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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. Some have called Seesmic "YouTube meets Facebook." It's a social networking site with mega video capability. What if news sites allowed people to post comments via video rather than just text?

2. Blogger.com is better than ever now that you can post vertical photos. And Google Docs has upgraded its feature that enables you to embed a presentation in your blog.

3. As ABC's John Stossel explained, "Intrade is set up like a commodities market where buying and selling goes on 24 hours a day. Instead of betting on the price of copper or oil, you can bet on politics, economics, the weather, pop culture, etc."

4. Msnbc.com's NewsWare site includes games, widgets and tons of other stuff.

5. iCue is a new NBC News site that uses archived news and political video in educational ways.

6. See how much the airlines will ding you for an extra bag or overweight luggage.

7. I have been a big fan of Snapz Pro X as a screen and video capture device, but I may be falling in love with ScreenFlow.

8. My 300 or so favorite online resources and news ideas for journalists.

9. Virtual Gumshoe offers investigative links to help you find people, search criminal records and more.

10. RetailMeNot delivers more than 13,000 discount coupons to online sites. Do not buy ANYTHING online without checking this site first to see if you can get a discount.

11. Finally, a way to get those camera lights off your video cameras so you are not blasting the subject with light. The Xtender looks xcellent.

12. A Final Cut editing tutorial.

We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and links.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.





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New Home Sales Drop to 13-Year-Low
There are several stories for you embedded in today's new home sales figures.

New home sales fell to a 13-year-low last month. But the encouraging news is that inventories have dropped. That's a signal that builders are starting to move some of the glut of homes they have been sitting on. They have had to lower prices to move the overstock. MarketWatch reports:

The inventory represented a 9.8-month supply at the February sales rate, unchanged from January and the highest since 1981. The median sales price fell 2.7 percent in the past year to $244,100.

See a regional breakdown here.

On Monday, the National Association of Realtors said existing home sales actually rose last month, but even with that, sales were 23.8 percent below the 6.60 million-unit level in February 2007.

Reporting the story

Check with local painters, kitchen contractors, lumber supply centers, electricians. They all are looking for work. I remember a couple of years ago you could not get an electrician to even speak to you about a small job at your house. Now they show up the next morning.

Judging the market

The question keeps coming up, "Is this the bottom? Is NOW the time to buy?"

The Wall Street Journal explains that the current market could make homes affordable to working folks -- except that the housing pressures are not the only problematic part of the economy:

Foreclosures also can help bring prices in high-cost areas down to levels that are affordable to teachers, fire fighters and other middle-class buyers who may have been priced out of the market during the housing boom.

U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, recently announced plans for legislation to provide $10 billion of federal loans and grants to help local government and nonprofit groups buy and renovate vacant foreclosed homes. The homes would have to be sold or rented to people with low or moderate incomes.

The overabundance of foreclosed homes in the market is likely to push down home prices in much of the country for the next several years, says Ivy Zelman, chief executive of Zelman & Associates, a housing-research firm in Cleveland.

Until recently, all of this distressed property has been encouraging potential buyers to stay on the sidelines in anticipation of lower prices later. But Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, says the latest data show that sales are perking up in some areas where owners of foreclosed homes have become more aggressive about their pricing.

Prospects for the housing market also depend heavily on the job market. As measured by the S&P/Case-Shiller national index, home prices jumped 74 percent in the six years through 2006. During the same period, U.S. median household income rose just 15 percent. (Neither figure is adjusted for inflation.) That discrepancy made housing unaffordable for many Americans.

In Stockton, Calif., there is actually a new business of "foreclosure home tours."
Posted at 12:33:18 PM

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