Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:millennial here (unlike pp grandpa above) so my info has likely been stolen by hackers / is out there already / who wants my law school loans / idgaf
I love mint and use it and have been using it for at least 3 years - it got me started and mindful to track expenses, budget, set reminders, see the whole picture financially (including TSP which many programs can't connect right to). It's clean, you're able to customize it including reminders, and once you get in the groove identifying vendors you use often the system remembers. I can tell you how much I spent in January of 2015 on work lunches and specifically potbellys (you literally just search in a second) unlike your bank statements. and yes, I use turbo tax.
also, the program is always updated so it won't be abandoned like other "financial management systems"
I'm the PP and I'm a Millenial who also went to law school. I'm just not an idiot.
lol you probably cover the PIN pad when you type in your bank code....get real, your info is already out there, it's all saved somewhere and that somewhere isn't any safer than mint. think Sephora security breaches, Target credit card info leaking, and oh not to mention, I work for govt and also enjoyed a lovely OPM breach in 2015 for my info and everyone else's on my security application including social addresses etc.
basically, to the OP, don't let the "access" issue to mint deter you from using mint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like mint the best of the tracking programs I have tried. You don’t have to enter anything because it syncs to all your accounts. Just a bit of editing for things that are categorized incorrectly. You are giving up data; I decided I was OK with that. I’ve been using it for about five years.
+1
I have been using it so long that I don't remember, probably at least five years as well. I am 29 years old and feel the same as this poster
Anonymous wrote:I like mint the best of the tracking programs I have tried. You don’t have to enter anything because it syncs to all your accounts. Just a bit of editing for things that are categorized incorrectly. You are giving up data; I decided I was OK with that. I’ve been using it for about five years.
Anonymous wrote:It kept miscategorizing my expenses so I stopped using it. Trying ynab net, just haven’t set it up yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:millennial here (unlike pp grandpa above) so my info has likely been stolen by hackers / is out there already / who wants my law school loans / idgaf
I love mint and use it and have been using it for at least 3 years - it got me started and mindful to track expenses, budget, set reminders, see the whole picture financially (including TSP which many programs can't connect right to). It's clean, you're able to customize it including reminders, and once you get in the groove identifying vendors you use often the system remembers. I can tell you how much I spent in January of 2015 on work lunches and specifically potbellys (you literally just search in a second) unlike your bank statements. and yes, I use turbo tax.
also, the program is always updated so it won't be abandoned like other "financial management systems"
I'm the PP and I'm a Millenial who also went to law school. I'm just not an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:millennial here (unlike pp grandpa above) so my info has likely been stolen by hackers / is out there already / who wants my law school loans / idgaf
I love mint and use it and have been using it for at least 3 years - it got me started and mindful to track expenses, budget, set reminders, see the whole picture financially (including TSP which many programs can't connect right to). It's clean, you're able to customize it including reminders, and once you get in the groove identifying vendors you use often the system remembers. I can tell you how much I spent in January of 2015 on work lunches and specifically potbellys (you literally just search in a second) unlike your bank statements. and yes, I use turbo tax.
also, the program is always updated so it won't be abandoned like other "financial management systems"