Upon attempts to purchase the program is no longer available. Upon exiting the program it is requesting to purchase the program. I have to use whatever my bank offers, even if some say it's an old format. In regards to Microsoft Money 2004 the files were still viable but upon restoring the program Microsoft automatically updated to the last registered version proceeding mine and loaded with a trial period. ![]() Also, I really DO mean OFC format, not OFX. Update: I'm in Austria (Europe!) so purely US-based tools like Mint aren't relevant. Some nice dashboard views (upcoming bills, future cash flow, total net worth) and some graphs would be a definite bonus! Rate this 5 (Best) 4 3 2 1 (Worst) Microsoft Money Essentials is the perfect complement to your current online banking efforts. Is there a similar tool that can import OFC files and that doesn't do double-entry accounting? Tax capability is not needed for me, I only do after-tax numbers. This is still a useful alternative for me though. I've tried to make MS Money run in Wine with some success but it was hard to make it work and I'd have to re-do that on my new machine.It may be good for accounting but not for home use. I've tried GnuCash which does import OFC files but I can't wrap my mind around this double-entry philosophy.I've tried KMyMoney which seems pretty simple (that's good!) but it can't import the OFC files I get from my bank, so I would have to enter everything manually = not good.I'm looking for something to replace my MS Money 2004 application. (The upcoming version 5 appears to be web-based instead.) UPDATE: I found YNAB which runs very nice in wine too.
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