If you go to the Intuit website, you’ll have a very hard time finding this product: For example, some dialogs seems to have lost the ability to resize, or columns cannot be modified.
Granted, my 8-core iMac likely explains that difference (and more), but the end result is the same. However, not only did it operate on the file seamlessly, the speed improvement over running it on a Mac Mini running Mac OS X Snow Leopard is significant. I have a huge file, with data going back to 1994. The good news is that the software works as advertised. It’s like Intuit cloned a Wooly Mammoth, and put it in the New York Zoo. This is Quicken 2007, magically enabled to actually load and run on Mac OS X Lion. It sounds odd at first, given that we should really be talking about Quicken 2013 right about now, but it’s not a misprint. Last week, Intuit announced the availability of an anachronism: Quicken 2007 for Mac OS X Lion.
This is going to be a short post, but given the attention and page views that my posts on Quicken 2007 received, I thought this update worthwhile.