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Quicken 2008 Deluxe [OLD VERSION]
![Quicken 2008 Deluxe [OLD VERSION]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41rozdCQ-FL._SL160_.jpg)

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List Price: $59.95
Our Price: $47.99
Your Save: $ 11.96 ( 20% )
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Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Manufacturer: Intuit
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: CD-ROM Brand: Intuit EAN: 0028287016743 Feature: Includes all the features of Quicken Starter Edition plus additional tools to help you and your family better manage savings and spending Format: CD-ROM Label: Intuit Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product. Manufacturer: Intuit Platform: Windows XP Publisher: Intuit Release Date: 2007-09-09 Studio: Intuit
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Features
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Includes all the features of Quicken Starter Edition plus additional tools to help you and your family better manage savings and spending Make online banking even better--bring all your online accounts together in one place Connect to your banks, 401(k)s, brokerage or mortgage accounts with a single password Get suggested spending limits and set savings goals based on the day-to-day information you enter--and then check your progress through the month Let Quicken help you accurately track and categorize expenses for simpler tax preparation
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Editorial Reviews:
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Plan, save and control your finances with Quicken Deluxe 2008. Quicken lets you see your finances your way, instantly. Now it's easier than ever to manage a personal budget, pay bills on time, track your investments, maximize tax deductions - and find more ways to save. Quicken Deluxe 2008 gives you all of the features of Quicken Starter Edition - plus additional tools to help you manage spending and savings.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Can't import MS Money files Comment: If this will be your first personal finance application, or your finances are straightforward, I suggest Quicken because it seems to handle personal finances well without any bloat. However, if you're a long-time MS Money user looking to switch, you should think twice only because migrating your data is difficult to do and cannot be done completely.
I bought Quicken because I'm tired of how bloated and quirky MS Money has become and hoped Quicken would offer core functionality without the bloat and quirkiness. Unfortunately, Quicken can't import MS Money files very well. I expected to find an import function that I just point at my .mny file and Quicken would import all my info. Nope. You have to export accounts one by one then import them. You lose all the links between accounts like transfers, so many accounts have to be corrected manually. But that's only for those accounts that can be exported/imported--apparently some account data (from IRAs, 401(k)s, etc.) can't be exported/imported. That further scrambles any accounts you did import.
Inuit does have available an application that will do some automatic conversions and importing for you, but it doesn't come with the package (it should be built in to Quicken, but, instead, you have to search Inuit's website to find the app buried deep in a forum - bogus.) Even with this additional app, you still can't import everything.
The bottom line is, if you're in a similar situation, I think you're stuck for now. Hopefully, someone will develop a non-bloated app that will provide core personal finance functionality that can easily convert and import a full Money file. I will buy that, because I can't wait to ditch MS Money.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Crap Comment: [...]
Quicken came with my first Windows computer, a Packard Bell, back in 1996-ish. It also came with Microsoft Money. Both sucked then, but Money was better. I downloaded the trial version of Money and 20-minutes later uninstalled it. So I went to Wal-Mart and decided to give Quicken Deluxe a try. Long story short, it's even worse!
First of all, what modern day program doesn't allow you to order your transactions by date in descending order - so the most recent date is on top? Quicken wouldn't let me do it! And if it's possible, I couldn't figure out how and frankly all you should have to do is click twice on the date column header like any other self-respecting spreadsheet-like program. This alone is a brick wall for me.
I have a nearly new top of the line laptop. Lots of speed, lots of RAM, lots of other things I don't use at their full capacity. Quicken runs like a freakin' remote control car running out of batteries. You try and scroll quickly down through your transactions - it can't keep up. Rubbish.
When is Quicken going to realize that categories are EXTREMELY important and that the program should not make it a freakin' pain in the you know what just to change/edit/add categories. You have to go into this menu that operates just as bad as the scrolling I just whined about and make changes that should have been (1) more user friendly and (2) capable of being done solely in the register instead of what feels like a third-party category management software program band-aid.
Most importantly, the user interface, easy-of-use, and presentation of the program is no better than the ancient version of Quicken that came on my Packard Bell computer over 10-years ago. Sure it has tabs but ever since Firefox came up with tabs in its web browser, everyone has tabs. They don't help a thing in Quicken.
Don't buy this. Don't buy MS Money. Read a MS Access book, learn Access, and create your own money management tool. It'd be 100% customizable then, more user friendly, better looking, and you won't ever have to worry about exporting your data. Heck, you can even use Excel and have a better experience.
Wow, Intuit, what a waste of money you've produced! I'm sorry for being so negative, but this software is buggy, slow, ugly, and just plain no good.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Upgrade from Quicken Deluxe 99 on XP Comment: I have Windows XP. I've been running Quicken Deluxe 99 for a long time.
I starting getting more and more bugs in the program. I decided maybe it was time to upgrade to Quicken Deluxe 2008. I saw it on sale here for $[...] and jumped on it with the free shipping. WOW. I had read some negative reviews but decided I would just do everything manually and not try anything fancy like download information from a financial institution. Like before, each transaction would be entered manually and would be reconciled every month.
Conclusion: I returned the program (I hope they accept it) to Amazon. I couldn't even upgrade my Quiken 99 program accurately. I spent about half an hour with online customer service and decided that I am too old for this crap. Maybe in my 20s or 30s I would have spent the five weeks learning the program and working out the bugs. But as soon as I saw it couldn't even upgrade my financial information accurately, I knew what kind of fight I had on my hands. This would be a marathon. Wisely, I gave up right way (well, after a half hour). I returned the program to amazon and saw the price went up in the last few days. It was now over $[...]. Maybe the $[...] program doesn't have the same bugs.
Finale: I simple reinstalled Quicken Deluxe 99 on Windows XP (actually, it is only supposed to be used with Windows 98) and all my bugs went away in my old version. So far, even on XP, I'm having almost no problems at all compared to that abortion they call Quicken Deluxe 2008. I would rather keep my financial information in a spreadsheet.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Quicken converting from Money Comment: I had Money on my old machine but needed a different software as Money isn't compatible with Vista. The information re. Quicken said it could convert from Money - in the event I found it couldn't - but not before I'd bought it, taken it from the packaging and installed the software, so it was useless but unreturnable.
Warning - check that the software will do whatever you need it to do before opening the packaging.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Solid product for my uses Comment: I've used Quicken since 1993. I just upgraded from Quicken 2003 for Mac to Quicken 2008 Deluxe for Windows XP Home Edition, and have had absolutely none of the operational problems mentioned in other reviews. I had no problem saving my Mac 2003 data to a single "QIF" file and importing this file into Windows Quicken 2008 Deluxe. All data, including multiple accounts, etc., came in with no errors or other issues. (Note, however, that I only use Quicken for tracking basic checking and savings accounts, and do not use its connectivity options to connect to investment accounts, etc.) For my uses, Quicken Deluxe has worked flawlessly. I like the user interface, which is certainly superior to the 2003 Mac version, and I've made extensive use of the report capabilities, which are more than adequate for my purposes. On the negative side: (1) Like everybody else, I object to Quicken's frequent upgrades that add no useful functionality for 99.9% of users; (2) My few experiences with their customer support over the past 15 years have been both futile and extremely annoying. Fortunately, my questions were minor ones that I figured out on my own in the end, and the product itself has worked very well for my purposes so I've had no show-stoppers.
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