Posts Tagged ‘iPhone’

New HyperSocial agent search tools now on Realtor.com

Realtor.com recently announced the beta roll out of its mobile-enabled HyperSocial agent search tools — HyperSocial™ Agent Profile Pages and HyperSocial™ Agent Recommendations.  Both tools will be integrated into the Realtor.com Find a REALTOR® (FAR) directory at the beginning of the 2012 home buying season and accessible on the Realtor.com desktop FAR and Showcase Listing Enhancement iPhone, iPad and Android mobile app experiences.

HyperSocial Agent Profile Pages are mobile-enabled pages viewable from desktops and most mobile devices. Through social graphing technology, the HyperSocial Agent Profiles surface mutual connections, extended relationships, and shared interests by layering the social networks of agents and consumers.

HyperSocial Agent Recommendations live within each HyperSocial Agent Profile as an agent branded URL and is an easy way for clients to share a recommendation an agent has earned without any registration requirements.  Recommendations are reviewed and approved for display by each agent and can be manually or automatically broadcasted to the agent’s online network from one central hub with one easy click. When the recommendation URL is emailed or texted, users are directed back to the agent’s HyperSocial Agent Profile featuring other key agent information.

Now available in beta for registration by REALTORS® with a valid NRDS number at http://www.socialbios.com, the HyperSocial agent search tools will initially span Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Google and FourSquare.  Information on how to register can be found at:  http://lockbox.realtor.com/realtor-technology/how-to-set-up-a-socialbios-account/.

More info

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Shortcut-hungry holiday shoppers to whip out smart phones

y PATRICK MAY
San Jose Mercury News
Published: Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2010 – 12:00 am

SAN JOSE, Calif — SAN JOSE, Calif. – For a growing number of shoppers this holiday season, the difference between offline and online will be no line at all.

With an avalanche of new smart phone apps just in time for Black Friday, these handheld shopping tools are redefining the art of consumption, blurring the distinction between the in-store experience and the virtual world of information now available in the palm of your hand. Advances in location-based technology, bar-code scanning, price-comparison apps and social-networking tools have turned the mobile device into a sweaty-palmed third channel of commerce, empowering consumers while challenging retailers to rethink the way they do business.

“The future of online is offline,” said Cyriac Roeding, co-founder and CEO of Shopkick, a popular shopping app. “These apps are encouraging people to interact in brand new ways with products and with the store itself, fundamentally changing the shopping experience.”

The appetite for new apps seems voracious. A recent survey by comparison-shopping site PriceGrabber revealed that 36 percent of consumers plan to use their mobile phones for shopping-related activities this holiday season. Recession-wary consumers are embracing new tools that can instantly call up product specs, reviews, price comparisons and input from Facebook friends and Twitter followers, all while they’re standing in the aisle. And Manish Rathi, with the consumer electronics shopping site Retrevo, says its surveys show that consumers using cell phones to make purchases jumped among respondents from 10 percent in February to 20 percent in June.

“We think mobile purchasing has arrived, and it’s evolving quickly,” Rathi said. “People who walk into your store now are no longer comparing you to the next brick-and-mortar site but to everything else offline and on. Shoppers are shopping and comparing prices on a global level.”

Even for those already using their iPhones and Droids as digital tool kits, some of the new apps are downright mesmerizing as they twist and bend the way we shop.

One mapping app helps you find a product in a mall and takes you to it with a virtual escort leading the way. Another locates your car in the parking lot, thanks to the photo you’d taken of it and the GPS that locked its location into your phone. One app rewards you with a discount for stepping into a particular store, while another coaxes you to a dollar-off discount for a product in the back-row Siberia of a big-box retailer.

“We call it a virtual end-cap,” said CEO Mark DiPaola of CheckPoints, referring to the shelves at the end of an aisle. His app earns you rewards simply for scanning bar codes on certain items. “Even though the product may be way in the back, we feature it in your phone and make it feel like it’s right up front when you walk in to the store. At the same time, we’re making money by driving tens of thousands of users to these products, breeding new customers for the manufacturer.”

With thousands of third-party shopping applications available for the iPhone – and Android and BlackBerry trying to catch up – these mobile magic tricks are presenting retailers with challenges along with benefits. If a customer can now instantly compare your price to thousands of others, and if a user’s 200 closest Facebook friends can weigh in on that pair of shoes you’re trying to sell her, the technology prompts a question: As apps continue to blur the online-offline wall, what will the store of the future look like?

Anne Zybowski, an analyst at Kantar Retail, says that a few years ago “retailers spent a ton of time trying to make their online stores look and act like their physical stores. Now they’ve sort of reversed course, and the challenge is how to take that online shopping experience that’s so personalized, socially connected and heavily layered with data, and essentially bring it into a physical environment.”

Major retailers like Target are experimenting with on-site “glorified kiosks where they take the online product information and reviews and bring them to life in the store,” Zybowski said.

Europe is ahead of us,” she said, “with pure online retailers who have started to open up small 3,000-square-foot stores that essentially enable you to pick up stuff you’ve ordered online, or place an online order with a clerk’s assistance.”

As she wandered around a Palo Alto, Calif., shopping center last week with her daughter, Katie, and 3-year-old granddaughter, Samantha, toting an app-laden iPhone in her hand, retired school administrator Karen Wolff was the picture of the line-blurring, digitally savvy smart-phone shopper. She brought up a price-comparison app, then a bar-code-scanning app, then a Facebook app and another for MapQuest.

Finally, she pulled out her favorite app of all: the camera built into her phone.

“If I see a cute T-shirt for my granddaughter, but want to make sure her mom thinks she’ll like it, I’ll take a picture of it and e-mail it to her for her approval,” said Wolff. “It makes shopping truly collaborative. I know I’ve got Katie’s approval before buying it, so I’ve eliminated the return part of the shopping process.”

Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/11/24/3209106/shortcut-hungry-holiday-shoppers.html#ixzz16JMne3f9

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iPhone 4 Pre-Order Disaster

Published by Tei Baishiki under Technology.

The iPhone 4 pre-order was made available today. Were you able to get one?

iPhone4_Order

If you were like me you went to the Apple website and tried… and tried… and tried, only to receive the “Your request couldn’t be processed.” The Apple’s online pre-order system used an eligibility check for existing AT&T customers, which appears to have been the cause of the issue. Additional problems arose for users who attempted to pre-order using the Apple retail store software from the App Store and found the software hung up at a “processing” screen while checking eligibility for their upgrade.

iPhone4_Order_Failure

Even with all of the “processing” issues, the pre-orders for the iPhone 4 stopped from the AT&T website as of around 1:30pm Pacific from the AT&T website. So I guess in between all of the problems there were people that were able to get their hold on the prized iPhone 4.

As if the problems of today is not bad enough rumors have been circulated that a potential AT&T security breach worse than the one encountered days before with the iPad 3G email addresses being leaked. AT&T reports it has been unable to reproduce the issue but users are reporting that they are logging into their AT&T accounts only to find out they are looking at someone else’s account information. Talk about a case of “when it rains, it pours.”

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iPhone or Droid? Doesn’t matter, they’re both better for real estate professionals than phones without apps.


my android apps menu #5Image by laihiu via Flickr

It seems to be a hot topic for debate, which phone Realtors should use in their business and personal life. As cellular carriers have pretty much equalized price-wise, the debate truly becomes about which device best suits you and your lifestyle. For real estate pros, I can’t say enough good stuff about getting a phone that utilizes “apps” or mobile applications. Apps are easy to use buttons that you can download onto your device (and the iPhone and Droid both come with some installed already) that are guaranteed to make your life easier.

Why do you need apps beyond basic Internet browsing? The apps are great on the go and are designed to work specifically with your mobile device. An example, instead of logging into the Southwest Airlines website to check in for my flight, I could do it directly from my application with two clicks. I could also easily check flight status, get reduced airfare notifications and make car reservations. Apps also tend to be faster than most mobile browsing options and require fewer steps to complete the same task – saving you time!

So what apps should you check out? Here are some of my must haves:

  • A mapping app like Google Maps. This usually comes installed already and is a real lifesaver when on the road, in an unfamiliar town or if you’re searching for something generic like “Mexican food” it will give you a list of the places closest that fit your search including phone number, website (if applicable) and directions via car, public transit or on foot.
  • Mobile banking. I love my mobile banking application because it allows me to easily check account statuses, transfer funds and pay bills from my phone without ever having to log into my laptop. This is especially helpful for busy months or trips out of town when you need to pay PG&E so the lights are still on when you return.
  • Facebook and Twitter. The easiest ways to keep up with these popular social networking sites are via your mobile device. Post instant updates, check in quickly, and avoid time sink holes like Farmville by using the easy mobile application that gives a basic version of the more densely populated home page.
  • A photo posting app. I use TwitPic and Flickr. Use this app to quickly snap photos of homes for sale, your proud new buyers and much more to get posted in a simple couple of clicks. This will distribute your photos to the web so you can get them out to interested people. If you have the Facebook app, you can upload photos directly from your mobile device to Facebook pages – just remember that your business page should be the only page that you post open house and real estate related photos to, based upon Facebook’s terms of service.
  • Yelp! This app will not only help you keep an eye on what consumers are saying about you, but also allows you to make good recommendations to buyers and sellers looking for various services or products.
  • Traffic.com or other traffic app. This can save you a bunch of time and frustration by knowing whether the traffic you’re encountering is clearing up (so you can stay the course) or getting worse (so you can get off the road and grab a drink, reschedule meetings, etc.) and construction timetables, hot spots (to check before you leave your current location) and much more. The traffic.com app has an easy to use interface that works well for quick checks.

If you’re worried you’re making the wrong phone choice – take a look at TryPhone.com – a service that will allow you to try out the phone online before you buy it. This service actually allows you to virtually “press” buttons, maneuver through the various screens, etc. so you know if the phone really fits you and your lifestyle.

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