Daily Archives: May 17, 2011

A conversation with tech guru Walt Mossberg | Inman News In Pound Ridge NY

 Walt MossbergWalt Mossberg

I recently had an opportunity to chat with Walt Mossberg about the ninth annual All Things Digital conference and get his insights on mobile, social media and the next big thing.

Mossberg is the author and creator of the weekly Personal Technology column in The Wall Street Journal, which has appeared every Thursday since 1991.

In addition to Personal Technology, Mossberg also writes the Mossberg’s Mailbox column in the Journal, and edits The Digital Solution column, which is authored by his colleague, Katherine Boehret.

He appears regularly on television and Internet video as a commentator on technology issues. He is a weekly contributor to the Fox Business Network and has been interviewed repeatedly on programs like “Charlie Rose” and “PBS NewsHour,” as well as on National Public Radio.

The following is my Q-and-A with Mossberg.

Q: The initial lineup for the upcoming All Things Digital conference includes Andrew Mason, CEO of Groupon. A Chicago-based real estate firm recently offered a deal through Groupon, which was a first in our industry. Can you talk about Groupon and its effect on consumer shopping?

A: Groupon and its competitors have done two important things: made coupons digital, and therefore easy and instant in a tight economy; and made them social by requiring a minimum number of people to participate and encouraging people to get their friends to participate.

Q: Apple finally addressed concerns over the iPhone collecting and storing location data. Apple, Google, Microsoft and RIM seem to approach privacy differently. How concerned should we be?

A: I believe that, at least for now, Apple isn’t violating the privacy of individual iPhone users. But, overall, the privacy dangers involved in location-based apps and in Web advertising and app advertising in general are considerable.

I believe that either the industry or the government must require all involved companies to not only disclose when information is being collected, but ask the user’s permission.

Q: At the D8 conference, you put Mark Zuckerburg on the “hot seat” and addressed privacy concerns with Facebook and social media. Has Facebook matured in the last year? What do you think the future holds for Facebook?

A: Facebook has improved its privacy controls, but it still is too easy for users’ information to wind up exposed to outside people and entities without their even knowing it. Users must be especially careful when using third-party apps on the Facebook platform, since they can be granted access to lots of information.

Q: There has been a huge explosion in mobile, which has certainly impacted the real estate industry. The iPad has been wildly popular. How have other tablets matched up, in your opinion? For example, the BlackBerry Playbook, the Xoom, Samsung Galaxy, etc.

A: Not yet. In my tests so far, no other tablet has measured up to the iPad 2 in terms of key factors like battery life and the variety and quality of tablet-optimized apps. Also, no other tablet has achieved significant market share. But the competition is just getting started.

Q: Last December you hosted “Dive into Mobile” in San Francisco and there will be an “AsiaD” in Hong Kong this October. These are new conferences, can you talk about these events and some of the new things you’re working on?

A: For nine years, we’ve had great success with the annual D: All Things Digital conference each spring in California. And we have an influential website … that runs year-round. So, now we are expanding.

We have more than doubled the writing staff of the website and are adding new versions of the conference. The Asian edition is especially important, because Asia is a tech hotbed, and we are planning to bring over a number of important U.S. tech figures, plus tech leaders from all over Asia.

Q: Social media, mobile and apps have changed the technology landscape. What do you see as the “next big thing”?

A: We are in the “post-PC” era, where a wide variety of devices will have access to apps and data stored on servers in the “cloud.” Apps for smartphones, tablets, e-readers and other devices, plus Web apps that run inside browsers, could gradually replace traditional programs running on laptops.

And laptops themselves will become redefined. Apple is incorporating iPad-like features into its next computer operating system, and Google is bringing out “Chromebooks” — laptops that run an operating system that’s essentially nothing but a browser that runs apps from the Web.

 

 

 

Top 15 Regions for Smart Transit | Urban Real Estate News | NYC Transit

Robyn Griggs Lawrence thumbnailThe Natural Resources Defense Council’s Smarter Cities Project has named the top 15 metropolitan regions for transportation innovation and smart transit, on the heels of a new study showing that superior location substantially reduces a household’s environmental footprint. The study found that households in transit-oriented locations consume less energy than those in conventional suburban locations, even if residents of the suburban home employs energy-efficient building technology and drive fuel-efficient vehicles.

The good news is that “cities across the country are finding innovative solutions to costly commutes by providing cheaper, healthier alternatives,” In America’s Smartest Regions for Transportation, the NRDC cites Lincoln, Nebraska, where low-income riders pay $7.50 for unlimited bus rides all month long, and New York, where residents travel fewer miles in the car than residents in any other region in the country besides Jersey City, New Jersey. “By and large, ‘location efficient’ places – with essential services that are nearby or accessible by many transportation modes – lower transportation costs for residents,” says Scott Bernstein, president of the Center for Neighborhood Technology (CNT). “Cities and regions that foster compact, walkable, transit-rich communities can reduce reliance on automobiles and help lower at least one expense for households struggling to get by in the current economy.”

The NRDC study, created in collaboration with CNT, compares and profiles U.S. cities based on public transit availability and use; household automobile ownership and use; and innovative, sustainable and affordable transportation programs. How does your city rate?

2011 Smarter Cities for Transportation 

Large (population > 1 million)

Boston, MA/NH 

Chicago, IL 

New York, NY  

Portland, OR 

Philadelphia, PA/NJ  

San Francisco, CA 

Washington, DC/MD/VA/WV 

 

Medium  (pop. between 250,000 – 1 million)

Boulder-Longmont, CO 

Honolulu, HI 

Jersey City, NJ 

New Haven, CT 

 

Small (pop. < 250,000)

Bremerton, WA 

Champaign-Urbana, IL 

Lincoln, NE 

Yolo, CA 

boston transit  

Boston tops the list of transit-friendly metro areas. Photo by Soopy Sue/iStock 

 

 

NAR New Home Sales | Bedford NY Homes

Each day the Research staff takes a look at recently released economic indicators, addressing what these indicators mean for REALTORS® and their clients. Today’s update highlights housing starts.

  • dyk051711
  • The Census Bureau released monthly figures for housing starts this morning.  The seasonally adjusted figure for April fell 10.6% to 523,000 units.
  • Both the single-family and multi-family sectors tumbled in April falling 5.1% and 24.1%, respectively.  Total permits eased 4.0%.  Permitting has experienced wide swings in 2011 and fell in 3 of the last 5 months.  The tepid trend for permits reflects builder confidence which remained weak in May as reported yesterday by the NAHB.
  • The decline in construction has a mixed impact.  Construction was an important source of both income and job growth during most of the recent economic expansions and job creation will remain muted until the construction sector reemerges.  However, there is a large reserve of distressed properties on the market.  Limited construction caps the new supply, better enabling the market to handle the excess supply until market conditions improve.  In the meantime, the decline in new construction will retard new home sales in the near term as there are fewer new homes to be sold.

 

Bedford NY Homes

twitter unfollow tools in Katonah NY | Katonah NY Realtor Tools

5 Unfollow Tools to Keep Your Twitter Account Spam Free

Twitter is a fun social network where you can follow people, make fans or friends. It is hard to keep count of the following or followers and at one point it becomes hard to keep up with everyone. Moreover, spammers add salt to the wounds by posting their junk and spammy tweets promoting their beloved sites. Not only do they spam our feeds, they make our inbox go frenzy as well. That’s why we should unfollow people regularly in order to keep our Twitter account spam free.

Unfollowing can be done manually in the twitter website but it is a time consuming and less effective way. Nowadays, there are many web based unfollow tools that can be used to distinguish the people responsible for your bad twitter experience and mass unfollow them. Here are 5 great tools that would aid you to keep your twitter account spam-free.

ManageFlitter

ManageFlitter is arguably one of the best free twitter unfollow tools out in the web. It has a wide set of features, that helps the twitter users manage and organize their twitter accounts more efficiently. ManageFlitter usually categorizes your followers list and let you decide the persons to unfollow. It has super easy interface and the tool is completely free.

Friend or Follow

Friend or Follow is a good twitter management and unfollow tool too. It categorizes your followers list based on the way of their following. For example, they categorize them in 3 categories, following, fans, and friends. Friend or Follow provides with a wonderful sleek web interface. The best thing about this tool is that there is no need for creating an account. You can login to the service by using your username alone.

SocialToo

SocialToo is one of the best paid twitter unfollow tools. The best thing about this tool is the e-mail service they provide. If you pay a measly $20 onetime fee, they will send you an e-mail daily with the list of followers and unfollowers of that particular day. This is extremely helpful for distinguishing the users that follow people, send message and unfollow them. SocialToo provides another unique feature, The DM Spam Control. It helps the twitter users have a clean inbox by finding the spammy followers that flood the inbox and automatically unfollowing them.

The Twit Cleaner

The Twit Cleaner is a wonderful unfollow tool for twitter. It helps you differentiate people by categorizing them in different categories. For example, the dodgy, absent, repetitive, flooding, and non-responsive people. The categories are divided into several sub-categories as well. You can easily unfollow the unwanted people by following these categories. The service is free for accounts with up to 2000 followers.

UnTweeps
UnTweeps is a simple yet trendy web based unfollow tool for twitter. You can sort people based on their inactivity within a certain time span. This is a good method for filtering the useless profiles and unfollow them.

With these amazing tools, you can unfollow the unwanted people and maintain a spam free twitter account.

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Builders bank on real estate test drive | Inman News in Chappaqua NY

  

I’ve noticed a number of news reports lately on the extreme lengths to which builder/developers are going to try to push entrenched would-be buyers off the fence and into buying a property. And bizarrely enough, I’ve seen multiple articles around a single theme: the real estate test drive.

Yes, the real estate test drive. One builder in Georgia is letting would-be buyers spend the weekend in one of their unsold properties for $99, hoping that they’ll love their surroundings so much that they’ll ring up the sales office on Sunday evening and sign the papers to make their vacation home their permanent residence.

And the Wall Street Journal says “dozens” of retirement communities in sunny foreclosure hot spots like Arizona, Florida and California are offering the 55-plus set the opportunity to take a two-night test drive in their fully furnished, luxury-laden model homes for the low, low price of $299 for the weekend.

Desperate times call for desperate measures, so far be it from me to criticize these builders’ creativity and hustle. This extreme strategy will undoubtedly generate some revenue from their assets that were just sitting empty before, has already generated a good value in terms of press coverage and might even generate some sales; the Georgia builder says about 17 percent of the 1,100 people who have signed up for the deal have bought homes. Having people pay for the opportunity to sell themselves on the properties? Seems sort of win-win, no?

With that said, I don’t know that the premise of the real estate test drive really deals with the core issues keeping most procrastinating, qualified, would-be buyers on the fence. Maybe for that 17 percent, indecision about the property is the problem, and staying in the most tricked-out model home the developer has to offer will push them into pulling the trigger. But for the other 80 percent-plus of hemmers-and-hawers, there are a number of other issues and experiences they would need to test-drive to thaw their self-imposed homebuying freeze:

1. Test-driving a mortgage: The prospect of having a mortgage — a long-term commitment to paying for a home — is daunting to some would-be buyers and completely horrifying to others. The fact is, even renters have a 30-year (or longer) commitment to paying for housing.

In fact, their commitment is as long as their lifespan — if you live 50 years, and you rent that whole time, you’ll be paying rent for 50 years. If you live another 60 years, but you buy a home now with a 30-year mortgage and you pay it every month without refinancing, in 30 years that obligation is over and that payment will go away.

So, to some extent, we all are “test-driving,” having a long-term commitment to paying for housing, even if we don’t know it. But what renters might be concerned about is making that payment commitment to a larger amount than they are currently paying, without the flexibility to move to a cheaper place and reduce their expenses, if they need to in a financial crunch. What they don’t think about is that homeowners can take in roommates or move and rent their homes out, if their financial picture grows dire.

In fact, if you have a job loss or temporary financial glitch and can’t pay your rent, you’ll likely get booted out within a month or so of missing your first payment. It’s bad form to plan on missing mortgage payments, but if you should happen to, due to unavoidable circumstances, it might take six months of missed payments to get evicted, much longer, in some cases.

(Right now, the average number of missed mortgage payments before a foreclosure ranges from 16 to 22 months, in various states.)

2. Test-driving permanence and immobility: For other buyers, the biggest concern about committing to homeownership has nothing to do with the mortgage — it’s all about needing to be in the same geographic place for years to come. They don’t know if their job will move, or their industry will crumple and they’ll need to relocate.

They don’t know if the loft that seems perfect for them today will still work for them a few years down the road. And they don’t know what the history of home values will hold, which leads to the next thing conflicted homebuyers wish they could test drive: the market.

3. Test-driving the market: Probably the largest driver of homebuyer hesitance is the fear that home prices will continue to decline after they close their home purchase. By waiting, they hope to hedge against further price declines, often delaying the life they really want to live and delaying the tax and other advantages of homeownership.

The best test-drive would be one where they could buy and have some sort of stop-loss in place; a guarantee that the value of their home would never drop below what they paid for it.

Unfortunately, these simply don’t exist.

Fact is, no one knows what will happen in the housing market over the short-term. So, a short-term buy is simply, truly, deeply inadvisable. Wannabe buyers can best hedge against losses by picking a home that should work for their family, life and career plans for the next seven to 10 years (shorter in a market that’s been fairly recession-proof, longer in a locale that has been a foreclosure hot spot, like most of those where the test-drive homes are on offer).

4. Test-drive retirement: Much data has recently been released revealing the distressing delays that the recession has created in the financial lives of many retirement-aged Americans. I suspect that some of these real estate test drives are designed to get those who have pushed retirement off for a few years excited about the vision of the lifestyle they could live in retirement and lured into buying that retirement home now, while prices are low.

But if your current financial plans didn’t allow for you to buy your retirement home with integrity, falling in love with a place during a test drive should not change your decision-making. On the other hand, if you simply need to put retirement off, but it makes financial sense to buy now, while you have a salary and while prices and rates are low, then perhaps the test drive can help the property selection part of the process.

Either way, market dynamics and even falling in love with a particular home should not overshadow the personal finance and life plans that you know make sense in light of your numbers and your vision.

With all that said, I’m a huge believer that only a well-qualified, financially responsible subset of people who really want to be homeowners should buy homes.

But I also know that there are many things besides concerns that can be overcome by a stay in a home that stop even the best-qualified of wannabe buyers from moving forward, despite the current climate of high-affordability and low-rates (which are unlikely to stay this low for much longer).

More critical than the fact that a given house might not be the right one — which is the issue ostensibly addressed by a test drive — are the many, graver concerns with which smart buyers should rightfully be occupied.

From the long-term commitment to a mortgage, to the long-term commitment to a home or geography, to whether or not they are ready to buy or retire in the first place, buyers-to-be are smart to calculate for all these items they can’t test-drive, but can plan and strategize for in their decision-making, before they test-drive or commit to a home.

       

      

 

    

    

     

  

      

 

      

 

   

  

House of the Week: Frank Lloyd Wright’s ‘Usonian’ in Houston for sale | Inman News in Katonah NY

Location: Houston, Texas
Price: $3.29 million
The Skinny: When this Frank Lloyd Wright-designed spread was constructed in 1954, the Bunker Hill neighborhood was a remote suburb, but by 1991, the area was so popular that the famed architect’s only Houston commission was threatened by a wave of redevelopment. Luckily, the current owners purchased the property and adapted it to a modern lifestyle, building an addition that vastly expanded the 1,200-square-foot Usonian original. Now measuring more than 10,000 square feet, the home includes six bedrooms, 7.5 baths, a courtyard swimming pool, and two kitchens. Though it traded in ’91 for just $535K, the expense of renovation and solid appreciation in the Houston property market means the asking price is now $3.29 million.

Sources: Houston Association of Realtors, The New York Times.

View the original item at Curbed.com: “Frank Lloyd Wright’s Only Houston Commission For Sale,” by Rob Bear.

Don’t expect mortgage interest deduction to go away | Inman News in South Salem NY

  

 Two Washington insiders, speaking during the National Association of Realtors midyear conference last week, said the debate over changes to the mortgage interest deduction is largely for show, and that major changes are unlikely.

The mortgage interest deduction is a “sacred cow that has been under attack for years,” but support for housing and the MID remains strong on Capitol Hill, said Paul Equale of Equale & Associates.

NAR strongly opposes any changes to the mortgage interest deduction, saying such changes could  further depress home prices by up to 15 percent.”Controversial issues have a tendency to get teed up in election years,” the political consultant and former Democratic Party official said, and sometimes issues are put into play “for purely political purposes.”

But support for changing the MID is mostly confined to the far right and far left, Equale said, with those in the center wary of the claimed benefits of scaling it back.