Yes we moved quickbooks to the intuit cloud.  My business partner and our
accountant seem very happy with the transition.  I'm happy with it because
I don't have to deal with supporting it anymore lol.

-Sean

On Tuesday, November 1, 2016, Chuck McCown <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

> I presume you mean you moved QB to the Intuit cloud.
> How much does that cost?
> They take care of backups etc I would assume?
> How difficult was it to make the transition?
> I presume your accountant can get right in without having to create and
> transfer accountant copies of the DB?
>
> *From:* Sean Heskett
> *Sent:* Tuesday, November 01, 2016 10:24 AM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] OT : Small computer to run QB enterprise with RDP
>
> we moved ours to their cloud and haven't looked back.  much less clunky
> than running it on a local server etc.
>
> YMMV
>
> -Sean
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 8:53 AM, Lewis Bergman <lewis.berg...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> This is a bright group so I wanted to see if this is something worth
>> doing or maybe worth avoiding. I really don't want to get Windows server
>> 2012 and try to figure out the while terminal services thing with
>> licensing. I was thinking it might just be easier since I only need one or
>> two people to remote in just to get some headless PC's and sit them in a
>> corner somewhere.
>>
>> Probably a bad idea but any thoughts?
>>
>> The specs from QB are:
>>
>>    - Windows Vista SP2, 7 SP1, 8.1 Update 1, or Windows 10(32-bit &
>>    64-bit)
>>    - Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, 2012 R2
>>    - 2.4 GHz processor
>>    - 4 GB of RAM
>>    - 2.5 GB disk space recommended
>>    - 1024x768 or higher screen resolution, extended monitor is supported
>>    - 4x DVD-ROM drive
>>
>>
>

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