![]() ![]() Current Quicken Online users should see their transactions move into the Mint-powered version, and Patzer hopes that other items such as categories will also be able to make the transition. ![]() The battle between Quicken Online and Mint will end, and it’s Mint that will be the victor: The Quicken Online service will be pretty much the same service as today’s Mint except with Quicken’s red-and-white color scheme, Patzer told me. It doesn’t make sense for one company to have two Web-based personal-finance services that, while far from identical, are trying to do similar things. Quicken Online will become a reskinned Mint. A few notes from our discussion on what’s in the works, assuming the merger goes off as planned: ![]() I just spoke with Aaron Patzer, founder of Mint and general-manager-to-be of Intuit’s personal finance group, about Intuit’s planned $170 million acquisition of Mint and what it means for consumers. ![]()
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