There are open source alternatives. Not sure they'll be easier.
You can try KMyMoney:
It's one of a few good open source money managers that can actually import data and has a pretty full feature set (others include Gnucash, Scrooge, HomeBank and Money Manager Ex).
The reason I suggest KmyMoney - it's easy to use and they've done pretty well porting it to non-linux platforms. It works on Windows and OS X as well as linux.
It's pretty simple though. If you need to manage a business- gnucash and some of the others maybe more useful. Gnucash is a ledger style thing, and if you aren't used to that concept, it is hard to get used to. There are others if you google opensource budget or finance apps, but those are a couple good ones.
Wundert mich tatsächlich sehr, dass bisher kmymoney nicht genannt wurde. Ist eine vollwertige Buchungssoftware, die komplett Quelloffen und kostenfrei ist (free and open-source software). Benutze das ganze seit einiger Zeit und bin super zufrieden. Daten bleiben komplett in deiner Hand und können verschlüsselt werden.
Probably not exactly what you're looking for, but if you want something like Quicken, but free-er I can recommend KMyMoney. There's no mobile version, but everything's local so you don't have to worry about giving your credentials to a third party.
Open source and cross-platform for computers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GnuCash . The official site at www.gnucash.org is down for me, maybe you're more lucky.
Open source and cross platform: KMyMoney https://kmymoney.org/
Open source for Windows: TurboCash http://www.turbocash.net/
You mean something like these? Basically they all do double book-keeping, which is what I guess you're looking for...
You may have a look into kmymomey at https://kmymoney.org/. I use it since the last 10 years. It support standards bank conciliation and you may also export data to explore it in your favorite data analyzer.
For kmymoney their main support is via KDE 's forums as well as a mailing list, among other places, as listed on their website.
https://kmymoney.org/support.html
Just noticed that they have revamped their website recently. Looks nice.
Three Quicken alternatives that I have briefly looked at are Moneydance, Moneyspire and KMyMoney, and they each have their charms. I wouldn't use them myself, but for expense tracking, I think they are worth trying out.
Ich kann dir Hinweise geben, doch dann musst du selbst weiterforschen. Ich selbst weiß nicht wie diese Haushaltbuchsoftware aufgebaut ist und habe auch kein Interesse viel Zeit einzustecken nur um des Lösens willen.
Du sagst z.B. ohne Fehlermeldung, doch im log sind viele kleinere Fehler. Z.B: "0009:fixme:ieframe:handle_navigation_error Navigate to error page" Die jedoch nicht kritisch sein dürften. Schau sie dir genauer an. Sie weisen allerdings auch schon drauf hin, dass die Software sehr überladen ist. Websites die während der Installation angezeigt werden?
Schau dir die Systemvoraussetzungen an, vielleicht musst du das Net Framework in Wine Installieren. Schau dir eine erfolgreiche Windows Installation an, kopiere eventuell von dort Dateien, ... Wenn das nicht hilft, wende dich an die Wine Experten unter https://forum.winehq.org/viewforum.php?f=2
Mein Rat allerdings wäre: Es gibt sicher vergleichbare Software die nativ unter Linux läuft und dir viel Ärger erspart. Z.B. https://kmymoney.org/ Wobei ich wie gesagt die von dir genannte Software nicht kenne.
I switched from GnuCash to KMyMoney, which does handle split transactions quite well. For most vendors, I set a default category. For the likes of Amazon and Wal-mart though, it's still a manual process.
I have been using https://kmymoney.org/ for my business since 2012. It has excellent support for importing CSV or QIF from your bank account and has some auto matching abilities for the proper ledger categories.
If you want to track your finances without paying for the software, there may be better options available than excel spreadsheets.
You could try KMyMoney (https://kmymoney.org/). It's open source software and it works on all major operating systems (Windows, Mac, Linux).
Sometimes people recommend GnuCash and KMyMoney, two options with long history. I haven't used either, but if you're the type that is okay with learning a new interface, these are both free and open source.
I use Quicken, but am hanging in with Quicken 2007, avoiding some of the feature bloat.
Sorry for the late reply. I was working yesterday. I use KMyMoney . I would recommend it. I reccomend it mainly because it is free/libre software which roughly means:
> the users have the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software