When downloading the file from the bank, my bank lets you choose dates for the beginning and end of the statement, or select everything since the last download date. Does quicken automatically connect to the bank itself and download the file?
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Originally posted by Feathers McGraw View PostWhen downloading the file from the bank, my bank lets you choose dates for the beginning and end of the statement, or select everything since the last download date. Does quicken automatically connect to the bank itself and download the file?Kubuntu 22.04 (desktop & laptop), Windows 7 &2K (via VirtualBox on desktop PC)
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Originally posted by Feathers McGraw View PostOut of interest, what's involved in maintaining a PPA?
Tried KMM today, works fine with NatWest
Sent from my Droid DNA using Tapatalk, like that really matters
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostIn my case, not a huge amount. When KMM has a new release I have to make sure the packaging will build on Ubuntu successfully, and hopefully for more than one version. As they don't release things willy nilly, this usually means I have to remember what it was I did last time to get it to work, or copy what Debian did to get it to compile LOL.
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Originally posted by Buddlespit View PostI use cheatsheets. If I find that I need to build something over and over, I'll set my commands into a text file , name it (ie- android kernel.txt), and save it in ~/Documents/cheatsheets. Then all I have to do is copy and paste. It makes it so much easier to print out if I have to re-install Archlinux instead of having to try to read three or four archwiki pages.
If you anyone does decide to give CherryTree a try, I highly recommend installing it via the PPA and the terminal commands. The version in the repository is dated. I ran across some problems with clicking on a link in a tree and then the web pages coming up very slowly. It was something about its interface with browsers not being up to date. The latest version (0.32.0) doesn't have that problem.
Btw, Treepad does run very well in WINE.Kubuntu 22.04 (desktop & laptop), Windows 7 &2K (via VirtualBox on desktop PC)
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No, it doesn't change anything at my bank when I do an ofx download. It's just a straight download from the beginning date (which you specify) to the end date (which you also specify.) Then you import the created *.ofx file into the KMM ledger. KMM is smart enough to look at your local ledger and tell if you downloaded any duplicates and not re-import them into the ledger for a second time.
cheers,
billsigpic
A person who never made a mistake never tried anything new. --Albert Einstein
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Originally posted by bweinel View PostNo, it doesn't change anything at my bank when I do an ofx download. It's just a straight download from the beginning date (which you specify) to the end date (which you also specify.) Then you import the created *.ofx file into the KMM ledger. KMM is smart enough to look at your local ledger and tell if you downloaded any duplicates and not re-import them into the ledger for a second time.
cheers,
billKubuntu 22.04 (desktop & laptop), Windows 7 &2K (via VirtualBox on desktop PC)
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Originally posted by richb View PostThat is an awkward process as compared to Quicken's direct connect.
The only reason I don't still use KMM is simply because I don't use a bank anymore.
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Admittedly I have not tried it in KMM but I have done it in Quicken. Perhaps it is easier in KMM. I do like the direct download, and my bank charges $3.00 per month. I would have to do the process for two accounts as my brokerage account is at a different institution, so it means to separate logins and two separate downloads, whereas direct connect handles both with one click in Quicken. That is obviously is more time and more fiddling.Linux because it works. No social or political motives in my decision to use it.
Always consider Occam's Razor
Rich
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Screenplays and DVDs
Originally posted by Tom_ZeCat View PostThere's no version of Final Draft for Linux. It's a screenwriting / stage writing word processor that is the industry standard. The closest Linux equivalent, CeltX, is totally inferior, especially for stage plays.
Trelby ( http://www.trelby.org/ ) is an open source alternative to Final Draft. A .deb package can be downloaded from the website and installed directly.
Using a MediaWiki extension, a screenplay can be written in MediaWiki, allowing conversion to other formats. ( http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Mediawik...e_a_screenplay )
Originally posted by Tom_ZeCat View PostThen there's ConvertXtoDVD, which only has a Windows version. This app gives me excellent control over how subtitles appear in the DVDs that I burn, much more so than the Linux equivalent, DeVeDe. DeVeDe is pretty good and may catch up at some point. I hope so.
DeVeDe is a front-end, primarily, for authoring DVDs and is only one of many (see http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Kubuntu_...oring_programs ). I don't really like it or use it.
Besides, who is using DVDs any more? I spent a month or two converting my DVDs to files (using mencoder) and now carry all my movies on a single portable USB hard drive (about $60 - $70 for 1 -2 Tb). My DVD players (about $30 new these days, or $60 with Netflix and WiFi ) all play files from my USB hard drive, so DVDs aren't really necessary for even them, any longer.
If you think you need DVDs to distribute files inexpensively to clients or something, that is fine, but you can always put video files on the DVD disk instead of making VOB format DVDs.
Having said that, I do give lectures and have distributed DVDs in the past with my lectures in both .vob format DVDs (in VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folders) and video files (.mkv or .avi or .mp4 files in their own folder) on the same DVD!Last edited by perspectoff; Feb 07, 2014, 11:47 AM.
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Originally posted by perspectoff View PostFrom (K)Ubuntuguide -- Scripts and Screenplays ( http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Kubuntu_...nd_Screenplays ):
Trelby ( http://www.trelby.org/ ) is an open source alternative to Final Draft. A .deb package can be downloaded from the website and installed directly.
Using a MediaWiki extension, a screenplay can be written in MediaWiki, allowing conversion to other formats. ( http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Mediawik...e_a_screenplay )
I add subtitles using mencoder, which is very powerful. cf. (K)Ubuntuguide at http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Video_Co...itles_to_video
DeVeDe is a front-end, primarily, for authoring DVDs and is only one of many (see http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Kubuntu_...oring_programs ). I don't really like it or use it.
Besides, who is using DVDs any more? I spent a month or two converting my DVDs to files (using mencoder) and now carry all my movies on a single portable USB hard drive (about $60 - $70 for 1 -2 Tb). My DVD players (about $30 new these days, or $60 with Netflix and WiFi ) all play files from my USB hard drive, so DVDs aren't really necessary for even them, any longer.
If you think you need DVDs to distribute files inexpensively to clients or something, that is fine, but you can always put video files on the DVD disk instead of making VOB format DVDs.
Having said that, I do give lectures and have distributed DVDs in the past with my lectures in both .vob format DVDs (in VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folders) and video files (.mkv or .avi or .mp4 files in their own folder) on the same DVD!
I still burn DVDs all the time. The reason is I watch a lot of foreign films, usually French ones. I need to be able to use subtitles. You can buy a French film from Amazon.fr or some other place and then rip it to an AVI (to get rid of the region BS) and then download subtitles and burn the new project to a DVD. I have investigated a device that will play an ISO file. I'll use that when the time comes, but for now it's burning lots of DVDs. I'm looking forward to trying the subtitle software that you recommend. ConvertXtoDVD beats the pants off DeVeDe for subtitles. It allows you to choose the size, the font, and the color. You can also choose to use an opaque box behind the subtitles if you want to. This is important if you've somehow ended up with a movie with hard-coded subtitles in another language. With the opaque box, the English subtitles show up without being jumbled together with the other ones. Also, really great is the ability to use a dark outline around the subtitles. I use that often. It makes them show up way better than if you just put them in there.
I'll check out that software that you recommended. Thanks for the tips.Kubuntu 22.04 (desktop & laptop), Windows 7 &2K (via VirtualBox on desktop PC)
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