![]() Unfortunately, that’s not terribly useful. ( "Quicken_Export")]()Quicken Essentials Export There’s an Export menu found under the File menu in Quicken Essentials, it looks like this, and gives the user hope: I’ll say that again: Quicken Essentials no longer provides ANY useable export function for your data. Quicken Essentials no longer provides ANY useable export function for your data. You see, I’m trying to move away from Quicken Essentials, and I cannot. Decades of transactions and purchase behavior and past transactional histories. My data should be my data and Intuit has stolen it from me. iBank 3 was different and had some performance problems that weren’t apparent in Quicken Essentials.īut there was a flaw. I had been a Quicken user for over a decade and Quicken Essentials maintained the feeling of a Macintosh personal finance application. It was basically the best of two bad options. I made the decision to upgrade to Quicken Essentials, but only by the smallest of margins. I then went over the decision criteria between Quicken Essentials and iBank 3. ![]() In that article I went through my upgrade experience and got the reader setup on Quicken Essentials. I wrote about that upgrade in my article entitled Quicken Essentials for Mac – The Bare Minimum. A year ago I upgraded from Quicken 2007 for Macintosh to Quicken Essentials 2010 for Macintosh.
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