Personal Finance Software for Unix?
pstreck asks: "I'm trying to find the best personal finance software for Unix. I've been using Quicken for a while, but unfortuantlly it won't run under Wine. I've tried gnucash but it just isn't up to par with what Quicken offers. What do you guys use?" While the free software versions may not quite be up to par with the current commercial offerings, it won't always be the case. The turning point can start now, of course. What finance software are you using now, what features do you like and what features do you think these software packages need?
What, you mean my sig? Christ. So basically moderators are all twits.
It's a shame the same isn't always true of Java. Is it still leaking memory? Still changing radically every 6-8 months? What a pain...
--- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
I invite you to mod this offtopic. Dumbasses.
The superior linux finance app I was referring to is/was/will be
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Try typing it in and hitting enter, at that weird dos like thingy called the console, or alternately at a Kterm window, or whatever the crap it's called (wmaker user myself). Again, it is...
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Why? Well, because when I typed it in, in a non-halfassed fashion, the blind/dyslexic/illiterate moderator modded me offtopic. Quite possibly because he was too fucking retarded to tell when my post ended, and my sig began. If you don't like sigs, or are confused by them, turn the damn things off. Or at least abstain from from moderation until you have a brain.
And the worst part? In close to 12 months that I've had an account (been posting as AC for 3 years) I've never once been m2'd. I won't now. Because if anything, the IQ limit for metamoderation is even lower than that for moderation, if possible. Retards.
VVVV-------- This is my sig, not an
"advertisement". It happens to be somethign you
can opt out of, if you like. It's a personal statement.
Others get to make them, why can't I?