http://digg.com/programming/Trulia_Goes_Mobile_Adds_Feeds
Why print out all of those search results when you can have them on
your mobile phone or in your Dash GPS car navigation device?
Today, real-estate search site Trulia rolls out mobile versions on the
iPhone and the Dash.
(also a Blackberry version I think.)
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 25 Aug 2008 14:51 GMT
In article
<b2e7a5db-f694-4934-add1-93741d0cb40e@w7g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>,
> http://digg.com/programming/Trulia_Goes_Mobile_Adds_Feeds
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> iPhone and the Dash.
> (also a Blackberry version I think.)
wow. Proof that you don't actually go LOOK at the things you talk
about, that you don't KNOW anything about what you talk about.
"(also a Blackberry version I think.)"
You THINK?
I didn't even hit the link, I just went to Trulia.
http://www.trulia.com/mobile/
You "think"?
Trulia doesn't give a sh.t about the iPhone in particular. They're
putting themselves onto mobile devices, period. That the iPhone is a
mobile device is incidental to their business.
Notice that this is also available for iPod Touch. Wheeeeee!
Quote Trulia:
"Now everyone can go mobile with Trulia! Whether you've got a
BlackBerry, Blackjack, Sony Ericsson, Nokia or many more, you can find
all homes for sale near you or just search for open houses -- and see
the results on a very cool interactive map."
ANY phone. Got that? ANY phone.
Next thing you know, you'll be discussing the light bulb as if it was
invented by Steve Jobs specifically to backlight the iPhone screen.
4phun - 26 Aug 2008 14:28 GMT
> http://digg.com/programming/Trulia_Goes_Mobile_Adds_Feeds
iPhone Applications August 25, 2008, 12:00AM EST
House Finder
Front Door
StreetEasy
Businessweek
Trulia's New iPhone House Finder
The free app lets iPhone-toting house hunters find listings and open
houses in their vicinity. But it's not the only smartphone real estate
tool
by Prashant Gopal
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/aug2008/tc20080824_251234.htm?cam
paign_id=rss_daily
House hunting? Forget the listing agents and classified ads. Now you
can find homes for sale with a few taps on a smartphone.
Trulia, one of the Web's most visited home listing sites, on Aug. 25
is introducing a tool available on Apple's (AAPL) iPhone that can
locate all the listings and open houses in a user's vicinity.
The free software application uses navigation technology to summon
data and displays the results on an interactive map. It lets users
call up such information as price, photos, square footage, and number
of bedrooms. Another tap of the screen sends a call or e-mail directly
to the listing agent. "It's all about convenience," says Trulia CEO
Pete Flint.
Trulia is also releasing home listing applications for Research In
Motion's (RIMM) BlackBerry, Samsung's BlackJack, and Dash Navigation's
Dash Express, which provides navigation services using GPS technology.
Trulia's service will also be available on various mobile operating
systems, and on devices made by Sony Ericsson and Nokia (NOK).
Competitive Playing Field
Trulia, which boasts information for 70% to 80% of the properties on
the multiple-listing service database of real estate listings, will be
the biggest listing site with an iPhone application. But it's hardly
alone. FrontDoor.com says it will introduce an iPhone application
later this year that not only searches nearby listings, but also
integrates video and information about what it's like to live in a
given neighborhood.
StreetEasy.com's two-week-old iPhone application, which provides
location-based for-sale listing information for New York City, has
been downloaded about 5,000 times. The application was designed with
New Yorkers in mind, letting surfers see available properties not just
in a neighborhood, but also in a given building.
Coming versions of StreetEasy's iPhone software will make it possible
to search for open house and broadcast observations about specific
buildings. "People are experiencing real estate by walking down the
street; they're not experiencing it in front of the computer," says
Dawn Doherty, StreetEasy's vice-president of business development. "It
takes people involved in searches one step closer to the tangible
product."
Greg Swann, a broker for BloodhoundRealty.com in Phoenix, says that
while the Trulia application may undermine the role of buyers' agents,
it will probably be a boon to sellers' agents and customers. He's
quick to add that as empowering as the iPhone apps may be for buyers,
they can't replace the advice and negotiating abilities of a good
Realtor. "Anyone can change their own oil," Swann says. "But then why
is there always a line for Jiffy Lube?"
Gopal writes about real estate for BusinessWeek.com in New York.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/aug2008/tc20080824_251234.htm?cam
paign_id=rss_daily
4phun - 28 Aug 2008 20:34 GMT
> http://digg.com/programming/Trulia_Goes_Mobile_Adds_Feeds
>
> Why print out all of those search results when you can have them on
> your mobile phone or in your Dash GPS car navigation device?
http://digg.com/apple/Using_an_iPhone_to_find_your_dream_home
Todd Allcock - 29 Aug 2008 00:07 GMT
> http://digg.com/programming/Trulia_Goes_Mobile_Adds_Feeds
>
> Why print out all of those search results when you can have them on
> your mobile phone or in your Dash GPS car navigation device?
>
>http://digg.com/apple/Using_an_iPhone_to_find_your_dream_home
And, as if I needed no further evidence of why a "WinMo" magazine would
morph into an iPhone magazine (see other thread) you just highlighted the
reason yourself! Your Digg.com link called "Using an IPHONE to find your
dream home" links to a Newsweek article titled "Using a CELL PHONE to find
your dream home!" (Emphasis mine in both cases.) Whoever "dugg" it,
apparently thought it needed a little "punching up" iPhone style.
(The actual linked article mentions using iPhones and Blackberries for
real-estate hunting equally, BTW.)