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- This Product is AWFULBe warned....DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT....especially if you have business accounts that you need to keep separate from personal accounts. When the program updates from the bank, it downloads every account with that User ID....Unlike 2004 or earlier versions, you cannot pick and choose which accounts to download...and if you try to delete one account, you get a message saying deleting one will delete ALL....You CAN set the account to closed...but the stupid program downloads it anyway.... Rating: - Truly Terrible "Upgrade"I'm not sure it gets much worse than this, I should have stuck with 2004. When it "converted" my 2004 Money file none of the totals were right. It didn't carry over the starting balances listed in the account settings for each of the accounts, it took me days to figure out that is what the problem was. Occasionally this will happen again when it has trouble connecting to the online services at your bank, it just wipes everything out and starts all over. Had I known it was going to be this bad I would have never touched it. Rating: - Not Ready For Beta TestingImagine if Microsoft Word crashed every time a period or capital letter was used or when opening saved documents some of the paragraphs appeared twice. Such is the state of affairs of Microsoft Money 2005. I have been using Microsoft Money since 1996; while it was never perfect, it basically did what it promised. I have also used the portfolio manager on the MSN website which is a subset of the Money program with a similar interface. Others have written about problems downloading bank and credit card statements; this review will focus on the portfolio manager. The portfolio manager is the part of Money that keeps track of investment accounts. It is not unusual for multiple income families to own quite complicated investment portfolios including 401Ks, IRAs and college savings accounts. Something went very wrong in the fall of 2004 when Microsoft upgraded their software to Money 2005. Gone is the ability to analyze a single account or groups of accounts; you are forced to analyze your entire portfolio. When entering new equity transactions, Money used to allow you to simply enter the trading symbol and it would quickly find the name of the company and other information, now you must follow a wizard and enter the information manually. Previously, you could enter a back dated transaction and it would guess a price using the closing price for the day (this is very useful for watch accounts); now you must manually enter the information. The worse part has been the removal of the associated cash accounts. I never really appreciated the separate cash accounts until Microsoft removed them. For those unfamiliar with software, here is the basic concept. Say you own an account with a discount broker like Fidelity or Vanguard that holds six mutual funds. Associated with that account is a cash account in which you add and remove cash, collect dividends and conduct other transactions into and out of the account. When you sell a mutual fund, the proceeds are put into the cash account; similarly, cash is taken from the account when you buy shares of an investment. Prior versions of Money created a distinct cash account associated with a specific investment account. You could open the account, view the transaction history and correct any errors. In Money 2005, when you create a new account it simply asks for the initial cash balance. Money then automatically mismanages this account by recording dividends twice and mishandling sales proceeds. Furthermore, money will not allow you to record interest dividends, contributions or redemptions. There is no way to view the history at all; Money simply gives you the current value in a little box. When errors occur, the fix from Microsoft is to simply change the amount in the little box to the correct value. If you access the cash account too often it begins to create multiple cash accounts labeled #2, #3 leading to cash account nightmare. Microsoft did an upgrade to the software this weekend (May 20, 2005). They have added more features and unfortunately more bugs; I have not noticed anything that has been fixed. New problems include: 1) updates are no longer stored on the MSN server preventing you from accessing up-to-date account information from multiple computers (this may be a temporary problem); 2) investments that lack a trading symbol, such as specialty funds available through certain 401Ks or 529 plans, are no longer supported. You can see the investment in your portfolio but you cannot record "buys" or other transactions; 3) information contained in watch accounts, such as year-to-date performance was lost after the upgrade. I hope once Microsoft is finished adding features to their Money 2005 software they will work on bringing it from Alpha to Beta quality. Perhaps, after a year or two of Beta testing, Microsoft will be ready to release Money 2005 (or 2008) for general sale. Until then, I do not see how they can legally be selling software that fails to perform its basic functions. Rating: - Stick w/ 2004I've had 2005 on the shelf for a while and finally upgraded from 2004. I've been happy w/ every upgrade since 2001, until now. First, it doesn't upgrade the 2004 installation, it installs separately. In the end, this turns out to be the best feature of 2005, because when you inevitably uninstall 2005, you don't have to reinstall 2004! The most annoying items for me were: 1. The toolbars at the top take too much space due to an internet navigation toolbar that cannot be turned off. Every other MS product has fully customizable toolbars, what happened here! 2. In many cases, when clicking on something to get to some aspect of your financial info, you are first taken to an MSN MoneyCentral website, which is very intrusive! 3. There is a more complex and nested arrangement of menus for features which makes it harder to find and get to stuff. I didn't use it much beyond that. #2 was really hard to accept. Rating: - Incredibly Disappointing "Upgrade"First, let me say that I have been an avid fan, user, and recommender of the Microsoft Money products since I first became acquainted with them after the 1998 version release of the product. Words cannot express how greatly disappointed I am with the product itself and Microsoft as a company for unleashing this grossly inept, buggy, and endlessly frustrating piece of trash upon its previously contended users. I have spent countless hours trying to fix problems that Money 2005 has created in my personal financial records, and even more hours with their support people communicating with them via e-mail (a journey in frustration itself - you have to format your messages a certain way for it to even get to them). I am, as of today, sending a request to Microsoft for a refund of my purchase price and am going to try one of the Quicken products. I've never even used ANY of the Quicken products before, and am already convinced that they are surely head and shoulders above this latest version of Money. Shame on Microsoft for thinking that nobody would be willing to jump ship and take their business elsewhere.
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