My older 2015 Mac runs Mojave, and so upgrading to newer OS would mean no longer being able to use Quicken 2007. Now that I bought a new Mac, I wanted to see what could be done to transfer the data over.
In trying to import the data from my old mac, I kept encountering the "resource fork is missing" notification which seems to be a common issue here. I tried several times to create a compressed zip file as suggested by an agent, but it never worked and so seemed the only way to get it to import was to create a cloud-based version. I'm not too big on that, and so dragged the icon off the cloud to my desktop to see if the program would still run - don't see any difference, so at least I felt good about that.
I spoke with 3 agents who all gave me slightly different responses to questions. One said something about there only being 90 days worth of transactions that can be entered the way I'm using the program, beyond which the computer would not register anything further (?) That one made no sense to me and I still have no idea what he meant. I asked another agent about that very thing and didn't get any response. Another agent suggested that since Quicken doesn't really "merge" or support data from anything older than the 2010 version, he said I really should start from scratch. With 30 years of entries (going all the way back to Quicken 2003), it's not a real practical idea to re-enter literally thousands of transactions.
I really wanted to like this new version, and in some ways I do. While the user interface on the new version is admittedly very nice, and surely lots of great features, I was immediately disappointed to see that there is no longer an option for a category that reflects total invested (cash) amount in any one fund (different, of course, from cost basis). The other thing is that there seems to be no way to 'hide' securities that one is no longer using within a portfolio, so when everything transferred over, it has, within the portfolio, every single investment I've ever owned since '87! I'd have to weed through all that and see if I can hide them. Otherwise too long a list to scroll through. I encountered a post by someone where this issue came up and he said that it's anticipated in the near future that Quicken "might" add the 'hide securities' feature, but no guarantee.
Honestly - and not just because I've had it so long - but 2007 seems so much easier to use, so I think I'll probably cancel after the 30-day trial. It's most disappointing. I didn't want to continue using my old mac for internet access since the software is so out-of-date and thus lacking security, so right now I'm working with both computers - the new one to access my brokerage, and the old one to still log entries into Quicken 2007. If there would be a way to use an emulator whereby the entire 2007 program could be brought over to the new mac and work the same way it does on the old, that'd be great.
Any suggestions greatly appreciated. What I surely don't want to do is wind up entering data in both versions so as to keep them fully up-to-date. That'd be doing double work. I could 'start from scratch' with Quicken for Mac from the perspective of entering in current number of shares, etc. and proceeding from that point, but then it would no longer reflect the overall history, which comes in handy to look back on as needed. I'd still wind up using both old and new versions. Anyone else encounter any of what I've mentioned and found a way to work with the new version?