Aqmoney is a homebanking application.
Aqmoney is able to create both RDH mode ("security disc" mode called in
other programs) and DDV mode (chip card) customers. A customer is one who
has one or more account(s) at a credit institute. To manage accounts you must
first create a customer.
Beanie is a flexible, distributed accounting system for medium-sized
companies. It includes back-end batch processing as well as a
(skeleton) GTK GUI and provides automated purchases, sales, and
nominal ledgers as well as automated invoicing (via email). It also
supports VAT and payroll.
The latest version has considerable updates over the earlier releases
and isn't particularly backwards-compatible. The installation and
compilation is streamlined and the multi-database schema has been
reduced to a single database per company. The gnome GUI is still
lacking, but the command-line interface now has support for automated
bank reconciliation (from online banking QIF files), payroll,
automated billing and reminders, invoice PDF generation, statement
PDF generation, and a general journal.
Expense is a very lightweight application to track your expenses,
much like you might expect to find on a PDA. It is built upon the
code found in Yen-ju Chen's excellent money.app tutorial.
I use Expense daily, but it still contains bugs.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
OpenHBCI -- the first free client-side implementation of the HBCI
specification.
HBCI is a bank-independent homebanking standard used by many German
banks. This publicly available protocol describes communication,
authentification, encryption, and business transactions taking place
between a homebanking applications and a bank's server. OpenHBCI
provides an object oriented library implementing the current
client-side HBCI specification. The library is written in C++, with C
wrappers also available. OpenHBCI provides the application programmer
with a high-level abstraction of almost all business transactions, so
that all HBCI details are totally encapsulated and do not need to be
bothered with.
jGnash is a free (no strings attached!) personal finance manager
with many of the same features as commercially-available software.
It was created in order to make tracking your personal finances easy,
but also provides the functionality required by advanced users.
LedgerSMB is a double entry accounting system, written in Perl.
Accounting data is stored in a PostgreSQL Server, for the display
any text or GUI browser can be used.
LedgerSMB is a double entry accounting system, written in Perl.
Accounting data is stored in a PostgreSQL Server, for the display
any text or GUI browser can be used.
Money Manager Ex is a free, open-source, cross-platform, easy-to-use personal
finance software. It primarily helps organize one's finances and keeps
track of where, when and how the money goes.
MMEX includes all the basic features that 90% of users would want
to see in a personal finance application. The design goals are to
concentrate on simplicity and user-friendliness -- something one can use
everyday.
The aim of the program is to make it as easy as possible for people to
do their own personal budgets and keep track of their finances.
MyPhpMoney is a set of scripts (Open Source)
which allows you to manage your accounts,
with the possibility to compare with your old currency:
Francs, Lire, etc (More than 230 currencies available)
- Courou <courou@users.sourceforge.net>