Give me a moment and I can locate my magazine that had something in it -- but that is more for accounting and billing. I am not sure if that is what you want. Otherwise gnucash worked fine for me at least (when I had money to track ;D ).
Can anyone recommend any personal finance software that works well under linux?
I have seen some out there, but I don't know how polished they are. I have been using Quicken under CrossOffice, but it tends to be very slow.
Give me a moment and I can locate my magazine that had something in it -- but that is more for accounting and billing. I am not sure if that is what you want. Otherwise gnucash worked fine for me at least (when I had money to track ;D ).
I saw that, but in order to run gnucash under slack/dropline gnome, you have to make a million hacks; i'm kinda reluctanct to do that.
http://dropline.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=876
I use GNUCash. No need to hack on my Debian. ;D
[quote author=Compunuts link=board=2;threadid=9602;start=0#msg87371 date=1091148242]
I use GNUCash. No need to hack on my Debian. ;D
[/quote]
Problem is that Dropline aims to get rid of all the Gnome 1.x dependencies, and Gnucash has not been written for Gnome 2.x yet...
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