Interesting. What is the taxing jurisdiction? Is it a tax on sales
or a tax on total revenue? In some jurisdictions the discretionary
tax is on total revenues, somewhat like a surcharge on existing VAT.
In Florida and some other US states discretionary tax is an additional
sales tax levied by in
There was indeed a US federal level medical device excise tax, but it
was placed in moratorium in 2015 and repealed in 2019:
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/medical-device-excise-tax
This must be a county tax. Well, I'm stumped. It probably should be
tracked and calculated, but I'm not sure how.
I make an effort when I have to call Chase, Schwab, etc., for other
topics (mystery charges, etc.) to also request that they make an .ofx
download available. Schwab is a hard no on that, and they got rid of
direct connect years ago. Chase last week indicated that .ofx was
gone since 2021, but the
Hello, GnuCash Users,
Gnucash will begin to start, then abort (crash) when launched, using
normal startup or gnucash --nofile --debug. Output from terminal is:
$ gnucash --nofile --debug
Found Finance::Quote version 1.38
**
GLib:ERROR:/build/glib2.0-pjKWYQ/glib2.0-2.48.2/./glib/ghash.c:373:g_has
er or checker that can correct errors in an
account file? I should give that a whirl and see what it finds.
Thanks again, you guys rock,
Gordon
On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 9:59 PM John Ralls wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Sep 13, 2019, at 11:53 AM, GWB wrote:
> >
> > Hello, GnuCa
mand in the
> shortcut.
>
> Regards,
> John Ralls
>
>
> > On Sep 13, 2019, at 8:11 PM, GWB wrote:
> >
> > OK, will do. This is interesting. I moved the file to a Windows 7
> > machine, and opened it with GnuCash 2.6.21. It did read the sqlite3
> >
off the top search field.
If I can't find out how to migrate from linux to Windows 7, I'll send
another email to the list.
Thanks,
Gordon
On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 6:46 PM GWB wrote:
>
> Great, thank you, that helps. This is probably also a problem with
> gnucash 2.6.12 on u
Again, no tax advice here, but I tend to look for a reporting form
that goes to some kind of governmental unit, and then I check the tax
software (I use CCH) for some checkbox or other items for "loss
payouts", "insurance loss payments", etc. It might be something for
form 4868. But that's not ad
OK; Outstanding, this works like a charm. On Windows 7 Pro (64 bit)
the GnuCash installation created:
C:\Users\$USER\.gnucash
There is also:
C:\Users\$USER\.AppData\Local... \LocalLow ...\Roaming
When I copy the files from the linux installation at:
$user/.gnucash to C:\Users\$USER\.gnucash,
w; that seems to be the largest percentage of
the user base.
Gordon
On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 5:01 PM GWB wrote:
>
> OK; Outstanding, this works like a charm. On Windows 7 Pro (64 bit)
> the GnuCash installation created:
>
> C:\Users\$USER\.gnucash
>
> There is also:
>
I'm not a dev, but I do know that Catalina (OS X 10.15) is having
compatibility problems with a number of apps that worked on OS X 10.14.
Webroot just discovered their app won't work on Catalina.
Assuming all the 32 bit libraries are now 64 bit in Gnucash 3.7 this may be
a false alarm from the Cat
Chronosync is another app that needed some work to integrate smoothly
with Catalina. This excerpt from their email to users explains:
<<
The Catalina Split
Catalina introduces a new APFS feature called ‘Volume Groups’. Under
Catalina, Apple takes advantage of this ability and splits the boot
volu
Apple OS X combined two types of kernels, bsd and mach, but is
(according to some FreeBSD kernel developers) progressively removing
the mach kernel components. This may be due to their possible shift
to ARM processors for computers (same family of processors as their
other devices). But Apple doe
an 26, 2020 at 5:53 PM GWB wrote:
>
> Apple OS X combined two types of kernels, bsd and mach, but is
> (according to some FreeBSD kernel developers) progressively removing
> the mach kernel components. This may be due to their possible shift
> to ARM processors for computers (same fam
Curious about this. So is the goal to show all times in UTC on
invoices along with local time? I tend to default most things to UTC
(including local time on computers) and just display in some local
time if necessary. If GMT is available as a time zone, I use that
(GMT is a timezone; UTC is not)
7;ll see the dates on your transactions change.
>
> The right solution is to change the date representation to not use time so it
> doesn't care about time zone, but that's a major change and so far nobody's
> had the appetite to take it on.
>
> Regards,
> John
Hmm, not able to get to the .sql files yet, but the xml has things like:
2019-02-14 00:00:00 -0600
...
2014-08-05
...
2019-04-11 21:30:12 -0500
Still digging.
It would be hard to get rid of timestamps altogether, I think, and
Have used sqlite3, postgresql, and xml on various machines (Windows 7,
Ubuntu, FreeBSD). Windows 7 (with extended service for malware) does
fine with xml, but I have not had a problem with the sql backends.
sqlite was easier to set up as a backend than postgres, but postgres
(from other uses as a
The idea about the images is a very good one. Invoices, receipts,
etc., would do fine in digital format.
No question that databases are capable of much greater depth,
granularity and ability to search and change. However, in defense of
the humble xml text file, I give you this:
cat GnuCash-xml-
Have you tried sqlite? I don't know how it works on Windows but it might
just save it as a file without setting up a salute back end. Maybe try that
when you have time.
Gordon
On Fri, May 8, 2020, 1:27 AM Jeff wrote:
> On 5/7/2020 8:28 PM, GWB wrote:
> > The idea about the im
ably pretty much identical to a high end Clevo or Sager.
Gordon
On Sat, May 9, 2020 at 1:15 AM Jeff wrote:
>
> On 5/8/2020 2:03 AM, GWB wrote:
>
> Have you tried sqlite? I don't know how it works on Windows but it might just
> save it as a file without setting up a salute back en
OFX as a format does several things CSV does not. It can give a
unique transaction ID, which the software can then "remember" if there
are a number of repeated transactions of the same amount and similar
dates. With OFX, you know they are unique transactions because of the
unique identifier.
Whe
Haven't tested this with the SQLite GnuCash backend, but it is
sometimes possible with PostgreSQL to "roll back" to an earlier state
before the last transactions, or for that matter, any arbitrary number
of transactions before the last one. I haven't used the PostgreSQL
backend with GnuCash for so
How would HRMC know if you cut and pasted the data or not? I haven't
looked at this in some time, but if a CSV file works for the report,
how would they know that a submission isn't just a .csv or .xml file
that was copied and pasted manually from another program? I vaguely
remembered the website
Derek,
Sorry to hear that, and its frustrating. Perhaps AT&T could, in the
meantime, install a different modem temporarily to see if that solves
the problem? I've been through this with various T line providers,
and their default response is often "Something you did", even when the
internal set
vent, it's worth it, and necessary.
Check around. Anywhere from Cambridge to Dedham should be any number
of telecomm trunk leasing outfits.
Gordon
On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 6:57 PM, Derek Atkins wrote:
> [removed -announce]
>
> On Mon, October 2, 2017 6:09 pm, GWB wrote:
>&
, Oct 3, 2017 at 12:31 PM, David Carlson
wrote:
> Derek,
>
> Is it possible to read event logs and determine that some pieces of
> equipment are definitely not causing the problem?
>
> David C
>
> On Oct 3, 2017 10:04 AM, "Derek Atkins" wrote:
>>
>> GW
IP addresses).
But that could break something else if the router thinks it has 256 IP
addresses.
Gordon
On Wed, Oct 4, 2017 at 7:22 PM, Derek Atkins wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, October 4, 2017 1:14 am, GWB wrote:
>> I agree that the problem developing at midnight is too much of a
>&g
Hello, Frank,
I am very sorry to hear that, and yes, it is very frustrating. I'm
not a "guru" for .qif importing or anything else for that matter, but
I did some experimentation with .QIF files some weeks ago. But just
off the top of my head, I would suggest:
-Are you sure your version of Quick
Thank you, that sounds worth trying. To be clear, at the step:
"Turn Windows Features on or off"
Turn Windows Features on, correct? Or is there a specific way to
activate Windows Subsystem for Linux within Windows Features?
I'm not at Windows 10 yet, but we do keep some Windows machines
around
I can say that VueScan softer does work with the older Fujitsu
ScanSnap (s500, I think) on Ubuntu 14. But VueScan is not free, and I
have not tried Fujitsu's linux version for the ScanSnap. I don't use
OCR when I scan, but instead batch scan, and then later run the files
(usually .tiff) through a
I have not yet tried this yet with GnuCash on the G4 and G5 PPC Macs
we still have, but it is possible to install FreeBSD 64 bit on the G5
Macs, which does have some virtualisation (weird, but impressive).
That would be a "corner case" scenario for what I'm guessing are a
very few GnuCash users. A
My favourite was a mailing list some years back which, when receiving
"list-unsubscribe" in the body of the email, would literally subscribe
the email address to a "list-unsubscribe" mailing list, which would
send the messages of those attempting to unsubscribe to each other.
But not to the list or
It also appears an "unsubscribe" button would not work with mailman
(or most mail lists), because most of them send in text only, and few
allow html or scripts (for good reason). So forget about the
MailChimp type of button. It would also have no effect on nabble,
etc.
Gordon
On Tue, Jan 30, 20
and
> GnuCash passes Debian's tests on their PPC buildbot, so that's the way to go
> if you're still running an old PPC mac.
>
> Regards,
> John Ralls
>
>
>> On Jan 26, 2018, at 12:41 PM, GWB wrote:
>>
>> I have not yet tried this yet with GnuCas
I have used xml, postgresql, and sqlite (which must default to sqlite3
on Ubuntu) with gnucash. sqlite3, as mentioned already, is a good
compromise between a database backend and simplicity of set up.
PostgreSQL is, probably, technically the best of the database backend
options for being robust, a
I'm not sure how the version history works in Ubuntu or Debian, but I
installed GnuCash 2.6.7 from getdeb.org quite a while ago, and
"pinned" it (so that apt-get upgrade would not go to the version up)
to that version hoping that gnucash in Ubuntu 14 would catch up with
2.6.7. Ubuntu 14 ("Trusty T
and other nasty
things to occur when you're using gnucash. They won't be caused by
gnucash, but they will affect what you're trying to do.
If you can navigate that and work around the instability, give it a
try. I'm OK with 2.6.whatever until Ubuntu 18 gets 3.
Gordon
On Tue
Yes, thank you, I may try building from source. Has there ever been a
standalone .deb package for GnuCash? I don't know what the flatpack
is, but it occurs to me that for linux, debian, etc., a 3.x .deb might
be worthwhile. But I don't think I have seen a .deb package on the
download links at Gn
licated, is generally
> fine. (problems arise if you have dependency conflicts with other software)
>
> Regards,
> Adrien
>
>> On Aug 21, 2018, at 4:55 PM, GWB wrote:
>>
>> I'm not sure how the version history works in Ubuntu or Debian, but I
>> installed Gnu
8, at 3:41 PM, Adrien Monteleone
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On Aug 22, 2018, at 4:04 PM, GWB wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Why is gnucash in the Gnome ghetto for program categories? Am I able
>>> to run it in xfce because I already have the gnome dep
You might be able to gun gnucash on a chromebook using Google Play
Store. Here's a list of ChromeOS Hardware Google says will work with
Google Play:
https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/chromium-os/chrome-os-systems-supporting-android-apps
I know it can work because I'm looking at GnuCash
Wow; that's excellent. The Crouton page also mentions Crostini:
https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/docs/+/master/containers_and_vms.md
Which does not require running with dev enabled.
Pixelbooks work with Crostini. Here's the hardware list by motherboard:
https://chromium.googlesour
Hello, Anita, GnuCash User list,
The attachment smime.p7s might be a file format (.p7s) that is unique
to microsoft outlook, so I'm not having any luck opening it. I use
Macs, but not for gnucash, so perhaps you might try:
1. Using the spotlight feature in Mac to search for all files ending
in .
lnk files are created by gnucash to prevent
> users accidentally opening the data file on multiple machines. They are zero
> bytes in size and there is no point in trying to open them up. There is no
> there there.
>
> On Mon, Nov 5, 2018 at 7:08, GWB
> wrote:
> Hello
Well, I don't claim to be a genius at anything, but the .pdf files are
interesting.
If you are now up and running and have gnucash and your file back, great.
If not, you might have to delete, move or rename the .LNK file. I
would rename it and move it out of the directory (folder) where LSA
Nico
David, Michael,
Yes to both of you, but see the other thread on this. Mac's give you
modified, created and last opened in the finder window. That can help
troubleshooting. That's also why older unix systems used some version
of .lck .lnk files and core dumps; all three can be diagnostic. And
C
Here's what I do, but it might not work for you.
I use two pieces of software for accounting, bookkeeping, and
compliance: gnucash and prosystemfx from CCH (Wolters Kluwer).
gnucash is excellent for tracking expenses, but for income amounts I
rely on 1099's, DIV's, etc. Similarly, I sometimes use
give you the number of miles. So maybe Christopher's way
is better.
Gordon
On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 10:29 PM, GWB wrote:
> Here's what I do, but it might not work for you.
>
> I use two pieces of software for accounting, bookkeeping, and
> compliance: gnucash and prosyst
This reminds me of an earlier question from a user in Sweden.
Apparently governments (Sweden in that case, the UK in this one) are
getting into the habit of specifying not only acceptable tax software
but also accounting software. The UK has not yet required businesses
of a certain size to use spe
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