> On Oct 17, 2017, at 8:36 AM, John R. Sowden <jsow...@americansentry.net> 
> wrote:
> 
> It makes sense that users of the Intuit family of products want to leave, due 
> to some of their business practices; and some desire to use an operating 
> system that is not founded on enhancing the profits of the publishers at the 
> user's expense.
> 
> I watch Gnucash for fixes to these problems, but all I see are justifications 
> of why they exist.  A 'preference' switch to allow users who are familiar and 
> comfortable with the 'Intuit Way' to continue, vs. those with accounting 
> knowledge who want a transaction to look like a transaction, could have it 
> that way, is a possibility.  The end result would be a transaction posted to 
> the appropriate accounts.


You’ll have a long wait, it’s not something that the GnuCash development team 
is interested in. The underlying conceptual designs of the two programs are too 
different. Quicken users who want a similar FOSS program should consider 
KMyMoney rather than GnuCash. Quickbooks users and Quicken users who are ready 
to graduate to real accounting are in GnuCash’s target audience.

Regards,
John Ralls

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