
It meant that I could file things diligently, and find information going back 15 years. I don't tend to delete emails, and the mail servers don't like storing them all, so many years ago I took advantage of Outlook's offline mail file format. With how miserably intuit and ms treated Mac users for decades, it's a wonder anyone wants to use their software at all today. (Although with how little it did, is "working" the proper term?)Ĭhecking their website, it seems they've moved on to something called "Quicken for Mac" which imports from "Quicken for Mac 2015 or newer" so presumably they returned to semi-annual releases labeled semi-annually, then dropped the labeling at some point because it did feel a bit odd when the current release's "year" was three or more years ago. That eventually stopped working on High Sierra. The resulting ground up software was called "Quicken Essentials" and had fewer features than ever before.

Speaking of which, how are you doing, intuit quicken? They never even pretended to think about feature parity, then after the MacOS X transition, eventually said they would do a ground up rewrite.

Click to expand.That's how it has always been.the only "supported platforms" have only ever been various flavours of windows.įor a while, ms's msoffice for Mac client was "entourage." People complained it didn't have feature parity with "outlook" but ms said it wasn't "outlook" so what could you expect? Then they released something called "outlook" which still didn't have feature parity.
