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How Happy Is Your State?

Do you live in a “happy” state? And just what would that mean, anyway?

To find out, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index conducted a survey of a random sample of 352,840 adults over 2010.

The Index looked at six categories of well-being, including life evaluation (self-evaluation about your present life situation and anticipated one in five years), emotional health, work environment (such as job satisfaction), physical health, healthy behavior, and basic access (access to health care, a doctor, a safe place to exercise and walk, as well as community satisfaction), according to a report yesterday from LiveScience.

The happiest state?

Via How Happy Is Your State?.

RentWiki Launches First Socially Integrated Apartment Rental Site

By Robert Turnbull

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RentWiki.com announced today the launch of the first online rental site that lets apartment hunters vet not only the property but the neighboring community as well. By integrating social media and networking features with property listings, RentWiki.com allows existing renters to contribute content about their neighborhoods, 5a8 as well as interact with potential neighbors before they commit.
“It’s hard to get a feel for the day-to-day life and character of a neighborhood from such standard sources as chambers of commerce, property listings, random blogs or basic apartment listing sites,” said Jamie Gallo, CEO, RentWiki.com. “RentWiki.com gives an insider’s look at potential areas of residence and a platform to network with the people living there, making it faster and easier than ever to find the right place to live.”

RentWiki.com was designed after six years of research to deliver what people have been looking for but unable to find through existing online rental services. The site offers an unprecedented, interactive look at daily life at the neighborhood level in a wiki format via locally contributed content, content widgets, and other social networking tools. In addition to wiki content, RentWiki.com includes neighborhood reviews, pros and cons, and renter recommendations. Unlike other Internet sites that focus solely on apartment features, RentWiki.com helps people find a home and neighborhood that fit their personal style, taste and financial needs by seeing what people who actually live there have to say about the area’s:

  • Neighbors – what do the local residents think of the area?
  • Social scene – bars, clubs, restaurants
  • Value – how do prices measure up to quality of life?
  • Transportation/parking
  • Unique rental process ‘ins and outs’
  • Pet friendliness/unfriendliness
  • Entertainment/recreation
  • Recommended streets/areas
  • Essentials – groceries, gyms, banks, etc.
  • Family information – schools, community centers and houses of worship
  • And more categories as users create new and relevant topics

RentWiki.com content is screened by the company and its site users. Malicious or inappropriate content is removed. In addition, all renter leads sent to an apartment community are reviewed and validated as legitimate leads.

ForRent.com’s New Partnership Encourages Neighborhood Reviews

Rentwiki_ForRent_Logo

“Consumers trust the unbiased opinion of other consumers,” said Brock MacLean, senior vice president of national sales and development [at ForRent.com]. “According to a September 2010 study from the Pew Research Center, nearly one-fourth of U.S. adults say they have posted comments or reviews online about the products or services they buy. ForRent.com has an exclusive partnership with RentWiki.com that allows us to incorporate user-generated content into our site. This creates another platform for renters to communicate with each other.”

More… via ForRent

12 Reasons Why Moving is a Good Thing

By Relocation.com

Living in a new place can really open your mind to new experiences – ranging from meeting new people to learning about a new area. This all begins with moving, when you leave your comfortable environment and start fresh in a new uncharted one. Moving isn’t all sunshine and roses though. It can elicit a lot of fear and apprehension – from fear of the unknown, to fears about finding and trusting moving companies with all of your prized possessions. All of these things, no matter how scary they may seem, are actually good things and can be positive steps to a new and exciting life.

Move

Whether moving to a new location is your decision or not, it is your decision how to embrace it. Here are 12 reasons why relocating can be a positive experience:

1. Having to learn your way around a new place helps you become more resourceful. Once presented in a new environment you will be forced to live outside of your comfort zone. This can mean something as simple as having to learn where the post office is or getting to know your new neighborhood by taking a walking tour of your new community.

2. Living in a new place is a great way to expand your horizons, both geographically and mentally. Relocating builds confidence, humor and an appreciation for adventure. You may find yourself living near a park and find yourself running in your new town or living in a city and finding a new hobby or club to join. Whatever it is, living in a new area can expand your mind and allow you to try something new that you may never have attempted before.

3. You can reinvent yourself. If you live in the town where you grew up, your childhood friends and family will see you the same way at age 35 as they did at 15. A new location can mean a new you. When relocating, you can start fresh by trying new hobbies or even switching careers.

4. It’s the perfect time for self-improvement. Relocating is an excellent opportunity to break bad habits. Living in a new and fresh environment often forces you to think and live in different ways; this may mean breaking old habits like excessive television watching, smoking and/or drinking.

5. You’ll meet new people and make new friends. Moving is a great opportunity to expand your social network and meet new people. As the old adage goes, “Make new friends, but keep the old.” It is important to stay connected to your old friends, but meeting new people is a great way to spend time with people who share your interests, as well as finding someone who can help you acclimate to your new town. Online resources and local community boards are great ways to make new friends.

6. Moving will keep your brain fresh. When you know a place inside out, your brain can go on autopilot. Moving to a new place forces your brain to learn new things and be resourceful.

7. You’ll experience a new culture. Whether moving from the East Coast to the West Coast, from the Midwest to the Southwest, or from New England to England, you will find that each geographical location has its own culture, traditions and food. What a wonderful way to experience something new.

8. You may appreciate more. What are you taking for granted where you’re currently living? After living in Japan, I really appreciated Western style toilets, non-smoking restaurants, and being able to find good wine easily. There are some luxuries that you don’t realize you have until you leave where you are from.

9. You’ll learn more about yourself. It is easy to get comfortable with our surroundings – never really thinking about the streets we walk down or second-guessing our coffee choices. This also applies to how we react in our day-to-day life. When moving, you’ll learn more about how to be independent or acquire new skills – whatever it is, getting outside of your comfort zone is always good for personal growth.

10. You’ll test your organization skills. Let’s face it; moving means getting organized. There is no better way to test your skills by having to stay on top of movers, packing, obtaining boxes and much more.

11. You’ll get rid of junk. Over the years, whether we realize it or not, we collect junk – ranging from the useful to items that should be trashed. Moving is great time to decide if they should be tossed, donated or move on with you. You may find that you have a lot of items that you don’t need, so lightening your load now can help you move on to your new town with a clean slate (not to mention fewer boxes).

12. You can always leave! You have nothing to lose. But if you don’t go, you may always wonder, “What if?”

Find An Apartment

Finding an apartment is going to be time consuming, exciting and somewhat frustrating. As difficult as it can be, there’s nothing that compares to it…

Apartment Hunting

Finding an apartment is going to be so overwhelming. Where do I start? How much will it cost? What does the apartment come with? Who’s going to help me move? If you don’t have a general idea of what you want and where you want it, you’ll have a harder time trying to decide.

Did you know that 1 in 6 people move out every year. That’s about 5 million people! You have a lot of competition out there. A lot of them have no idea what they’re doing either.

That’s where we come in. We’ve been where you are and have already gone through all this crap so you don’t have to. We’ve broken down the moving process into sections and have listed just about everything we could think of that you will need to know.

Time to start the apartment search

First things, first. Let’s find an apartment. But in order to do that, you need to answer a few questions….

Read more… via www.girlsmoveout.com

A Mother’s Tips for Moving to a New Home

Moving Tips from an Experienced Mom

By: Vera Mosley, August 30, 2010

If you’re like many Americans, you move homes fairly regularly. In fact, more than 40 million Americans move every year, according to the Census Bureau. For many folks, moving is about getting into a bigger or better home. Whatever the reason, moving always brings stress and extra expense.

This month, I’m organizing my family’s move from Phoenix to Texas. We’re a family of re-locaters. With a husband in the service, I’ve gotten used to moving on a moment’s notice. But, with each move comes the task of organizing our junk much-treasured belongings, getting all the members of our family ready, scheduling appointments with Realtors, calling ahead to turn on utilities, figuring out car licensing, etc.

With each move I’ve made, I’ve learned a few things. Here are five helpful moving tips that will hopefully make your next move a little easier:

Read more…  quizzle.com

The Renter’s Manifesto

“Stop throwing your money away on rent.” You see the phrase in Realtor junk mail and hear it from new homebuyers who are immersed in the nightmare of paperwork, points, and plastering.

The logic is simple: renting is just flushing money down the toilet; buying a house gives you a piece of something to call your own. You earn home equity and end up with something tangible to pass down to your heirs–or to sell or refinance when you retire.

There is a kernel of truth to all of this. But it’s mostly crap. I’ve been a renter all my adult life, and I have plenty of home equity. My home equity is called “cash,” and it’s the accumulated difference between what I pay in rent and what a comparable homeowner pays for their mortgage, maintenance, property taxes, and utilities. (Sure, I pay for all of those things indirectly, but that’s the point: they’re rolled into my rent, and they’re not rolled into your mortgage.)

Unlike a homeowner, I can choose to invest my equity in something other than real estate. I can spend my equity without taking out a line of credit. I might squander my equity, but I’ll never be “underwater” due to the vagaries of the market. And I accumulate home equity more quickly than the average homeowner.

Yes, thirty years from now, when your mortgage is paid off, you will own a home, free and clear. You know what I’ll own? Enough money to pay cash for your home.

Sure, I’m making a big assumption: I’m assuming the value of your house won’t rise much faster than inflation (or, at least, not much faster than the performance of my investments). Harvard professor Ed Glaeser, writing on the New York Times’s Economix blog, thinks this is an excellent assumption:

Houses are assets, too, but it’s a mistake to expect them to offer a regular rise in price. Houses pay hefty dividends to their owners in the form of living space–that’s the real return on housing investment–and the basic economics of housing doesn’t point to perpetual price growth.

Indeed, the Case-Shiller index, the most respected measure of housing prices, shows that they’ve barely outpaced inflation since 1890.

I’m also assuming that I have the discipline to keep saving the money. So far so good. Homebuying is often lauded as a “compulsory saving scheme.” I guess that’s true: it’s a scheme that compels you to invest a large proportion of your money in real estate. How is this better than simply increasing your 401(k) contribution?

Two kinds of renters

We’re not so different, Joe Homeowner and me. I rent property from a landlord. He rents money from a bank.

Every month, I write my landlord a check. The money gets spent on orthodontia for the landlord’s kids, and I will never see it again.

Every month, Joe writes his banker a check. The interest portion of the payment–for Joe, that’s well over half the payment, more than I spend on rent for a similar home–gets spent on polishing the banker’s yacht, and Joe will never see it again.

For this analogy, I’m indebted to David Crook of the Wall Street Journal, who wrote a landmark 2007 column on the topic:

Mortgage interest is rent that you pay to your lender for the use of its money rather than to a landlord for the use of his house…most of your monthly payment neither builds equity nor is deductible. It just goes down the same black hole that sucks up any other renter’s money. And it takes 20 years before a typical borrower pays more principal each month than interest.

Oh, but what about the mortgage interest deduction? It’s not for Joe. It’s for my landlord and Joe’s banker. Only half of homeowners take it–the rest are better off with the standard deduction–and the average tax savings for those who do is $2000, according to Roger Lowenstein of the New York Times. (The big winners in the mortgage interest deduction game are homeowners who make over $250,000 a year but not so much that they can afford to buy a home with cash.)

Trapped in the closet

Home ownership, it has long been said, leads to financial and community stability. The last three years should have taught everyone that “owning” (that is, financing) a home is no protection against financial upheaval.

As for community stability, be careful what you wish for. If you lose your job, the worst place to find yourself is trapped in an underwater house. I could move with two weeks notice and get my security deposit back.

This isn’t just anecdote. As Tim Harford reported in Slate:

English economist Andrew Oswald has shown that across European countries, and across U.S. states, high levels of home ownership are correlated with high levels of unemployment…. Renting your home and staying flexible do wonders for your chances of always finding an interesting job to do.

As for high levels of homeownership creating community, I’m not sure how you would measure that. All I know is that my family lives in one of the safest and most desirable census tracts in Seattle; as of the 2000 census, it consisted of 85% renters.

Why buy?

Am I saying nobody should buy a house? Of course not. There are plenty of situations where you would want to do so:

* You live in a place where the total monthly cost of renting is similar to borrowing. This is true in a lot of non-housing-bubbly places, outside of big cities and off the coasts. In that case, sure, why not?

* You really want to be able to renovate. Yes, this requires ownership. But be careful: renovation costs are almost never recouped when a house is sold. Also, people talk about the ability to customize as if this should be important to everyone. I just don’t care to get my hands dirty.

* The kind of house you want in the neighborhood you want isn’t available for rent. (This is unlikely to be the case in the present market, however).

* There’s a specific house you want, and you can afford to buy it with a big down payment and a boring 15- or 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

Just because a house isn’t a good investment, in most cases, doesn’t mean you shouldn’t buy one. A steak isn’t a good investment, either. The problem is, houses cost more than steaks, and a lot of people are convinced that everyone should own one, whether they can afford it or not. If you can’t afford to buy real estate, or just don’t want to, don’t. It’s okay. You’re still a grownup.

Me? There isn’t anything I want out of my financial, social, or family life that requires me to own real estate. So I rent.

Hungry Monkey out now: http://hungrymonkeybook.com/

Microsoft Street Slide Review vs Google Street View

Pull over Goggle Street View… Bing’s Street Slide View is looking good.

Augmented Reality: PlanningAlerts Uses Mobile to Reveal Undesirable Real Estate

PlanningAlerts, an Australian website for property development proposals, is extending its service to mobile using Layar augmented reality.

According to The Sydney Morning Herald:

The new app could soon become the weapon of choice for those looking at buying or renting an apartment to find out if the location could become undesirable due to a new development.

It could be used, for example, to learn whether prospective views might soon be obstructed.

The app demonstrates the disruptive nature of open data and anywhere access. With information flowing like water, organizations are being forced to rethink the way they act. From personal online identities to the retail space, transparency is the new norm.

[via textually]

Study Says Most Marketers Should Forgo Foursquare

Forrester: Why Most Marketers Should Forgo Foursquare

Report Finds That Only 4% of Online Adults Use Location-Based Services

by Kunur Patel
Published: July 26, 2010

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Marketers, hold off on Foursquare — for now. That’s the verdict of Forrester Research on location-based start-ups, which, despite their reputation as the hot new media, are still too small for major marketers. The research firm finds that these heavily-hyped apps currently make sense mainly for brands seeking male influencers.

In a study out today, Forrester finds that only 4% of U.S. online adults have ever used location-based mobile apps such as Foursquare, Gowalla and Loopt. Only 1% update these services more than once per week. What’s more, 84% of respondents said they are not familiar with such apps, leaving the vast majority of Americans online still in the dark about location-based apps, which have had the marketing world obsessing over them in recent months.

The report could also be a wake-up call for social media on mobile phones, especially when comparing the location services to the last social-media darling, Twitter. The micro-blogging service reports 35% of its 125 million registered users are in the U.S. and only a fraction of that number accesses Twitter via mobile. In April, Twitter said 37% of its usage comes via mobile clients. Apply that percentage to U.S. tweeters — we must extrapolate because the company does not break out U.S. users via mobile specifically — and the 16 million Americans using Twitter via mobile is about comparable to the location-apps audience in total.

Almost 80% of location-based service users are male. Close to 70% of them are between the ages of 19 and 35, and 70% have college degrees or higher. Forrester also found these location-app users to be influential (the report finds they’re 38% more likely to say friends and family ask their opinions before a purchase) and they are especially receptive to mobile coupons and offers. This set is up to 20% more likely to consult their phones before a purchase, and are far more likely to research products and services and read customer reviews.

This small audience is still attractive to some marketers. Forrester recommends that gaming, consumer electronics and sportswear marketers lead the way with testing these apps. Location apps have already proved they’re not only for male-oriented brands. PepsiCo, Starbucks, Oil of Olay, Bravo and, most recently, Campbell’s Soup have all launched campaigns with location apps.

Forrester analyst Melissa Parrish believes that male-oriented brands should forge the way and other marketers should hang back until these apps get bigger audiences. To date, Foursquare has more than 2 million users; Loopt 4 million and MyTown 2.5 million. Scale could come to the category if digital behemoths such as Facebook, Google and Twitter, which have already made moves toward location services, develop their own products.

Wow… I couldn’t disagree more. 4SQ is up to 2 million users (in about a year?); I don’t consider this an irrelevant or small number for many biz/marketing objectives. 70% of geo location app users are “college educated and “especially receptive to mobile coupons and offers.” 38% are “more likely to say friends and family ask their opinions before a purchase… and read customer reviews.” Sounds to me like a growing crowd… taking the lead. My guess is the girlz will overtake the boyz as soon as they get wind of all the “specials” to be had.

About Us

“Where should I live?” is a question 40 million movers ask each year.


When we move, we want to know much more than bed, bath, and price. We want to know about the location, safety, walkability, social scene, etc. and get a feel for the neighborhood. Instead of starting dozens of rental sites to sort through hundreds of listings, we call a friend, family member, or co-worker and ask for advice and their opinion to help narrow down the location.


We’ve previously launched sites such as ApartmentGuide.com, RealEstate.com and Rentals.com, and are guest speakers about social media at industry events. (Next gig - http://tr.im/speaking)

 

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