I used TobaccoCellar at one point and moved to excel. When I was using it the site frequently went down without an announcement, which led me to download a CSV file of my cellar to my PC just to make sure I wouldn't lose all of the data. Secondly, I found that their databases for tobacco and genre were either outdated or not helpful. I moved all of my data to an excel workbook, that way I keep all of my data and I can track characteristics that are important to me. I also built macros that would decode tin dates for Dunhilll, SG, and others. As observed earlier pivot tables can be a source of insight or alarm.
There was another app, I forget the name, that was available for a while. It required a paid subscription, tried it had the same issues as TobaccoCellar. I was not convinced that either could be depended on any length of time, if I'm going to spend time maintaining a database of my cellar I'm going to keep it on my computer.
There was another app, I forget the name, that was available for a while. It required a paid subscription, tried it had the same issues as TobaccoCellar. I was not convinced that either could be depended on any length of time, if I'm going to spend time maintaining a database of my cellar I'm going to keep it on my computer.