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:LinuxPlanet: Review: Small Business Accounting Software For Linux
LinuxPlanet: Review: Small Business Accounting Software For Linux
Jan 3, 2005, 16 :45 UTC (5 Talkback[s]) (10399 reads)

(Other stories by Carla Schroder)

"Choosing small business or personal accounting software seems relatively simple: evaluate features, ease of use, price, support--the usual things. The one factor that can really drive you nuts is migrating away from an existing installation.

"Intuit dominates the small business/personal finance market with Quicken and QuickBooks, and for good reasons. They have short learning curves, nice clean interfaces, and they allow people who are not accountants to manage their own finances. And, unlike so much accounting software, they are reasonably priced. It is not uncommon to find hard-core Linux users keeping a Windows box just to run Quicken or QuickBooks.

"So why should anyone even consider migrating away from Quicken/QuickBooks (or other Windows accounting program) to a Linux accounting program...?"

Complete Story

Related Stories:
NewsForge: CBTracker: A Checkbook Manager for the Rest of Us(Mar 23, 2004)
ComputerUser: Linux By The Numbers(Nov 04, 2003)
UNIXReview: Review: Kapital 1.1, GnuCash 1.8, and Moneydance(May 30, 2003)
LinuxWorld: Balancing Your Books? GnuCash is the Answer(Sep 26, 2002)


Index Mode   |   Flat Mode   |   Thread Mode   |   Thread Flat  
  Talkback(s) Name  and Date
...but it works very nicely for my small ...   SQL Ledger not mentioned..   
Tommy
Jan 3, 2005, 18:01:29
 
> ...but it works very nicely for my sma ...   Re: SQL Ledger not mentioned..   
Eric Brown
Jan 4, 2005, 01:14:53
 
What do you use when you are a small man ...   No cost accounting, No VAT   
Stomfi
Jan 4, 2005, 02:24:21
 
> using perl and apache ...then: posgres ...   Re: SQL Ledger not mentioned..   
R.L.
Jan 4, 2005, 03:08:42
 
> What do you use when you are a small m ...   Re: No cost accounting, No VAT   
Rob Sixpack
Jan 4, 2005, 05:58:19
 
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