Wednesday 31 October 2012

How To File A Home Insurance Claim: Six Tips

Insurers will be dealing with a crush of claims in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy which inflicted billions of dollars in damages. Once homeowners can assess the extent of their personal losses, many will have to brace for another ordeal: navigating the insurance claims process.

Preparation and planning well before a storm arrives can help homeowners avoid potential pitfalls. But how they handle the details when it comes time to file can help ensure receiving an adequate payout.

Here are six tips to weather the claims process:

1. MAINTAIN AN INVENTORY OF HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

Receiving a fair payout for damage to one's home and belongings begins by making a list of what you own, particularly the more expensive items, including what they cost, even if it's only an estimate.

Taking photos or even shooting video while you describe the items and how much you paid for them, works too. And, if possible, take digital photos and video, which you can store online on websites like Flickr and Picasa. That way, you can access them in the event your computer is damaged.

You don't have to count out or photograph every single CD or piece of dinnerware you own, for example. A photo of your CD rack or your China cabinet will do.

If you have receipts saved for your more valuable items, take photos of those, as well.

"A lot of people can't remember what they had for breakfast, much less what's been stored in the attic the last 20 years," says Jeanne Salvatore, a spokeswoman for the Insurance Information Institute. "If you have an inventory, it makes life a lot easier."

2. UNDERSTAND SCOPE OF YOUR COVERAGE

Knowing what your insurance policy covers and what it doesn't is essential to getting through the claims process quicker.

You don't want to have to rely only on what claims adjusters tell you, especially as they go through the process of evaluating how much of a payout you're going to get.

When it comes to hurricanes and other major weather-related damage, it's important to remember that standard homeowners' insurance does not cover flood damage. And if you haven't purchased that separately, you will not be able to get reimbursed for damages caused by flooding.

Flood damage is defined as water rising from the ground up, unlike, say, if you have a hole in your roof and rain is spilling in.

In addition, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island and 15 other states let insurers include deductibles in their homeowners' insurance policies in the event of a hurricane. Such deductibles vary from 1 percent to 5 percent of the insured value of the home. But each state makes its own determination on whether a storm will trigger those deductibles, so check with your state department of insurance to see if that will be a factor in your coverage.

You can find links to your state's insurance department at , www.naic.org/state_web_map.htm

3. QUICKLY DOCUMENT DAMAGE AND MAKE ONLY TEMPORARY REPAIRS

After the storm, once it's safe to move about, it's important to take photos of the damage right away. Comparing these photos to the ones taken before the storm can be used to establish the value of items that are damaged or destroyed.

If holes have been torn in your roof or windows are broken, cover them quickly to prevent further damage, but don't make any permanent repairs. But take photographs or videos of the damage before you start working.

And don't throw out damaged furniture or other expensive items until an adjuster has seen them.

4. CONTACT YOUR INSURER RIGHT AWAY

Homeowners should call their insurer quickly and get the claims process rolling, regardless of how much damage their home has sustained.

You can contact your insurance agent for information on how to file a claim. Or, if the agent can't be reached, contact the company directly via the Internet or phone.

Even if you've been evacuated and have yet to return to your home, but it's in an area that may be flooded or known to have been damaged in the storm, call your insurer and tell them, Salvatore says.

Doing so can help establish that you have to spend time in a hotel, something you may be able to get reimbursed for later.

Also, note the name and number of everyone you speak with during the claims process. That can help clear up any confusion that may arise along the way.

5. BE PREPARED TO NEGOTIATE

Once insurance adjusters look over the damage, they will determine the size of your payout.

But if that figure seems too low, there are ways to voice your disagreement and try to work out a better settlement.

You'll want to ask the adjuster to show you the contract language and justify the proposed amount.

If you're still dissatisfied, get a second or even third opinion on the cost of repairs from independent contractors. You can use that to argue for a bigger payout.

Ideally you can work it out with the adjuster, but if not, you can try to make your case with someone at the company's regional or national office.

"You need to be ready for a fight and be tough working with your insurance agent," says Jeff Blyskal, senior editor at Consumer Reports.

Another option to help bolster your case for a better settlement is to hire a public insurance adjuster.

They are experts on the insurance claims process and can assess the damage to a home and help build the case on behalf of the homeowner.

The insurance industry argues that public adjusters charge homeowners for services that homeowners can do themselves. Public adjusters typically charge 10 percent of the settlement amount.

Credited adjusters can be found at the National Association of Public Insurance Adjusters' website, . www.napia.com

6. WATCH OUT FOR SCAM ARTISTS

Many homeowners want to immediately get started on repairing the damage to their property. This makes them targets by unscrupulous contractors looking to overcharge for repairs.

"Con artists will demand large cash deposits, or push you to sign a contract that might not be in your best interest," Salvatore says. "Don't be rushed into anything."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/31/how-to-file-a-home-insurance-claim_n_2051371.html

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Thursday 25 October 2012

9 Things You Didn't Know About Microsoft Surface

Microsoft Surface is now a known quantity. It?s sold out on pre-order and has been tested to the hilt by tech pundits across the U.S (including this one). The Surface is an exceptional Windows tablet that, with its Touch Cover, can masquerade as a touch-screen Ultrabook. We know so much, but not everything. Here are nine behind-the-scenes secrets about the new Microsoft product, which I learned from those who built it.

[More from Mashable: Microsoft Creates a Mini New York City to Hype Windows 8 Launch [VIDEO]]

1) It Really Was a Secret

[More from Mashable: Top European Facebook Exec to Leave in January]

Microsoft?s Surface team worked in secret at the company?s Studio B building in Redmond, Washington. Word has it that many at Microsoft had no idea what this team was doing. When I took a special tour of the building and all the rooms where Surface was designed and tested, we typically passed through two locked barriers and always under the watchful eye of some very stern-looking security guards. Those working on and testing the product were not allowed to take it outside. Though hundreds tested Surface, it was always in ?locked offices, with the curtain down.?

See Also: Surface Is a Tablet Windows Users Will Love [REVIEW]

The outside world was certainly in the dark. As Surface lead Panos Panay put it ?We had the great advantage of nobody was looking.? In other words, we were all looking at Apple, a company known for secrecy and always expected to deliver some fresh innovation to our doorstep. Microsoft innovates, but rarely gets credit for it. Yet it?s never been this secretive, and certainly no one expected a Microsoft tablet. So we weren?t paying attention. Panos said that during the Surface development cycle, they had ?zero industrial espionage incidents.?

Even so, the June 18 announcement date came about because Microsoft realized they were getting to a point where it would be virtually impossible to maintain secrecy and chose to tell the story before someone else did.

2) The First Surface Was Cardboard

The Surface Tablet concept was conceived, in part, with the idea of ?opening a book,? sort of like the long defunct Courier (though no one at Microsoft ever mentioned that dead project). I actually touched the first cardboard mockup, which was held together with Scotch tape and is surprisingly close to the final design. From that early stage, Microsoft?s small team of Surface designers spent months refining the Surface concept and progressed through ?boxes? full of 3D-models, most of which were built with a Polyjet 3D printer. ID Studio?s Designers told me they ?iterated until there wasn?t any 'ink' left in the 3D printer.?

3) Surface Almost Had a Lucite Keyboard

Microsoft Surface is a tablet, but it?s also one with a very close relationship to its snap-in keyboard. The product ships with a urethane-covered one ($599 bundle model) and a real keypad option ($129). That keyboard was almost a shiny Lucite panel, but studies on how users find home keys quickly proved that idea wouldn?t work. The resulting polyurethane is, Microsoft promises, ?no shrink and super durable.?

4) Microsoft Had to Invent

Microsoft was so demanding about the size, shape, look, feel and tolerances of the magnesium-clad Surface tablet, that designers said they had to invent some new machinery to build it. The Windows RT-based product is designed in the U.S., but like most tech these days, it?s built in China. As a result, team members made more than half a dozen trips to China over the last year.

5) Surface Is 3D

Microsoft relied heavily on 3D printing to model virtually every part in the Surface tablet. All those parts are the created in the real world on hundreds of Computer Numerated Control machines. These are essentially computer-controlled vertical millers (kind of like Dremels). Studio B has a handful of them, but there are hundreds in Chenzou, China, where Surface is manufactured. Unlike human-controlled milling, these babies are precise to 0.5 microns.

6) Touch Cover Keys Labels Are Not Printed White

The 3mm-thick Touch Covers are almost as stuffed full of technology as the Surface tablet itself. Each Touch Cover is built in layers, with a carbon-fiber base, a thin layer of pressure sensors (that respond to grams-per-inch of pressure), a layer of white material and then the polyurethane cover. Microsoft showed me how a laser carves through the black cover to reach the white layer and label all the keys. Microsoft also spent a year figuring out how to develop a keyboard that would shut off when you folded it against the back of the Surface tablet. They settled on something they called ?Flux Fountain,? which creates a mechanical interference and turns the keyboard off at just the right point in the rotation to the back.

7) Surface Display?s Resolution Is Lower Than the iPad by Design

Microsoft Surface Tablet?s screen is 42% larger than the iPad?s, but it has far fewer pixels. The company?s display expert, however, told me that the JND (or just noticeable difference) between the screens is far lower than one might assume. Since Microsoft focused on squeezing the LCD, touch sensor and Gorilla Glass 2 cover closer together, so the spaces between the three drop to 0.5mm (as opposed to 1 mm in competing devices), the refraction is far, far less on the Surface display. In the lab-based demo I saw, this appeared to be true. However, as I said in my review, the Surface display does not look appreciable better than Apple?s iPad Retina screen.

8) Surface Is Custom

There are over 200 custom parts in Microsoft?s Surface Tablet and it?s all squeezed together to remove pretty much all the space and air that might otherwise exist. For example, when Microsoft went looking for hinges for the signature, built-in kickstand, it ended up building new ones from scratch. The three hinges have built-in dampers that keep the stand from snapping against the back of the Surface. This picture shows a semi-translucent, large scale model of one of them.

9) You?ll See Surface?s 22-Degree Chamfer Everywhere

Microsoft is pretty proud of the sharply tilted edge you see on the Surface. It?s exactly 20 degrees and, if you visit a Microsoft store, you?ll see that same 22-dgree angle repeated over and over again.

Microsoft Surface Powered Up

This is the Surface tablet with Touch Cover in place.

Click here to view this gallery.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/9-things-didnt-know-microsoft-surface-174313110.html

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In final stretch, Romney seeks to turn momentum into votes

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/final-stretch-romney-seeks-turn-momentum-votes-023114203.html

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The customer service divide: Social Media Vs Telephone | Red ...

I had two experiences this year that has left me concerned about the ethical operations of companies and how they approach customer service. Mainly the type of customer service it seems you receive if you go by the proper channels, and that you receive when you go via a social media channels and start throwing your toys out of the pram.

I?ve not been one to get stung by bad customer service often to have to deal with it; it has mainly been something I have read about, rather than had a personal experience of. I understand there are genuine slip-ups; mistakes happen, things are overlooked or forgotten about. They shouldn?t happen, but they do, and businesses/employees learn by their mistakes.

Both of the following incidents were first dealt with by my girlfriend (who made the orders) using the telephone numbers for customer services, which then led to me complaining via Twitter about their failures, i.e., I started throwing my toys out of the pram.

I don?t want to make a habit of complaining about companies on Twitter, but it frustrates me seeing a company give poor customer service via telephone, and yet suddenly take action when I mention their shortcomings on Twitter. I know social media is a good leveraging tool when a company fails to provide customer service, though it shouldn?t have to be that way.

The Delivery Company

We had ordered some dog food and my girlfriend was at home until the reasonable hour of 4pm waiting for its delivery. Later she received an Email saying that they had tried to deliver but no one was at home. Fair enough, sods law, stay in all day nearly and then they (supposedly) attempt delivery ? no calling card was left, just an email. The problem was the email gave an incorrect 8 digit reference number made up completely of zeros. This was, as you can guess, not being accepted when entered into the automated telephone system or on their website.

With no direct easy way to get hold of the delivery company my girlfriend fired off an email to the dog food supplier. They reported that the delivery company said that one of the two parcels was ?stuck? (their words not mine) and the other one would be delivered the next day ? whilst no one was at home.

So I made my tweet complaining about the error, tagging the delivery company name, and sure enough I had a response asking for details. There was no way to directly communicate with anyone when my girlfriend called by phone, but here was another real human being willing to help out in some form just because I was making a statement on Twitter.

The Florist Company

The girlfriend had ordered flowers for a friend who had an operation soon after giving birth to a baby boy. Thankfully it wasn?t long till she was back home and my girlfriend thought some flowers as a surprise would be nice. We enquired with her partner if the flowers arrived after not hearing from her after a few days and sure enough they hadn?t been delivered.

When my girlfriend rang the company, they confirmed they had not been delivered, and offered her a complementary redelivery or a refund. When she enquired about the ?complementary redelivery? it turned out that they wouldn?t refund her and redeliver, but simply deliver the flowers late that she had paid for! So my girlfriend requested a refund after pointing out that the redelivery was not exactly complementary, and there was my second statement via Twitter of rubbish customer service.

This time I was given a URL by the flower delivery company?s Twitter profile to fill out a form. So I passed the details on even though my girlfriend had already organised a refund. For her troubles they called her and offered to deliver the flowers for free and got back to me on Twitter saying it had been resolved.
Here is what my girlfriend had to say when I forwarded the tweet to her:

?Ha ha that was quick. She was nice on the phone and are going to send flowers to [friend?s name] yay. That is what should have happened in first place though. Twitter complaining is weird.?

Customer service via social media

Yes, complaining on Twitter is weird. Surely a company should always try and do its best to resolve things before it gets to the stage of anyone complaining on Twitter to make things right. By telephoning customer services the issues should have been resolved in the first place.

It?s not like I have a big following of people on Twitter who are interested in flowers, but meanwhile my girlfriend works alongside many women in a NHS laboratory, the exact demographic that they would love to be targeting on social networks. Do they think my girlfriend is recommending their service after they forgot to deliver the flowers, and then offered to just deliver them late without a refund?

Why do companies have this divide between how they treat their customers on the phone and on social media? Having worked a number of years face-to-face in retail with customers, I believe companies should do their best every time so there are no second choices.

Maybe it?s a financial thing; don?t bend over backwards for all customers due to costs of compensating them? That?s a false economy in itself, especially when the business is in the wrong.

Pay attention to social media complaints

What happened about our dog food delivery? We ended up driving to the depot and demanding our box (which they had sat there) because no one rang back to follow-up what was happening ? even after speaking to a person on Twitter. I hazard a guess that they have a major customer service problem that can?t be fixed by social media alone.

Yes, it?s good that your company may be paying attention to social media channels for customer service issues, but it?s only as good as the customer service that you provide in the first place. You need to make sure that you have a system to follow-up that the issue is resolved so it does not slip through the cracks again.

Have you had poor customer service that was then resolved by social media channels? Please leave out using brand names to protect innocent employees who actually do a great job for their employers.

Source: http://www.redrocketmedia.co.uk/blog/the-customer-service-divide-social-media-vs-telephone/

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Apple Event 23/10/12 - iPad Mini

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? Reply # 702429 posted on 17-Oct-2012 12:05 send private message user's profile quote this post

Behodar: iPad mini, Mac mini, new 13" MacBook Pro, iTunes 11, availability of new 21.5" iMac, and announcement of new 27" iMac.

Edit: Updated :)

Pretty much all the hardware updates ahead of the Xmas shopping season,

There is also some?speculation?we may see an iPad 3 update to replace the old 30pin dock connector with the new lightning port.


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? Reply # 702486 posted on 17-Oct-2012 13:21 send private message user's profile quote this post

wellygary:
Behodar: iPad mini, Mac mini, new 13" MacBook Pro, iTunes 11, availability of new 21.5" iMac, and announcement of new 27" iMac.

Edit: Updated :)

Pretty much all the hardware updates ahead of the Xmas shopping season,

There is also some?speculation?we may see an iPad 3 update to replace the old 30pin dock connector with the new lightning port.

I really hope not!!!


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? Reply # 702490 posted on 17-Oct-2012 13:22 send private message user's profile quote this post

mattwnz:
wellygary:There is also some?speculation?we may see an iPad 3 update to replace the old 30pin dock connector with the new lightning port.

I think there will be a new ipad too with the new dock connector and possibly the A6 processor. It means that they can then also extend out the next big ipad update for another year.

Wouldn't that make is a new ipad rather than an update, referring to the processor.

Would be good, current ipad replaces the ipad2 and a newer version at the premium end, to be honest I can't see it happening as the current ipad is too new still.


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? Reply # 702500 posted on 17-Oct-2012 13:26 send private message user's profile quote this post

dickytim:
mattwnz:
wellygary:There is also some?speculation?we may see an iPad 3 update to replace the old 30pin dock connector with the new lightning port.

I think there will be a new ipad too with the new dock connector and possibly the A6 processor. It means that they can then also extend out the next big ipad update for another year.

Wouldn't that make is a new ipad rather than an update, referring to the processor.

Would be good, current ipad replaces the ipad2 and a newer version at the premium end, to be honest I can't see it happening as the current ipad is too new still.

It would be more like an 's' upgrade, like they did with the iphone 4. Also they probably need 4G on the ipad, which basically brings it up to the specs of the iphone5. The thing about apple though recently is that they tend to under deliver, so it may just have the new dock connector and that is all. Especially if the ipad mini will have the same processor specs as the ipad 2, which is using 1 and a half year old hardware.

With the new MS surface there is now going to be so much choice for tablet devices.


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mattwnz:

It would be more like an 's' upgrade, like they did with the iphone 4. Also they probably need 4G on the ipad, which basically brings it up to the specs of the iphone5. The thing about apple though recently is that they tend to under deliver, so it may just have the new dock connector and that is all. Especially if the ipad mini will have the same processor specs as the ipad 2, which is using 1 and a half year old hardware.

With the new MS surface there is now going to be so much choice for tablet devices.

Maybe if they do upgrade the Ipad3 it will be called the New-New Ipad ? :P


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? Reply # 702777 posted on 18-Oct-2012 09:49 send private message user's profile quote this post

mattwnz:
Jaxson: ipad mini fills the gap between the ipod shuffle and a full ipad.?

That is what the ipod touch is supposed to be. If it is going to be the same price as the ipod touch(which is very expensive for what it is) they are either going to need to drop the ipods price, or noone is going to buy it, and they will get a mini instead. A ipad mini would be far better for games for kids, which is what the ipod touch was previously targeted towards.

Sorry that should have read fill the gap between the ipod touch and the ipad. Embarassed

I was quite interested in the 7" china tablets as I wanted something smaller than an ipad but I can't stand using a phone sized device for most stuff I want.? I actually would prefer a simple phone for calling/messaging/taking quick photos/listening to music but a 7" tablet for mobile use and a full ipad for home use.?

I do think there is a place for an intermediate 7" ish device, rather than have 'mobile' phones get larger and larger but still fundamentally have a much smaller screen than a 7" or 10" tablet.


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