| > This year I'm trying something radical: all the forms and instructions | > are available on irs.gov. I figured if I could install Debian, I should | > be able to work through the tax instructions. It's sort of like using | > the command line instead of a GUI. You answer all the same questions | > and you get the same output. | | The primary advantage of programs like Turbo-Tax is printing out | the forms with your data typed in. I have always done my own taxes | using some Lotus templates I made to fit my own situation, but for the | last few years I have used Turbo-Tax to print it out. I use my own | calculations to check Turbo-Tax (and vice versa), but the time savings | over copying the data by hand to the IRS forms and proof reading the | result is worth it to me.
Greetings, There are fill-in pdf's available on the IRS website, so that you can type the data in rather than hand-writing it. They don't calculate or anything, but it makes it cleaner. If I were a little more industrious, I'd figure out how to automagically get spreadsheet data to auto-fill in the fill-in pdf's. But that's a project for when I'm really bored. HTH, Brooks -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]