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Microsoft Money 2004 Released

Tom Warren   on 23 July 2003 - 17:48 · 7 comments & 823 views

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Fastest-Growing Personal Finance Software Helps Consumers Manage Finances With Free Financial Services, Personalized Tools and Powerful Web Integration

Microsoft Corp. today announced the release of Microsoft® Money 2004 Deluxe, Premium, Small Business and Standard, the company's award-winning personal finance software collection. Money 2004 addresses consumers' current financial needs with features that include an extensive Credit Center, a free bill-payment service,2 sophisticated capital gains tools and timely financial news, providing a more useful money management experience.

In light of rising debt and historically low interest rates, consumers are seeking more credit information and guidance. Money 2004 makes it easy for consumers to gain control of their overall situation with a wealth of credit- and debt-related tools. Through an alliance with Experian Consumer Direct, one of the most trusted sources for credit products and services, Money 2004 Premium, Deluxe and Small Business provide a free credit report and one year of ongoing credit monitoring, including unlimited credit scores, percentile rankings, risk levels and daily credit alerts.2 A summary of debt accounts, educational content, access to "what-if" scenarios and information on credit protection also are available.

News source: Microsoft PressPass


"The problem is that people are still confused about DRM. They get stuck on areas such as piracy and protection," he said.

"But there is already a lot of technology and laws for this and DRM covers wider issues.

"It is about the application of trusted computing technologies to manage content: who can have access to what and where, for commercial use, non-commercial and a combination of these."

Garnett added that a lack of micro-payment systems, and ongoing negotiations over new business models involving DRM, are also holding back adoption.

The government needs to talk to other countries to push through common global standards demanded by consumers, along the lines of the World Trade Organisation standards that regulate international trade, he said.

Downing Street should also show its support by implementing public programmes adopting these standards, and investigate whether DRM standards can be included into European consultations.

Ian Fogg, an analyst at Jupiter Research, agreed that the government should get involved, but warned that DRM still doesn't figure high on the radar of many internet service providers.

"The internet industry has been looking at how to drive uptake and offer higher speeds, so few are looking at value added services," he said.

"This has left DRM development to just a few and the government's role should be to enable a competitive environment."

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(3 replies) #1 nifu on 23 Jul 2003 - 18:03
as if microsoft didn't have enough money..
#1.1 Jason on 23 Jul 2003 - 18:10
No such thing as enough money.
#1.2 Octol on 24 Jul 2003 - 04:27
How much money is enough? Just a little bit more!

—John D. Rockefeller
#1.3 lucasvanos on 24 Jul 2003 - 06:33
Lol
#2 Jeffrey on 23 Jul 2003 - 18:28
4 months to early.
#3 Prelude76 on 23 Jul 2003 - 19:28
released today? download started. check.
#4 rseiler on 24 Jul 2003 - 00:17
It's been in some stores a week to 10 days now, so the announcement is late.

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