the door because some VP had bonus money at stake.

Quicken 2007 adds absolutely nothing useful for most people using Quicken 2006. After patch release #2 the product is still just as bad. As a public service please stick with Quicken 2006 - skip Quicken 2007 and hopefully Intuit gets it right in 2008.

Quicken 2007 has become a walking billboard as Intuit looks for any way to make an extra buck from a relatively loyal user base by advertising Quicken credit cards, mortgages, etc. In my opinion Intuit is moving away from their core mission of providing excellent financial management software for the home user.

131 of 144 found the following review helpful:

1Bugs Bugs and More Bugs  Sep 09, 2006
By M. Day "Voracious Reader"
I have used Quicken since the first version - and been a bigot in their favor. Not right now. 07 version is horribly bug ridden.

Tells me I am out of memory, but when I do a memory dump I have over 600meg free of physical memory, tells me I have low space on a hard drive with 40gbytes free. Ok, so the warnings are wrong. I can handle that.

When I download, most accounts work fine. But one account of 3 I download from my bank suddenly does not work correctly. It downloads transactions - they show in on-line center and match what is online at bank, but when you go to the account register to accept them, it says no transactions exist, but account list shows flag for transactions and mouse over says I have new ones to accept.

Ok so some problem, and if it weren't my main checking account I might be more tolerant, but it is and I need it to work. So I go online and search FAQ's - do all the recommended clean-ups - works once kind of - at least finally got things done. Then it stops again (mind you 10 others work fine but are smaller in transaction volume by one or two magnitude.) I try to do email support, but they require order number which when I take it off their email confirmation is one digit longer than field on form, so it won't submit. Try the chat feature, it won't go thru, try feedback, it abends. Tried each of these during workday, at night, and on weekend - same result. Makes one think they want you to use the pay by minute call line? Very frustrated with them right now. Have sent them actual screen shoots of problems - hope they fix, but getting very doubtful of results.

I am a CTO of a major company and have a lot of understanding for bugs - these are complex systems to be sure, but this is unacceptable to have bugs and poor support functions; and sell me an 07 version that is not much better than the 04 version I had been using successfully for years.

I am trying Money 07 trial version!

31 of 32 found the following review helpful:

1Worst. Quicken. Ever.  Jan 03, 2007
By robb0995
I'm embarrassed to face any of the dozens of people I've recommended Quicken to over the past 18 years that I've been using Quicken.

This is the worst release and most unecessary set of changes they've made since the disastrous 1996 release.

The beautiful crisp and clean interface that we've always associated with Quicken is gone and replaced by a muddy, unreadable mess that looks like the worst of garage-based shareware. The background has been switched (with no user option to change it) to a dark blue on which you're supposed to be able to read black and thin, red text. You can't.

The calendar, once a besacon of simplicity has become bloated and unreadable (somehow only about 1/3 of the payee's name now fits, so everything is swimming in ellipses and "More..." links).

The software, even with R2 is among their most buggy releases. Make sure you backup plenty and keep them rotated, because you never know when you're going to lose data. I've also been unable to use their built-in web browser for just baout anything (which is important as lots of Quicken features depend on the web browser). What made them think they were a browser company anyway.

I have recommended Quicken to so many people over the years, and I've already started to email them to make sure they don't downgrade to this version. If this isn't fixed by a complete overhaul, then you can be sure there will be class-action lawsuits the next time they try to extort people to leave their stable versions and move to this mess.

Why is there no zero star option?

40 of 43 found the following review helpful:

1Buyer Beware  Nov 09, 2006
By K James M (St Louis MO)
Buyer Beware: Intuit will use your "registration" information for aggressive marketing purposes, and refuses to remove customer name/addresses from marketing lists. Intuit cannot be trusted with customer information, therefore be very wary of trusting them with any information. This is especially problematic because the software company is also aggressive about insisting that you send them ALL of your financial information as an "online backup." Since they cannot be trusted with such basic information as name/address/phone/email they cannot be trusted to keep-secure more sensitive information. If a business will not respect customer privacy with regard to advertisements, how can one trust them to keep bank account numbers, credit card numbers, bank account passwords, etc,? If you do buy this product it would be advisable NOT to provide them with accurate personal information (most especially an email address). Again, buyer beware.

See all 122 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
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