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Quicken for Mac 2007 being rebuilt to work with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion By Thursday, December 22, 2011, 11:28 am PT (02:28 pm ET) Intuit announced to customers on Thursday that it plans to release a 're-engineered' version of Quicken for Mac 2007 that will be compatible with the latest version of Apple's Mac operating system, OS X 10.7 Lion. A note from Aaron Forth, general manager of the Intuit Personal Finance Group, was sent out to customers Thursday, acknowledging that the company has 'not always delivered' on its promise to deliver the best products to Mac customers. In particular, he was addressing the fact that Quicken for Mac 2007 does not have compatibility with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. 'I understand the frustration this may have caused you and have put a team in place to address this issue,' Forth wrote.
'I am happy to announce that we will have a solution that makes Quicken 2007 for Mac 'Lion-compatible' by early spring.' Details on the forthcoming release are available on with a newly published list of questions and answers. There users can request to be notified when more information becomes available. Forth told customers that the Quicken for Mac 2007 solution is 'just a first step' in winning back the confidence of customers. Intuit is also expanding its development team to better support Mac users.
Conchita wrote: Very odd page. Don't really understand it at all, but there it is. If someone tries it, please let us know how/if it works. All versions of Quicken for Mac prior to 'Quicken Essentials for Mac' are built for either 68K-series chips (Classic MacOS) or PowerPC chips (Classic MacOS, Mac OS X). As such, none will run on Lion without the aid of third-party Mac emulators, and a copy of the ROM and OS from a real Mac that you own.
'Lion-compatible Quicken 2007' implies (Mac OS X, Intel) binaries. From what I think I read on some blog, Rosetta was technology licensed by Apple, and Apple decided that they didn't want to pay for it and fund its support anymore. A few months ago there were rumors that Intuit might decide to license that code themselves. That's why it was suggested that necessary parts of Rosetta might have been licensed by Intuit and grafted onto Quicken. With this admittedly patchy solution, that does not require wholesale recoding, Rosetta could be used to run Quicken under Lion, so that the absence of Rosetta in Lion does not matter anymore. For Quicken at least.
Conchita wrote: But there is no rosetta in lion, so how can that be? If you're starting fresh I would avoid Quicken altogether. I have Essentials and it has been one of the most unreliable apps I've ever used. Just last month I couldn't connect to PayPal for 29 days due to server issues on their end. Conchita wrote: Right, but that's my question.
Since they say that if you are starting fresh you should use quicken essentials instead, what exactly is this? If it was a whole recoded version you would think it would be marketed for everyone, so I don't understand just exactly what happens when you install it. If I get a new computer that only has lion, is it a full install? If so, why is it only for people who already used it in the past?
Do you see what I mean? Graybalanced wrote: From what I think I read on some blog, Rosetta was technology licensed by Apple, and Apple decided that they didn't want to pay for it and fund its support anymore. Actually rosetta translates code written for G3/4 powerPCs to work on intel machines. I'm sure you must have read that apple isn't writing for PowerPCs anymore. By removing this, apps become very slimlined and easier to develop. Intuit is just a shitty company trying to grab the last remaining $$$$ on a product they let die. Essentials was a joke!
Thankfully while intuit ignored us Mac folks for 5 years most banks now have much better online services. I'd used Quicken for years, but never went beyond 2003, the last reasonable version - at least until I had to give it up when I went to Lion. I was able to import my Quicken 2003 files into iBank4, and everything but the investment accounts came in just fine. I was amazed. I didn't care too much about the investment files because I'd long since given up updating them in Quicken; it was too quirky and kept corrupting during data entry. I'm a very happy camper with iBank4. It is easy to use and appears to be pleasantly stable.
There's a place in hell for Intuit. Gollywop wrote: I'd used Quicken for years, but never went beyond 2003, the last reasonable version - at least until I had to give it up when I went to Lion. I was able to import my Quicken 2003 files into iBank4, and everything but the investment accounts came in just fine. I was amazed.
Hi gollywop, Good information, thank you. I've been keeping copies of all my original files (since Quicken Deluxe 98) and imported only a select few to Essentials, which was mostly used to track finances for income tax purposes. It's been a headache to work with Essentials after using the earlier versions of Quicken. I'll be glad to find something good that will import the old files, work on a Mac and let me drop Quicken for good. Regards, Londongal. I started using Quicken in '85 on a PC and back then it was one of the most useful and time-saving programs out there.
Rather than get better with age, i felt it was getting bloated, cumbersome and generally annoying to use. I switched to Mac in '07 and that is when I realized that it was time to start looking elsewhere. I did trials on many financial programs and finally settled on iBank. I did not try to import my Quicken data, but downloaded all the transactions from my bank.
I kept Quicken with previous years for reference, but actually stopped using it. IBank downloads my transactions quickly and categorizes them automatically so creating reports for tax day is a couple of simple clicks. The search function works very well and it seems flexible enough to suit my needs. It is simple and I like it that way, but I'm not sure it suits the needs of everyone. I tried iBank and a bunch of others and found them to be lacking enough that I stuck with Excrementals. Supposedly Quicken is working an a new proper version of Quicken for the Mac.
Londongal wrote: I have been using Quicken for over 12 years for personal and business accounts and struggled with Essentials' poor performance for the last couple of years. If I switch to iBank, will it read & convert my old Quicken files and newer Essentials files? This tax year is the very last one I want to use Essentials. I'm currently running Snow Leopard.