The end of EveryBlock, Monopoly’s new token, and Florida foreclosures

If you were an EveryBlock fan, you know that the hyper-local news site is no more. It abruptly shut down this week as owner NBC decided it just wasn’t paying the bills. Hyper-local news was going to be the next big thing. News about your community, your street and your block. What happened?

Facebook’s latest ‘new feature’ – have we been crying out for any of these? – is Graph Search, giving a basic search functionality to you or your friends’ profiles. Now you can find out if cousin Martha really did wish you a happy birthday in 2010. But what it also does is open up your profile from the beginning, those wild days of yesteryear when maybe you weren’t so picky about your privacy settings. Well if that gives you the shudders, the Wall Street Journal has a nice blog post on How to Prepare Your Facebook Profile’s Privacy for Graph Search.

Being in real estate, we of course keep track of changes to the greatest real estate game of them all – Monopoly. This week the venerable board game threw out the dreaded iron token, replacing it with a cat.

Instagram started on the iPhone, came to Android, and now is available on the web.

NPR had an interesting story this week on the ongoing pain foreclosures are giving to the Florida real estate market.

More often than not, the headphones you see on the young punk sitting next to you on the train will sport the distinctive ‘b’ of the brand Beats by Dr. Dre. While some say the brand is overpriced and the sound not that great, if there’s any headphones to counter Apple’s white earbuds, these are the ones. The story of their start, a tech company in way over its head, and how Dre and his backers managed to take control of the brand, makes for an interesting read this week on Gizmodo.

For those in need of a little humor to bust those winter blues, we recommend checking out the reviews for The Mountain Three Wolf Moon Short Sleeve Tee (click the link for “2,365 customer reviews”).

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Dystopias, saving $ in summer, and how unlucky is Friday the 13th?

Those Big Brother posters from 1984 really would work. Researchers show that even the illusion of being observed – even by a poster with eyes on it – makes people more honest. At least in England…

Speaking of dystopia: The rise of e-Readers is impacting more than just the publishing industry. Crain’s Chicago Business reports that built-in bookshelves in homes are passe. More and more owners are ripping them out or dry-walling them over in favor of flat screen TVs.

Rounding out our theme of nightmare realms:  Thought all your friends playing Farmville was annoying? Try Gagaville, launching next week. Yes, THAT Gaga.

Appolicious is a directory of free and paid apps on many subjects—health, finance, games, music and travel to name a few.  ABC 7 Chicago has highlighted a few of its navigation and driving apps in a recent story.

Summer heat is a mastermind at emptying our wallets. In today’s economy, many families cannot afford large rises in their monthly bills. How can you keep energy costs low this Summer?

Are accidents more likely to happen on Friday the 13th? How about if there’s also a full moon and a lunar eclipse? Slate revisits a classic Atul Gawande Medical Examiner column from 1998.

Be careful out there!

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Facebook apathy, eBooks for iPads, the value of homeownership, and your favorite childhood toys

Marketing through Facebook should be ideal – you’re connecting with friends and colleagues, reaching people who actually ‘like’ what you’re doing. So why is it often such a colossal failure? Scott Stratton at UnMarketing talks about how we are killing Facebook with events and spam marketing.

Katherine Boehret of the Wall Street Journal wrote an article this week (available for free at least as of now here or you can try here, and for NAR members via ProQuest here) on her experience in checking out eBooks using the OverDrive app from her public library in Washington DC. This is the same system NAR uses in its ebook collection. Her experience is useful in explaining how it all works, some current limitations, and things that might be a bit frustrating to newbies. Remember REALTORS, if you get stuck with the app or downloading any version of eBooks through our library, you can call us for help – 800-874-6500.

In an article extolling the virtues of the fixed 30-year mortgage, Nicolas Retsinas points out a disturbing trend for today’s retirees:

As late as 1989, more than 80 percent of all homeowners over 65 had paid off their mortgages, and they could tap into that money for retirement. And since some of the retirees had defined-benefit pensions that provided them with a set amount every month (so long as the company remained solvent), they found retirement the proverbial golden age. Today, unfortunately, only a third of people over age 65 have paid off their homes.

These may not be the worst of times for real estate professionals, but they certainly are not the best either. To add insult to injury, it is now tax time. However, there’s one thing you can do to help keep your head above water: Take all the tax deductions to which you are entitled.

The mortgage interest deduction is under attack and pundits are declaring that it’s a new age for renters, not homeowners. But before everyone goes running off the cliff on their way to apartmentpeople.com, NAR and REALTORS® in general are asking consumers to take a longer, more thoughtful view on the value of homeownership.

Are you a word game junkie? Learn how Scrabble and Words With Friends match up and, in some cases, the game players too.

You’ve probably noticed Google’s search results getting junkier and less credible over the years as the web is flooded with content from every Tom, Dick, and Harry. Google’s working on cleaning house with a new search algorithm designed to bring “high-quality” back to the top.

Watching movies at home has moved from a trip to Blockbuster to Netflix to iTunes to digital streaming. Amazon.com is just the latest to enter the arena. Are you an Amazon Prime subscriber? If you are, you can access over 5,000 movies and television shows for free. Sign in to Amazon, go to Instant Videos and click on Prime Eligible in the left column. Choose your movie and watching streaming on your computer, HDTV or compatible set-top box or DVR.

While interest by the young in traditional blogging wanes (really it’s morphing into other forms – Tumblr, Facebook, Twitter – which really fulfill the same function), older demographics continue to embrace the long-form medium.

TIME reporter Allie Townsend picks the 100 most influential toys from 1923 to the present. I loved my Creepy Crawlers as a child.

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