Schedule C and it's worksheets are there. So is Schedule D, of course.
The layout of the screen and the forms page is much better this year. The forms page opens a pane to the left of your tax return. Adding a form is also much better than it's been in previous years.
Naturally, when I started a preliminary return and checked the box that I had stock/mutual fund sales, it tries to upsell you to what they consider as the correct version. I guess it's up to you as to which version you go with. My returns are relatively simple and I don't need any help calculating my long term/mid term/short term cap gains and/or losses. The carryover worksheet is there, but for some reason it mentioned that as a reason to go with the upsell version. I need the carryover worksheet to work for next year. I can't imagine why it wouldn't since the form is already part of my return, and it already has my loss carryover included with the 3k eligible loss deducted for this years return.
I don't like the fact that it installs several services and a bunch of stuff under the Windows directory (although everything under the Windows dir is installed in intuit specific sub-folders). There's a few new services I don't recognize. One is a macrovision service, which doesn't seem like it's something I'd want. The other is some sort of flex license service. There's also an intuit update service that was added. That's what I noticed in services.msc.
It's hard to recommend it when they do crap like that.
The filenames are different this year also. Instead of *.tax they are *.tax2008. I guess that might imply a new file format for your saved return.
As for picking a version, if you have a simple return and know how to calculate gains/losses and don't need investment advice, go with Deluxe. If you want the investment advice, go with Premier. If you have a business, and need schedule C and need the interview topics/advice, you should probably go for the Home and Business version (or your own personal Dave M

). On the other hand, if you've already categorized all your business expenses properly in quicken, you might be able to get away with the lower end version. I guess you can always upgrade. It wanted me to upgrade to Premier for $30. I suspect it's all one program anyway, and when you upgrade it just unlocks the rest of the features. (That's a total guess.) I don't know if it's cheaper to buy the correct version in the first place or not. I paid less than $40 for TT Deluxe Fed + State, with Fed e-file (up to 5 returns) included. If I end up upgrading to Premier, it will be less than $70. For now, I'll stick with Deluxe and see how it goes. I think it will be fine for me. Quicken's already calculated my long term losses for 2008 (with a tax/cap gains report). Everything else (dividends) will be on the 1099s I get from the brokerage firms.
I don't blame anybody for switching away this year. There pricing is a mess.
-David