Personal Finance Software: Money Plus Home and Business, Quicken Home and Business
The 2008 editions of the leading personal finance packages – Microsoft’s Money and Intuit’s Quicken– try to simplify money management by making some features accessible even if you don’t launch the full application. Users who are looking for one application to manage both their personal and small-business finances will find Quicken’s offering more robust.
Microsoft has renamed its package Money Plus, the “plus” being a new system-tray applet called Money Insights. Click on its icon, and you can view customizable minireports in any of three categories: Cash Flow, for monitoring specific accounts; and Bills, for getting reminders of upcoming obligations. Money Plus 2008 lets you link transactions with electronic documents such as check images. Money Plus doesn’t add the documents to your data file; it simply provides a link to a location on your hard drive.
The free and trial versions of financial services – credit reports, a tool for helping children monitor their allowances, investment reports – that Microsoft adds in Money Plus Premium for an extra $10 aren’t overly impressive. Money Plus Home and Business adds a trial for the Web-based payroll service PayCycle, as well as extra software tools for people who mingle their personal and small-business finances.
Quicken 2008 Home and Business, on the other hand, is a meatier choice for small companies thanks to improvements that help you track one or more businesses separately. One useful tool is the new tagging feature, which essentially allows for the grouping of expenses from several categories. You can easily see all transactions relating to a business or a specific family member, for example.
Like Money Plus, Quicken introduces a system-tray applet, the Billminder Gadget, which lets you view upcoming transactions and bills without running the program. More users might be pleased to see PayPal on the list of financial institutions that support downloading of transactions to Quicken account registers.
Quicken’s other innovations are fairly routine, but it maintains its edge over Money Plus in one important way: Intuit still lets you download transaction data to Quicken for three years after you buy, while Microsoft forces you to upgrade Money every two years to maintain online services.
For anyone who needs a full-featured personal finance manager, Money will please if you want quick access, but Quicken continues to offer a slight advantage overall in features – especially if you are a small-business user.
Recent Entries
- More Traffic to your Website
- Satellite TV Online For Your PC
- Advantage Of The Internet With Online TV
- To Know About Games
- Everything You Need To Know About The Playstation
- Personal Finance Software: Money Plus Home and Business, Quicken Home and Business
- Выбор типа дома и планировка участка
- Ассортимент сантехнического оборудования
- Сифоны для стиральных машин.
- Сифоны

