Not trying to be quarelsome, but why do programs like Quicken put a calculator in their programs? They obviously went through the same process we're going through now. I never used it, so I can't shed any light on how their calculator might be different from the Windowws calc. As the person who started this thread, I realize that it would be easy enough to launch the Windows Calculator. It just seems to me that for a really quick calculation, it would be nice to pop up a calculator in Money Talks, check some figures, then drop right back to where you were. If it doesn't take much to add into the program, I think the benefits would outweigh the extra size it would add to Money Talks. -----Original Message----- From: moneytalks-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:moneytalks-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of vicki black Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2005 8:11 AM To: moneytalks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [moneytalks] Re: Calculator feature revisited No need to reinvent the wheel in my mind; Windows calculator works pretty well.