Buddi is a
cross platform,
open source personal
finance and
budgeting program, aimed at users without a great deal of budgeting knowledge.
Although still being actively developed, it is a stable application which should meet the needs of most home users.
Buddi is released in two branches: Stable and Development.
The Stable branch does not change much, and only adds bugfixes or other trivial changes; the Development branch is where all the new features are worked on.
Once a development version has been released for some time, and is considered to be working correctly, it will be released as the new stable version.
On
22 January,
2007, Buddi 2.0.4 Stable was released.
This version included updates to translations, as well as minor bug fixes.
On
5 January,
2007, Buddi 2.0.3 Stable was released.
This version included a bug fix for a problem introduced in 2.0.2.
On
4 January,
2007, Buddi 2.0.2 Stable was released.
This version includes translations for Portuguese and Russian, as well as fixing some minor bugs.
On
6 December,
2006, Buddi 2.0.1 Stable was released.
This version only changed some translated terms (mainly in the Norsk translation), and fixed some spelling mistakes in English (US).
On
4 November,
2006, Buddi 2.0.0 Stable was released.
This version added a number of new features, including:
A rewrite of the Transactions window, which helps to increase the speed when working with hundreds or thousands of transactionsFinalization of the Plugin architectureAddition of Dutch and French translationsA language editor to help make additional translationsNumerous UI improvements Functionality
Buddi's functionality falls in three main categories: first, it allows users to set up
accounts and record their financial
transactions; second, it provides a mechanism to set up a simple budget, by defining expense and income categories (such as salary, rent, groceries, etc); third, it shows how well users have kept their budget over a defined period of time.
For users who are looking for more advanced features, Buddi supports features such as scheduled transactions and powerful reports.
Since the source code is available, programmers can also improve features which they feel are lacking.
Buddi is written by Wyatt Olson, and is released under the
GNU General Public License.
Buddi is written in
Java, so it can run on most major
operating systems.
It supports easy translation into multiple languages, and is currently available in
English,
Spanish,
German,
Norwegian,
Dutch,
French,
Portuguese, and
Russian.
External links
Official Buddi Homepage Ars Technica review