Intuit Finally Offers Some Support For Linux
walterbyrd sends us to the ZDNet blog, where Dan Farber & Larry Dignan write: "Intuit said Wednesday it will allow QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions to operate on Linux servers. For Intuit, the move is a bit of a milestone — QuickBooks is the first of its products [to] work on open source software."
How many people really care about the server back-end when it comes to something like Quickbooks? Very, very few. The fact that neither Quickbooks nor Peachtree will run under Linux is a HUGE stepping stone for anyone who wants to use it for small business purposes, and this does very little to fix that.
Finally, a product that allows all the F/OSS zealots to keep track of all the $0.00 software expenditures that they've racked up...
This guy's the limit!
I know, I'm a bit paranoid. But I work with computers and accounting. Paranoia is part of the job.
We are the Borg...
It's good that another major software company is working with Linux. But compared to the overall market, this is a drop in the bucket.
If you haven't been down-modded lately, you aren't trying.
Sacred cows make the best hamburger.
Has anyone run quicken using WINE? I've had it with my Vista laptop.
I'm just hoping this effect builds more momentum till the day when Adobe released a 100% compatible version of Photoshop and Premiere for Linux.
I taught there several times back in the 90's. I was told by several ppl that they had the client running on Linux. Problem was that the marketing ppl were fighting it being there (as well as on the mac). They felt that MS would treat them right and that they had to be ONLY on windows. Marketing ppl are so short-sighted.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
I know it's a dream but heh ...
Not many business people are willing to work in Linux desktops. But at a site I manage, we can't back up QB from the server becuase it runs on one of the PCs and never seems to let go of its database files. Everything else runs on a Debian server machine where we can monitor it and back it up, but QB is always a thorn in our sides.
Okay, so it's a server, not a client. Have you forgotten all lessons taught by Microsoft? While we all like to decry the weakness of monocultures, we all also like them at least on some levels. The most important one, and the one that really brought Windows success as a server platform (hint: it wasn't that it was a better server) is familiarity. Operating Windows and Windows NT has always been similar, with slight lapses here and there (like NT4 trailing Windows 95) and this is precisely how they gained a share of the server market.
Linux has until recently been the only company gaining market share in the server market, by taking a little away from Windows and a lot from Legacy UNIX(tm). But Windows has [recently] been making headway of its own. This scares (or at least bothers) me, because I want to live in a future with less Microsoft in it, not more. But anything that gives Linux more of a boost as a server inevitably increases the chances of running Linux on the [corporate] desktop as well, which has positive ramifications for everyone but Microsoft.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
QuickBooks / Turbo Tax?
If not, why not?
However small, at least it's a step in Linux's direction, maybe it'll catch another company's eye and help them decide to support Linux. The more proprietary support Linux has the better and one day Linux will run anything you could want, which is what an OS should strive to do.
"we've got trenchcoats and bad attitudes" - John Constantine, HellBlazer
I'll agree with you there, but Intuit had better start getting more serious about cross-platform support. Right now, Microsoft seems like they're all over the place, but I would bet money that, if and when they get it back together, Intuit will be their next target. Unless they've ported their software to other platforms by then, they're pretty much done for.
Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
presales customer service.
I have a customer who is trying desperately to move all servers away from Windows (they currently run Sage 500), so I called up Quickbooks (the number the sales report said to call) for information as to when Linux server support would be available. They refused to answer any questions unless I had a support account. I suppose they are not interested in getting migrations to happen.
I suppose I cannot recommend such a product to my customer.
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
It took this long for them to figure out how to secretly modify the hard disk boot sector under Linux?
Anyone who runs more than one seat of Quickbooks ought to care.
I agree that the lack of a Quickbooks client on linux matters to more people. Unfortunately linux does not have sufficient desktop marketshare to reasonably expect a company like Intuit to develop the product. If/when linux captures a meaningful share of the desktop PC market (5-10% minimum) then there is a business case Intuit management will listen to. I would love to be able to set my clients up with a linux only solution for Quickbooks but all the PCs we buy already have Windows so it's kind of a moot issue from a practical standpoint. What I don't like is having to maintain a special server for Quickbooks.
Servers are another matter entirely since linux has double digit marketshare there. A linux backend is a huge first step and one I welcome. That cuts the number of servers required by potentially one and the hardware savings alone can justify it to a small business. I hope they will extend this product to the Premium and Pro versions.
because eventually the client app will probably be replaced with AJAX or Flash or something anyway.
Just installed Quickbooks Pro for a client who runs a FreeBSD file server with Samba, and the new version will only allow you to have the data file on a Windows machine if it is accessed over a LAN.
Isn't that nice.
Ok, the title was probably a little more flamebait than intended. I generally agree that there is a mindset that you describe, but also that it tends to be short-lived in many or even most deployments (at least in terms of Linux).
My experience is that a lot of people start out going to Linux because they think they won't have to spend money, but once they realize what is possible, they start spending it and adopt much more of a UNIX mentality.
I have said many times that Linux is the only OS that can fit any budget. However, unlike Windows, the possibilities tend to be sufficiently open that budgets tend to grow to allow people to cut costs elsewhere. This means, eventually, purchasing real servers (such as Power 5/6-based servers), real storage (or building this in-house using lower-end but still real servers), and the like.
Flexibility has a financial price, but also a higher ROI.
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
When I finally convinced my wife to let me manage the money, I moved over to GnuCash (she was using Quicken.)
The learning curve was steep, not because of the app itself (though a bit) but because I didn't truly understand the basics of accounting. This is something that Quicken does a good job of preventing people from realizing.
The help docs were *fantastic*, and I learned a great deal in a short time. Now that I use GnuCash, I have a much stronger understanding of where my money goes. Couldn't be happier.
I realize that's slightly off-topic, but it seemed a good time to mention it.
don't usually have in house support people. Most companies that I have seen that run QB enterprise are small to medium businesses. They don't have full time IT staff, and the companies are not usually IT related businesses.
I can't see these types of businesses successfully running Linux servers - hell some of them can't even run Windows or Mac OS without difficulty.
I'm glad Intuit is making the leap into Linux. As much as I hate Intuit, I applaud them for this move. Hopefully they will stick with it when Joe's Landscaping company calls asking for help with their Linux server.
As good as Linux is, QB Enterprise is a steaming pile of garbage, and they will get support calls - hopefully they will be ready for them.
-ted
They tend to be a bit clunky for the small trader though. Good luck with ledgerSMB.
There's also...
Home user: HomeBank, jGnash, GFP, Grisbi, Gnucash
Small business: phpOrganisation, Quasar, Gnucash, Turbocash, FrontAccounting, Lazy8, Bambooinvoice, GnuAccounting
Medium business: WebERP, OpenBravo, phpCOIN, LedgerSMB, CK-Ledger, OpenAccounting, smbledger
Larger business: Opentaps, Compiere
Obviously the quality and focus varies, some are more successful than others.
Can I suggest that you take a look at themed front ends to ledgersmb. That is, a user interface which doesn't make use of general accounting terms but which uses terminology common to a particular industry.
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Free Quickbooks alternatives:
Turbocash on Windows.
Gnucash on Linux. Mmm, also Grisbi, though it lacked double entry last time I looked and not to forget KMyMoney on KDE.
Tax return specific stuff:
http://cbbrowne.com/info/freetaxsoftware.html
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I for one welcome our northern latitude based, Linux loving friends.
For Intuit, the move is a bit of a milestone -- QuickBooks is the first of its products [to] work on open source software."
Ok, Quicken IS NOT Quickbooks. But for a decent, simple-to-use checkbook manager, Quicken is hard to beat. It's incredibly user-friendly, and the ancient version I have, version 5.0 for DOS, works great on FreeDOS. I use it all the time, Quicken 5 on FreeDOS on Linux via SSH in Xterm. (no kidding!)
This lets me do my books anytime, anyplace where I can get an xterm or putty loaded. (pretty much EVERYWHERE) Since it's done everything I've ever needed for my personal checking accounts, why would I use anything else?
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
Six months ago I set up a small plumbing company with Microsoft Small Business Server largely because they wanted to share Quickbooks among 3 workstations. What a disaster--- I've successfully deployed the "standard" version of NT server, 2000, 2003 and samba for file and printer sharing, but I'll never again work with SBS. If it had been possible to host Quickbooks on a samba server at the beginning of the year, these folks would have had a far better computing experience. This is definitely a win.
It's Word and Excel on Linux that will free the average user from Windows on the desktop. ( so, of course, Microsoft won't go that way unless they start losing marketshare to a linux-based office suite ).
We use a completely cross-platform accounting and ERP system. it's not GPL but the server runs on postgreSQL and the clients run on windows, linux, mac. I would highly recomended to someone looking to migrate because it will run on any platform server or client side. It was key in our move from windows to Ubuntu on the desktops. first we migrated the ERP (which we had to anyway) to OpenMFG (OpenMFG.com) windows clients all around, then when we started changing clients by department, everyone just kept on working because the applications were the same. If you don't need the ERP, manufacturingg, inventory, etc. modules, just use the accounting (which is much better than any quickbooks, to begin with) you don't pay extra for modules and you can develop your own screens or connect other in-house apps with ODBC to postgres from either linux or windows. Just my 2 cents. . .
It's worth pointing out that anything which is released under the GPL alleviates a lot of the concerns that single-vendor solutions incur. Any truly Free/Open Source Software is never going to go out-of-business or be killed. Someone else can always fork the code.
I'm not criticizing LedgerSMB (indeed, I'll be keeping an eye on it). And I appreciate that Quasar has some closed, non-Free parts. I just wanted to point out this advantage of FOSS.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
I don't particularly care for QB, but it is the product I have to support at my company. If I can deploy the backend on an existing Linux box, that's one less Windows server to worry about. In fact, I'm down to just one Windows server now. Currently it's a PITA to get info into and out of QB, especially in a real-time fashion. Having an standard SQL interface should improve the situation dramatically, especially for my in-house LAMP apps.
On a related note, the company/org/individual that writes a QB knock-off (think OpenOffice compared to MS Office) will make a killing. SMBs can't justify the learning curve of replacing QB. Remove that barrier, and I think many companies would consider switching. In particular, we need a web-enabled product that looks/behaves like to QB.