I found the treasurer and she said there was a disc with the Quicken as a txt 
file. Finally found the disc. My main problem was I couldn't find the disc. I 
had apparently set it aside on my desk to work with it. LOST ON THE DESK.

And it opened right up in the software I use which is Apple's Numbers.

Now I can get ready for the club's board meeting tomorrow.

Thanks for the help. From what I've seen and heard of Quicken I don't want any 
part of it. Back when I lived in Fairfield  Ohio (a long time ago) and was on 
the AppleSiders board, the treasurer's printed reports were quite something. 
Very impressive Quicken reports; as I recall seven pages long. Only problem, I 
wasn't smart enough to tell if we had any money in the bank.

Anne




On Feb 25, 2013, at 3:29 PM, Bill Rising wrote:

> On Feb 25, 2013, at 14:23 , Anne Cartwright <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> If I can find out any answers to your question, I'll get back to the group. 
>> At the moment all I know is that the previous treasurer kept the records in 
>> Quicken on a PC.
> 
> Oh...that's even worse. From what I remember, Quicken couldn't trade files 
> reliably. Intuit itself has a huge list of things that cannot be imported, 
> though I don't know if any are important. [1] Quicken for Windows and Quicken 
> for Mac diverged as Intuit stopped taking the Mac seriously back in 2003.
> 
>> I'm not even sure I even have a copy of the file in the vast amount of 
>> apparently useless material I have inherited as the new treasurer.
> 
> Heh heh. That's like inheriting your Aunt Martha's knitting/Uncle Marty's 
> tools.
> 
>> Thanks, hope to get back with some more information soon.
> 
> Bill
> 
> [1] 
> http://quicken.intuit.com/support/help/convert-quicken-for-windows-files-to-quicken-for-mac/GEN82890.html



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