HP3000-L Archives

January 1999, Week 3

HP3000-L@RAVEN.UTC.EDU

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From:
Ted Ashton <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Ted Ashton <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 21 Jan 1999 08:46:29 -0500
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Thus it was written in the epistle of Brad Feazell,
> Art H Bahrs wrote in message ...
> >Art "hmmm... Turbo Tax is sounding better and better! hehehe" Bahrs
>
> By all means, get Turbo Tax. Since you'll be itemizing, you can deduct the
> cost of the program. All the rules are built into the program and much more.
>
At the risk of starting a religious war, I'd advise looking at TaxCut (from
Kiplinger) before purchasing TurboTax.  I'm a Quicken user and a happy one,
but, having used (and paid for) TurboTax for a while and then TaxCut last year
and this, I'll be staying with TaxCut.  TurboTax is undeniably good, but TaxCut
is at least as good (better, IMHO) and at a better price.

Ted
--
Ted Ashton ([log in to unmask]), Info Serv, Southern Adventist University
          ==========================================================
Mathematics may be likened to a large rock whose interior composition we
wish to examine. The older mathematicians appear as persevering stone
cutters slowly attempting to demolish the rock from the outside with hammer
and chisel. The later mathematicians resemble expert miners who seek
vulnerable veins, drill into these strategic places, and then blast the rock
apart with well placed internal charges.
                                        -- Eves, Howard W.

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