If you believe, as I do, that almost everyone who uses a computer to manage their personal finances will be doing so using a Web-based service like within a few years, then you have to conclude that Intuit got a great bargain. Last September, the Mountain View, CA, software company, which has been selling PC-based personal finance programs since 1983 via floppy discs, CD-ROMs, and downloads, paid $170 million to buy a two-year-old Web startup called. Somebody at Intuit must have seen the writing on the wall. Why I’ve Abandoned Quicken, But Not Intuit Wade Roush 3/19/10
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