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MyCash Review MyCash is a full-featured, EASY to use financial manager with all the features a personal or small business user would want in a checking account program-- easy transaction entries, automatic reconciliation, powerful searching and graphing analysis, check printing, and much more. MyCash has been a best seller for over ten years. Do you need a solid dependable checking account program, but find that software programs like Quicken and MS Money are too complicated and tedious for your standard checking, savings, and credit card accounts? Then find out what tens of thousands of users have found since 1987: MyCash is the best computer-based personal checking account manager you will find anywhere at any price! MyCash maintains up to 100 separate financial accounts (checking, savings, credit cards, etc.). MyCash does all of the things you would want in a home-oriented program. For instance, it does all the math for you, of course. It will also print your checks, and display graphic analysis of your spending patterns. MyCash has an auto-reconciliation feature that lets you reconcile your monthly statement in just minutes, and much, much more. MyCash has flexible searching, sub-listing, report, and printing options-- and so much more, yet it's so easy to learn and use. For straightforward personal use, MyCash is your best answer, and at the best price, too!
MyCash $15.00 Purchase Now Limited Time Offer.
RAD Software started in 1987 as a self-taught programming hobby. Writing 16-bit DOS-based programs in GW-Basic, RAD Software owner Rad Delaroderie developed a few software applications for home and personal use, focusing on basic programs that helped the average personal computer user to organize their life at home. Initial programs were PCA (Personal Checking Account, now MyCash), BombAway (simple artillery game, now OnTarget), and BioBase (Address Book program, now InTouch). As some of you may remember, there was no such thing as “the internet” in the late 80’s. Instead, there were local BBSs (Bulletin Board Services). BBSs were operated by computer lovers with their own money in their living room in local communities all over the country, using ‘souped up’ IBM-ATs hooked up to a 1200-baud modem to their home phone line. These selfless BBS operators were known as Sysops (for System Operator). All day long, people in the local community would call their number hoping to catch it available (no ‘Call Waiting’ back then), log on for a few minutes, browse the file libraries, download a program if it looked interesting, and disconnect so the next caller could get through. This grassroots network of Sysops, looking for new files to post in their libraries, developed informal contacts with each other, trading libraries and slowly spreading popular software around the country, and the world. Given the severe ‘networking’ limitations of the era, it was rather surprising that RAD Software began getting mail orders from around the country, and eventually from around the world. RAD Software would copy a ‘registered version’ of the ordered software on a 5 1/4” floppy disk and mail it to the recipient. As the internet began to evolve during the 90s, BBSs slowly but inexorably became an extinct form of information sharing, and ‘shareware’ more and more became a viable, and even marketable, distribution and selling concept in an internet paradigm (a very popular word back in the early 90s). As the speed, refinement, and complexity of the modern internet evolved, RAD Software began offering more software programs on the internet. A series of collectors’ software, such as BookBase for book lovers (now MyBooks), SongBase for music collectors, CardBase for sports cards lovers, VCRBase, ad nauseum, were released, with MyBooks being by far the most popular (and the only collector’s series that survived the transition from DOS-based programming to Windows-based programming). RAD Software also wrote two software programs during early 90s based on popular word puzzles (Scramble and WordHide). Around 1990, RAD Software began developing software aimed for the law enforcement/public safety arena. The focus was on smaller agencies that did not have a big IBM mainframe and big-city budgets to spend the thousands of dollars that big companies demanded for software that enhanced the law enforcement function. The reason for this focus was that Rad Delaroderie had been a career law enforcement officer with the Columbus, Georgia City Police Department (500 employees), and saw that there might be a niche market for quality software at affordable prices for smaller police departments around the country.
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