If moving to an online service then each business name will be treated as a separate business and each charged the monthly rate. This is handy (or rather justifies the high purchase prices of buying myob) if you run a couple of micro (or hobby) businesses in the family. One other aspect is that a MYOB application on a computer can run multiple businesses within the app (up to five, from memory). One big question is how easy would a change from MYOB to XERO be and how it treats historical data as well as the structure of the accounts set up. ![]() There are different tiers of features at different price levels on both platforms.įor someone to move a myob business file/s from a single computer hard drive based version to a myob cloud based service will present challenges … little alone switching to another company such as Xero. My concern is that there will be a similar problem with the SSD on my Mac Mini, and that my only recourse will be to install Catalina, rendering all my AccountEdge files unusable on it (and I don’t want to run an older OS on Parallels or buy their Windows version or pay the prohibitive cost for their cloud “solution.”Īn option in Australia is which, I think, offers an online only service (web browser based). My Macbook Air is running Mojave but I had no choice in upgrading it: the SSD failed and had to be replaced and I was unsuccessful in reinstalling High Sierra on it: all that would work was to install the then current Mac OS of Mojave (which has been working fine for me). Due to the pandemic, I should have time to upgrade it to Mojave this summer. Re: upgrading to Catalina: I’m using AccountEdge on my Mac Mini, which is still running High Sierra. ![]() Anyone have any direct experience with it? I did see the very favorable 2014 review of MoneyWorks done by Macworld. MoneyWorks seems like it might be a suitable replacement for AccountEdge. MoneyWorks has an AccountEdge file converter that I’m looking into.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |