[Discuss] Personal finance software on Linux
William Cattey
wdc at mit.edu
Fri Sep 19 15:11:32 EDT 2014
Hi Rich (and hello to the rest of BLU),
My partner has talked me into experimenting with gnucash.
Up to now I've been using a couple spreadsheets that were operating as
glorified check registers/stock inventory pages. I don't actually have
a lot of experience with financial software. (I compared myself to the
guy who plays four instruments but doesn't read music.)
This week a cow-orker said that he felt gnucash wasn't as capable as
Quicken or Mint, but I don't yet have the experience to dig for details.
At any rate if others are playing with gnucash and want to chat, we can
take the conversation off-list for a while and then report back to this thread
with a summary.
-Bill
On Sep 19, 2014, at 2:35 PM, Rich Braun wrote:
> For about 2 years, I've been happily using Moneydance as a Quicken
> replacement. It's a Java app that runs on any platform, and also has an
> iPhone app that (up until now) provided sync capability to my Linux server.
> Their 2014 release apparently broke wifi sync, and it's now deprecated.
> Here's the response I got from customer support:
>
> "If you're using Wifi syncing, I'd definitely recommend
> switching to Dropbox syncing as it's more stable, robust,
> and there are unfortunately some issues with Wifi syncing
> that we can't fix due to certain network configurations
> over which we have no control. As well, Dropbox syncing
> is end-to-end encrypted, meaning that all your data is
> encrypted between your Moneydance application and your
> Moneydance iOS app, with none of it being unencrypted on
> your Dropbox folder. For these reasons, we've stopped
> maintaining the Wifi syncing functionality and are
> unable to fix most problems with it."
>
> Dropbox is putting up a new office building across the street from where I
> work, so I suppose there might be one throat to choke if anything goes wrong
> over there: but I'd still *really really* rather continue to self-host all my
> personal finance data.
>
> So, it's 2014 and I'm still in search for an excellent personal-finance
> manager that works on Linux, Windows and/or Mac, with sync to/from mobile. And
> whose data can be kept on storage media owned by me, not some cloud provider.
> (I guess I could go back to my old Windows-only method, but Windows is
> gradually fading out from my home network with the demise of Microsoft
> TechNet.)
>
> Your thoughts?
>
> -rich
>
>
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