The registers had different colors depending on the account type: credit card, bank, investment, loan. The old Quickens used to ask what type of account register you wanted and then they'd start one that had exactly what you needed. I've used Quicken (Mac) since 1995 and have stuck with 2007 because 2017 looked like Quicken Essentials.
Thanks, Quicken, for taking this approach. The ability to continue using the app after my subscription ends allays my main fear with subscriptions: Once you start, you're locked in because you lose the software if you ever stop paying. If they had communicated this more clearly up front, I wouldn't have had any qualms with supporting their new approach, nor would I have vented on Twitter. This policy allays my fears about the subscription: If I decide I don't need the online services, I can stop subscribing and still use the app manually.
But Starter is very limited I imagine most users will have at least Deluxe.)
(Note that this doesn't apply to the Starter edition, just Deluxe and Premier. You can view, edit, export, and manually enter transactions and accounts, even after your subscription ends.Īccess to online services, such as transaction download, quotes, and mobile sync, along with access to Quicken Support, will end if your subscription does.Įven if I stop subscribing, I'll be able to continue using Quicken 2018 (or 2019 or whatever) much the same way I use Quicken 2007 today: As a standalone app without access to online services or Quicken's support services. …whether you renew your subscription or not, you'll always have full access to and ownership of your data. Quicken's subscription is backed by something they call the Data Access Guarantee, which insures you'll always be able to access your financial data. (Though I believe Office will run in view-only mode.)īut that's not how Quicken's subscription works. Stop subscribing, and you can't use the apps any more. In a modern software subscription plan, as with Microsoft's Office 365 or Adobe's Creative Cloud, you only have rights to use the software while your subscription is active. However, to profit, you need to provide things people want, so New Quicken should be focused on providing excellent apps. It's good that they're out from under Intuit's lack of interest in the Mac app, but it's possibly bad in that an investment group only buys a company for one reason: To later sell it at a big profit. Note: For those who aren't aware, Quicken is no longer owned by Intuit they were bought by an investment bank.