[ale] Linux-based financial tools?
DJ-Pfulio
djpfulio at jdpfu.com
Mon Feb 8 11:15:42 EST 2016
What Linux-based tools do you use to manage bank, brokerage, and other financial
accounts?
I've been looking for a replacement to Quicken since ... 1989. Haven't found
anything except simple leger-type stuff. Tried beancounter for a few months,
but went back to quicken and their mandated every-3 yr upgrade/downgrade cycles.
Since 2013, getting Quicken to run acceptably under WINE hasn't worked for me
either. It is one of the last 4 things I cannot accomplish on Linux, sadly.
* Quicken
* Video editing with EDL cuts that can be manually validated efficiently; there
are many video editors, but NONE, ZERO, NADA support EDL. VideoRedo is the tool
to be replaced.
* MS-Visio (cough - nothing is close and the 2003 version hasn't been improved,
IMHO)
* Presentation broadcasting/captures - OBS isn't stable on Linux, IME. Works
great on Windows for some reason.
Everything else I do is done on non-Windows systems.
Ideas?
On 02/08/2016 10:59 AM, Lightner, Jeff wrote:
> Bank of America also tells you you’re not liable due to their policies
>
>
>
> However, I think using debit cards is fairly stupid anyway. Why give random
> strangers (sales clerks/wait staff/online merchants) direct access to your bank
> account? Even if the bank gives you back your money you may still have the
> hassle of having checks bounce and/or cleaning up fees for overdrafts.
>
>
>
> I much prefer to use credit cards and pay them off every month. If you have
> the discipline to do that you incur no interest charges. You have the benefit
> of seeing all the charges BEFORE you pay from your bank account and can dispute
> any that aren’t right. So long as an item is in dispute there is no interest on
> it and assuming the dispute is successful there never will be.
>
>
>
> One of the things I really like about BofA is they have a way to generate random
> credit card numbers that I can use doing online purchases (or if someone says
> they need a card to confirm a reservation or the like). Even better is the
> BofA (ShopSafe) cards:
>
> a) Allow you to set a dollar limit
>
> b) Allow you to set the expiration
>
> c) Are only good at the first vendor that uses the card. (i.e. even if
> that vendor gets hacked the hacker can’t use the number anywhere else).
>
More information about the Ale
mailing list