![]() You won’t be able to launch Quicken once you upgrade. If you are planning on doing a similar migration, make sure you export your Quicken data before you upgrade to Lion. One warning: the reviews below will be a bit stream-of-consciousness, as I write down observations as they occur to me. I do not care about syncing to mobile devices or the like.I want a decent, Mac-like user experience.Again, at least as good as Quicken is needed (though that is not saying much). Good-looking reporting is useful, but not required.Obviously, it needs to be Lion combatible.I also need the ability to manage investments of instruments that are not traded on exchanges (so, for example, don’t have official symbols or price feeds and so on). Though I no longer invest in stocks, I have in the past, and want those trades preserved. I need fairly advanced investment management.I need to be able to continue doing this at least as well as Quicken does it. ![]() I download transactions electronically from a number of financial institutions.A replacement needs to be able to import it all, the more intact the better. I have Quicken data going back to 1993.So, I have been trying out replacements before I upgrade. Since OS X Lion does not include the old Rosetta technology, it will not run Quicken 2007.
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