TurboTax would support Linux, my Gateway Desktop would suddenly turn green.
But until that time happens, it will stay Win7 to dooms day.

Don't mention the Cloud version of TurboTax, ain't going to happen.
This may not be up to your needs but to let others know it's available http://opentaxsolver.sourceforge.net/index.html.
xenopeek wrote: ↑Fri Jul 20, 2018 7:44 amThis already exists: Next Notes app on Nextcloud.
"Nextcloud is an open source, self-hosted file share and communication platform. Access & sync your files, contacts, calendars & communicate and collaborate across your devices. You decide what happens with your data, where it is and who can access it." To learn more see: https://nextcloud.com/. It runs on your own server and you can access it through web, their desktop client and their iOS and Android apps. You could run it on a RaspberryPi at home for cheap or for a few bucks per month host it on a virtual server like https://www.vultr.com/ or DigitalOcean.
I installed that both on Mint19 and on my android cellphone but it seems not work. (my laptop and phone connected to same WiFi and they can not find each other while sending a file)xenopeek wrote: ↑Sun Jul 22, 2018 10:16 amBetween PCs you can use NitroShare (available for Linux, macOS, Windows). NitroShare also has integration for several file managers, like Nemo (Cinnamon) and Caja (MATE). Install it through Software Manager on Linux Mint. For other OSes download from https://nitroshare.net/.
NitroShare also have an Android app https://nitroshare.net/android/. They are working on an iOS app but that's not ready yet.
If you're more looking for automatic syncing folders between devices, use Syncthing (also supports BSD and not yet iOS).
Dangit. It looks (from the FAQ) that the Android version needs you to have NitroShare one version newer than is in Linux Mint 19 (0.3.4 instead of 0.3.3).
May I suggest Double Commander https://doublecmd.sourceforge.io/. It's a cross-platform alternative to TotalCommander, touted by others as being better. It even supports TotalCommander plugins.
I don't have as complete a replacement suggestion for that. The player interface reminds me of Lollypop https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Lollypop. You may like that one. On Linux Mint 18.3 and 19 you can install Lollypop through the Flatpak category of Software Manager.
I let them know too.
This! ⬆
That's not impossible... https://puri.sm/shop/librem-5/
Just to let others know:
Carl answered your question: Do you plan on having TurboTax for the Linux operating system platform?
This is a public user-to-user forum. TurboTax does not frequent this forum at this time of year, like they do at tax filing time. But I can tell you that there are absolutely no plans at this time to port the program to Linux. Why? Simple business decision. No profit in it.
Let's take a look at that. Linux desktop marketshare is about 2% in the USA. Likely a bit higher among self-employed and small business owners.
I can see their point. As you said, a larger percentage are online users, so they probably won't switch to desktop of Linux. Then there are users like I am, they'll be switching from the desktop version of Windows to Linux, so no new customers.xenopeek wrote: ↑Mon Jul 23, 2018 1:01 pmLet's take a look at that. Linux desktop marketshare is about 2% in the USA. Likely a bit higher among self-employed and small business owners.
If I understand the pricing for the desktop version correctly, TurboTax costs between $50 and $120. Let's assume the average plan people pick is the $80 package. According to Intuit's factsheet they have 5.3 million TurboTax desktop users in the USA. So that's a yearly revenue of $424 million (about 8% of their total yearly revenue). Given, it pales in comparison with the 28.5 million TurboTax online users in the USA, even if that version is a bit cheaper than the desktop version.
Anyway, 2% of that is $8.5 million a year. So it would really depend on what frameworks and libraries they used to develop their Windows and macOS desktop programs. If either of those uses something cross-platform or that is easily converted to Linux, it might be worth the effort. But it wouldn't surprise me, given the huge preference of users for their online version, that all their development effort and business planning goes towards that.
Would that be Access from Microsoft that you can't remember?