[moneydance] Error 15500

Tim Ashman tim at ashmans.net
Thu Apr 10 22:32:27 EDT 2008


On 04/10/2008 11:21, Merv Curley wrote:
> On April 10, 2008 12:08:57 am Tim Ashman wrote:
> > So, my immediate need is a new bank.  I'm looking for suggestions
> > and I don't need a branch near me.  My big needs are
> >
> > 1. pc banking online/pc bill pay
> > 2. ability to send in checks via the mail
> > 3. as much of it free
>
> You didn't say where you live but in Canada with our nationwide banks
> there are many choices.  I pay 99% of my bills with internet banking,
> all major retailers here have arrangements for this,  the Can Gov't
> accepts Income Tax payments and the City of Toronto accepts Tax,
> Water, Electric payments and so on.  I prefer that system to using
> MD.  MD keeps my records, doesn't do my banking duties.
>
> 1.  Do you mean have Moneydance pay your bills vs logging into a Bank
> website?

Yes, PC Banking, not online banking.  I like downloading the transactions, 
matching them say every other day and also doing PC Bill Pay, which is where 
moneydance creates the "payment" transaction and transmits it to the bank all 
from within moneydance.  Ideally I never visit my banks online banking site.

> 2   When you say 'send in checks'  I assume these are deposits?
> Since you said checks, I assume that you are in the good old USA.

Yes, was the spelling the give away :-)  Yes maybe 5 times a year I need to 
make deposits from checks I've recieved.  Some banks will give their 
customers postage paid envelopes to send these in.  At the very least I need 
the ability to do it somehow.

> 3.  You mean no transaction charges?   Do any do that  except for
> perhaps  60+ age accounts?

Well my current bank zions offers pc banking, pc bill bay, online banking, 
online bill pay, etc, etc all for free.  This is really nice, but I really 
like pc banking for the time savings it offers and so I'd be willing to pay 
for the feature if I could just find a bank that still offers it.

>
> I am sure you will get some U.S. suggestions.   But always remember,
> you can never give too much information when asking for advice.
>
> Regards

thank you

tim



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