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Realtor.com is the latest company to unveil a tablet app, complete with GPS, social sharing and a place for notes.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Apr 26, 2011 2:09PM

Errol Samuelson, president of Realtor.com (Courtesy of Realtor.com)If you're as old as I am, you may remember when the multiple listing service of homes for sale was contained in a black-and-white printed book, and your agent wasn't even supposed to let you look at it. Actually, you don't have to be that old to remember the MLS book.

Technology has radically changed the way people look for real estate. Most of us have been looking at photos of homes for sale online for years. In the last few years, the tech-savvy have taken their home searches mobile.

The iPad, with its bigger display, may be the next big thing in home shopping. Its larger screen allows for easier use and better photo display than a mobile phone. Real-estate companies are finding the technology as alluring as newspaper and magazine publishers do -- as a way to publish what we once saw on paper on a mobile screen.

 

Realtor.com unveiled its iPad application today, complete with a screen of color photos and information that looks a lot like an old newspaper home-sale advertisement, but with better resolution.

 

"Mobile is changing the way people buy and sell homes, and our iPad app opens up real estate to millions of people with an amazing visual search experience," Steve Berkowitz, chief executive officer of Move Inc., operator of Realtor.com, said in a news release. "It combines mobile’s instant gratification and investigative component that everyone loves with Move’s search technology."

 
Tags: buying

Baby boomers nearing retirement want to pay off their homes while they're still working. You can save a lot on interest – if you can afford the higher payment.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate 6 hours ago

Man writing check, calculator, bills (© Dana Hoff/Getty Images)During the real-estate boom, people were refinancing their homes, pulling out cash and lengthening the mortgage term.

 

In recent years, an opposite trend has emerged: a trend toward shorter loans. That includes 10-year loans, reports syndicated columnist Kenneth R. Harney.

 

Baby boomers who want to pay off their home mortgages before they retire are attracted to 10-year loans. Low interest rates make the shorter term even more appealing.

 
Tags: loans

May's single-family permit pace is the best in 5 years. Total housing starts, including multifamily, were 28.6% higher than a year ago.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate 6 hours ago

© Kelly Redinger/Design Pics/CorbisBuilders began construction on 6.8% more homes in May, but the increase was all in multifamily construction.

 

The number of single-family homes started in May was about the same as in April, according to the latest data from the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Census Bureau. The single-family number is a better indicator of the health of the new-construction market because it’s a less volatile statistic.

 

If construction continues at this pace the rest of the year, builders are on track to construct 914,000 units, including 599,000 single-family homes. That’s up 28.6% for all construction and 16.3% for single-family homes compared with May 2012.

 

Bank of America pushed employees to deny loan modifications and lie to borrowers, ex-workers say, adding that they say they got bonuses for meeting foreclosure quotas.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Mon 1:57 PM

© Radius Images/JupiterimagesBank of America employees said in sworn statements they were told to lie to homeowners about loan modifications and were rewarded for sending homeowners to foreclosure rather than modifying their loans.

 

The allegations, which the bank denies, were made as part of a federal class-action lawsuit in Boston by homeowners who say Bank of America thwarted their attempts to take advantage of the federal Home Affordable Modification Program.

 

For the first time since 2006, more builders are optimistic than pessimistic about sales conditions. Builders expect to start 29% more new homes this year.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Mon 1:20 PM

© Andy Sacks/Getty ImagesIt’s official: Builders are now optimistic about the housing recovery.

 

The monthly National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index reached 52 in June, the first time the index has exceeded 50 in seven years. Any score over 50 means that more builders see sales conditions as good rather than poor.

 

With the inventory of used homes for sale so tight, you’d think builders would have been ecstatic for months. But they have found it difficult to gear up to meet the demand for new homes. Rising materials costs, a shortage of lots, difficulty finding labor and other challenges have tempered builders’ ability to take advantage of the recovery.

 

With the robo-signing scandal resolved, lenders are moving to complete foreclosures. The foreclosure rate is highest in Florida.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Fri 1:05 PM

© Tetra Images/SuperstockForeclosure activity inched up in May, a reminder that the real-estate crisis has not yet run its course in all cities.

 

The number of foreclosure filings – default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions – increased 2% from April to May, led by an 11% increase in bank repossessions, RealtyTrac reported. But the number of repossessions was 29% below the level of last May.

 

The tight inventory of houses and condos on the market is easing in some cities, according to two new reports. That could temper price increases.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Fri 9:35 AM

Woman in front of sale sign with fingers crossed (© SuperStock)Two reports released this week indicate that the shortage of homes for sale is easing, at least in some parts of the country.

 

While reports from both Realtor.com and Zillow.com showed that inventory was still low compared with the same time last year, both companies reported signs that the inventory shortage may be easing.

 

The number of homes listed for sale at Realtor.com rose 5.82% from April to May, compared with 1.77% in the same period last year. The number of homes for sale is 10.11% below last year’s level, which was 14.1% below the level of the year before.

 

The entertainer has created a unique compound in the desert over nearly 20 years. Now the home is on the market for $2.1 million.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Thu 2:17 PM

© Microsoft Corp./PictometryI think it’s safe to say you will never see a house that looks anything like today’s Listing of the Week.

 

Dubbed “The Slammer” by its owner, Penn Jillette, one-half of the Las Vegas comedy-magic duo Penn & Teller, it’s a unique, sprawling custom compound on 8.5 acres of desert 10 miles from the Vegas strip. Asking price is $2.1 million.

 

The compound began to take shape in 1994, when Jillette bought an 1,800-square-foot A-frame house and hired an old friend, architect Colin Summers, to design a custom dwelling. "It’s what Penn would be if he were a house," Summers says in a video tour of the compound. You can read more about the original project here and some of the later additions here.

 

A new analysis by Trulia finds that rates can rise substantially before renting becomes a better deal. But the numbers vary by city – and by individual.

By Teresa at MSN Real Estate Wed 1:42 PM

Home and stack of money on a scale. (© Diane Macdonald/Getty Images)Home mortgage rates are beginning to rise, and that’s causing great anxiety among some would-be homebuyers who can’t find a home to buy.

 

According to a new analysis from the real-estate portal Trulia, interest rates could rise to 10.5%  nationally before renting would become a cheaper option than buying.

 

The numbers vary by city, of course. An interest rate of 5.2% tips the scales in favor of renting in San Jose, Calif., while buying would make sense in Detroit until interest rates rose to a whopping 35.8%.

 

About Teresa Mears

Teresa Mears

Teresa Mears is a veteran journalist who has been interested in houses since her father took her to tax auctions to carry the cash at age 10. A former editor of The Miami Herald's Home & Design section, she lives in South Florida where, in addition to writing about real estate, she publishes Miami on the Cheap to help her neighbors adjust to the loss of 60% of their property value.

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