I use Mint for budgeting, but Personal Capital for wealth management. I don't really need budgeting tools as much as I used to, so I usually spend more time in PC.
I agree. That's what I said, gulp's async saves so much time. But in my experience, grunt is easier to understand for people new to build processes. I'm a huge fan of gulp.
On my Charles Schwab brokerage account, the minimum buy in is about $10,000, which can be prohibitive. Also some company-sponsored 401k accounts only have a limited number of funds that you can invest in and they aren't the greatest.
I do like they basically force everyone to match their low fees to compete. I have accounts with Vanguard and Schwab and the fees are comparable.
If you can, I'd learn gulp. Having the task run asynchronically saves so much time in the long run.
Grunt does have a lot of community support and I think I understood it faster than gulp, but it's a lot more code to do the same thing.



Personal FinanceWhat kind of tools are people using to manage their personal finances?Jul 21, 2016 at 7:09 PM