|  |     No, I have not tried it, but I do go to my library where I can read
    Morningstar at no cost.  I guess it is a matter of convenience.  To me,
    I find convenience having $95.00 in my account.
      
    Incidently, I find Morningstar to provide very good comparisons of
    mutual funds having the same objective.  Also, it gives you indication
    of risk, which can be largely overlooked in prospectuses.
    
    So while I really value Morningstar, I cannot justify buying diskettes,
    when I'm already buying it through my tax dollars.
    
    Bob
 | 
|  | 	A continuation to an old topic. Has anybody had experience with the
	Morningstar Mutual Funds OnDisc CD-ROM product? It's too steep for
	an individual investor ($295 for a single disc, $495 for an annual
	subscription of quarterly updates), but for my personal use I don't
	need up-to-the-minute reports; a 3 or 6-month-old CD would suit me
	fine.
	So, I'm wondering whether any public libraries would be able to lend
	something like this out, or whether any investment clubs or similar
	groups have subscriptions, and would be able to (legally) part with
	an older disc.
	Roy
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