After making the switch to Moneydance at the beginning of 2010 I discovered a useful feature of the software called “Transaction Tags” (or “Tags” for short). What are Tags? Well, the short answer is they provide an alternative way to group transactions beyond the standard categories Moneydance provides. Why would you use this? Well, let’s [...]
Posts Tagged ‘moneydance’
Transaction Tags in Moneydance
Posted: 3rd August 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: moneydance, moneydance tutorials
Equity Reporting in Moneydance
Posted: 30th July 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: moneydance, moneydance tutorials
One thing Quicken introduced some years back was the ability to associate a liability account to an asset account. So if you bought a house or a car, for instance, you could associate a corresponding loan account to the asset. Then Quicken could easily do the math (asset value – liability amount) to determine your [...]
Multiple Escrow Payments in Moneydance
Posted: 30th July 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: moneydance, moneydance tutorials
Category Reporting in Moneydance
Posted: 29th July 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: moneydance, moneydance tutorials
Categories aren’t new to personal finance software. A category is just a bucket in which to track spending. You could have categories for Food, Entertainment, Auto, Utilities, and more. I won’t go into great detail here; you can read the Moneydance documentation for more information. I’m going to assume you have a rudimentary understanding of [...]
Intuit recently announced that Quicken 2007 for Mac won’t run on the new Mac OS X 10.7 “Lion”. The reason for this is that Apple is discontinuing support for their “Rosetta” technology, a technology that allows old Power PC code to run on newer Intel Macs. Intuit is “working with Apple” on this to see [...]
Moneydance 2011
Posted: 9th May 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: ibank, moneydance, quicken, see finance
Back in February of 2010 I replaced Quicken for Windows with Moneydance on the Mac. Since then I’ve written briefly about SEE Finance and more recently about iBank 4. As a Moneydance user it seemed only fitting to also talk about the latest Moneydance release, Moneydance 2011. As I write this, version 2011 is currently [...]
iBank 4
Posted: 8th May 2011 by Brian in FinanceTags: doug bowman, ibank, igg software, mac switch, moneydance, personal finance, quicken
Recently I was contacted by IGG Software about a post I wrote back in early 2010 detailing my search to replace Quicken with a Mac equivalent. Doug Bowman (formerly of Google and currently at Twitter) commented about my article on his Twitter feed. I guess that generated a little buzz for a couple days. In [...]
Budgeting With Moneydance
Posted: 19th December 2010 by Brian in FinanceTags: moneydance, moneydance tutorials, moneywell, quicken, ynab
Turning Off Windows
Posted: 9th March 2010 by Brian in ComputersTags: adium, beyond compare, camino, cyberduck, deltawalker, disklabel, faststone image viewer, filezilla, firefox, flip4mac, gimp, google chrome, gvim, h&r block at home, heritage family tree, ilife, imagewell, imovie, iphoto, itunes, iwork, jollysfastvnc, keepass, keepassx, keynote, libreoffice, mac family tree, mac switch, macvim, mediaface, microsoft windows, moneydance, mysql, neooffice, numbers, openoffice, opera, osx, pages, parallels, picasa, pidgin, pinnacle studio, quicken, quicktime, realvnc, safari, silvermel, swf & flv player, taxcut, text wrangler, thunderbird, tightvnc, truecrypt, vine server, virtualbox, vmware fusion, vnc
When I decided to switch to the Mac one of the first things I did was create an application to application comparison matrix in order to ensure I could find an comparable Mac replacement for all my important Windows applications. I found some great articles written by others who’d made the switch and that really [...]
Moneydance 2010
Posted: 8th February 2010 by Brian in FinanceTags: cha-ching, gnucash, ibank, ifinance, intuit, jumsoft money, kmymoney, mac switch, mint.com, moneydance, moneywell, personal finance, quicken, see finance, squirrel, ynab
My name is Brian Jarrett and I'm a computer programmer and 

