Heres what you need to know, updated on September 26 with the formation of the Coalition for App Fairness. Your lack of continuing Mac support is a terrible reflection on Intuit.Īs far as Im concerned you may as well forget the Mac forever, I have better alternatives now. It was released a year or two behind schedule and in a half-baked state where much key functionality was missing. Sadly, it looks like Intuit did not put in enough resources and started with the rewrite way too late. Its not like Intuit forgot about this product, they deliberately end of lifed it.Īt the time, they already knew that Carbon was being replaced by Cocoa and that the transition from PPC to Intel architecture would mean the PPC support would eventually end. Oh, and by the way, the code for Quicken 2007 is actually five years old, not four. The work that Intuit is doing is to incorporate the Rosetta technology to get this old Carbon PPC code to run on Lion, something that Apple had deprecated. They cant really call it Quicken 2012 if it has zero new features. Those programmers are working on other things (Quicken Essentials, QuickBooks, TurboTax,, whatever). Intuit is also expanding its development team to better support Mac users.īut its latest efforts aim to support legacy customers, who have been locked out from Quicken for Mac 2007 since Apple launched Lion in July. There users can request to be notified when more information becomes available.
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