Really, it all comes down to that. Neither product can be considered a serious solution for personal finance. In the software vs. webware battle, neither platform wins. But you lose. In Quicken's ...
When financial software maker Intuit acquired Mint.com, there was quite a bit of uncertainty as to what would happen to the popular online financial service. More often than not, when a startup is ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Mint.com chief executive Aaron Patzer was a big winner this week. Intuit ...
Aaron Patzer, now an Intuit vice president following its acquisition of Mint.com, is now faced with uniting two distinctly different personal-finance software brands. Andrew Nusca is the editor of ...
It’s September, and companies are shaking off their summer torpor, counting their remaining employees, and deciding that they have a bit of extra cash to buy up other companies. The latest news: ...
IMHO, the whole personal finance software situation is sucktastic outside of Quicken for the PC. I've tried a bunch of different programs and never really cottoned to anything else. A lot of it is ...
As a staff writer for Forbes Advisor, SMB, Kristy helps small business owners find the tools they need to keep their businesses running. She uses the experience of managing her own writing and editing ...
It's been just over a month since news broke that Intuit, makers of Quicken budgeting software and Turbo Tax, would buy Mint.com for $170 million. Some of Mint's 1.5 million customers took to blogs ...
Intuit, the company behind Quicken and other small business accounting software, is reportedly buying online personal finance site Mint for $170 million, according to TechCrunch. Mint, which has ...