Archive for October, 2005

Apple’s iPod now has video-to-go

Thursday, October 13th, 2005

Sun

CREDIT: The Associated Press Apple Computer Inc. CEO Steve Jobs enjoys an episode of television’s Desperate Housewives on his video-capable iPod. The newest item in the portable-player line, it was introduced yesterday in San Jose, Calif.

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Apple Computer Inc. unveiled yesterday an iPod capable of playing videos, evolving the portable music player of choice into a multimedia platform for everything from TV shows to music videos.

Videos will now be sold alongside songs on Apple’s iTunes Music Store.

Citing a groundbreaking deal with ABC Television Group, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the online iTunes store will sell episodes of hit shows Desperate Housewives and Lost for $1.99 US each, making them available the day after they air.

“It’s never been done before, where you could buy hit TV shows and buy them online the day after they’re shown,” said Jobs whose other company, Pixar Animation Studios Inc., has a long relationship with ABC’s parent, the Walt Disney Co.

“This is the first giant step to making more content available to more people online,” said Robert Iger, Disney’s chief executive.

“It is the future as far as I’m concerned. It’s a great marriage between content and technology and I’m thrilled about it.”

The new video iPod, available in black or white, will be able to play video and podcasts.

A 30-gigabyte version will sell for $299 and a 60-gigabyte, $399.

Extra features on both versions include a clock, a calendar that Jobs said never looked better, a stop watch and a screen lock.

“It’s really very beautiful and very thin,” Jobs said at the much anticipated news conference.

© The Vancouver Province 2005

 

Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre & BC’s other Convention Centre

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

Other

Blast-off for satellite radio

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

All being well, Canadians will be able to switch to one of the two Canadian providers by the middle of December

Peter Wilson
Sun

CREDIT: Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun Wynne Powell, president and chief operating officer of London Drugs, previews two models of the satellite radio systems that the store will be launching in Canada, hopefully in time for Christmas.

The long wait for satellite radio in Canada is over. Well, okay, it’s almost over.

The best guess is that we’ll be able get our hands on legal satellite radios for our cars and homes by Christmas.

That’s if the two Canadian providers, Sirius Canada and Canadian Satellite Radio (CSR), can get their eight channels each (four English, four French) of home-grown programming in place quickly enough.

And that’s also if no major technical problems get in their way.

So, all being well, by the holiday season, average, everyday rule-observing Canucks will at last be able to join the estimated 100,000 grey market satellite radio subscribers in Canada already tuning into U.S.-based services.

Everything from the actual content of the Canadian channels to the cost of the service remains up in the air, but that doesn’t mean we don’t already know a lot about what’s coming.

Herewith, then, our frequently-asked questions about satellite radio:

Q: Why would I want it?

A: First, because the all-digital service even on the least expensive of the satellite radios sounds darn good in your car and even better pumped through your home entertainment system.

The wide variety of music is crisp, clear and gives as good as what you get from a CD. And that music is commercial-free.

Initially in Canada, you’ll get 80 channels of music, news, talk and sports (including the NHL, major league baseball, the NFL and the NBA) and at the same time be able to listen to, with a simple punch of a button, local AM and FM stations.

Non-residential construction spending soars to Q3 record of $1 billion in B.C.

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

But urban housing starts in the province drop by 1.1 % compared to last year, reports show

Brian Morton
Sun

Investment in non-residential construction in B.C. has soared to a third-quarter record of $1 billion, while B.C. urban housing starts were in decline, according to separate reports released Tuesday.

Statistics Canada reported on Tuesday that in the third quarter, B.C. non-residential construction continued the strong growth it has undergone since 2001, with increases in all three sectors (commercial, institutional and industrial) across Canada reaching a record investment of $7.9 billion in the third quarter.

The federal agency reported that while all provinces saw increased investment in the third quarter, the activity in each non-residential construction sector in B.C. pushed the value of projects up 11.5 per cent to a record $1 billion.

Meanwhile, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reported Tuesday that across B.C., urban housing starts were down 1.1 per cent in the third quarter compared to the same period in 2004.

So far in 2005, the report stated, multiple-unit urban housing starts have increased 3.7 per cent, while single-detached starts were down 10.8 per cent.

CMHC senior market analyst Cameron Muir said in an interview that while overall starts are predicted to be down in 2005, starts in urban B.C. were up 15.7 per cent to 3,230 in September 2005 compared to September 2004 and in Greater Vancouver by 18.4 per cent over the same period to 1,991 units.

“In Vancouver, there is still very high housing demand,” said Muir. “While pent-up demand is beginning to wane, the market has been bolstered by a second wave of home buyers.”

He said that year-to-date, housing starts in Greater Vancouver were down eight per cent to 13,933 units compared to the same time last year. Urban B.C. housing starts have declined two per cent to 23,144 units year to date over 2004.

Peter Simpson, chief executive officer of the Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association [GVHBA], said in an interview that he’s not surprised with the CMHC report.

“We’ve been saying that starts would level off and that we won’t reach the levels of 2004. But 2004 was the best year in a decade and to come close to that is a fairly good year.”

Keith Sashaw, president of the Vancouver Regional Construction Association, whose organization primarily represents non-residential construction companies, said that investment in non-residential building construction in Greater Vancouver increased by 50.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2005, compared to the third quarter of 2004.

“We’re at the start of a very strong growth curve [in non-residential construction].”

He also said that while the 2010 Olympics is the spark that lit the flame of non-residential construction, it only represents a small portion of the projects to be built. “We’re looking at $72 billion in projects by 2011 or 2012 [in B.C.],” added Sashaw. “The Olympics only represent about $700 million.”

The Statistics Canada report stated that Vancouver posted the highest rate of non-residential construction growth of any major Canadian city for the third straight quarter, rising 11.0 per cent to $630 million.

As well, the report noted, following substantial declines in late 2004, the institutional sector posted the second consecutive quarterly increase because of higher levels of investment in educational and health care institutions in B.C.

In the third quarter, the report said, all components of institutional building construction accounted for B.C. posting the strongest increase for a second straight quarter — 29.8 per cent to $260 million.

Both Simpson and Sashaw noted that the construction industry is facing a shortage of skilled employees, but that projects should nevertheless be completed on time.

“But we’re all concerned about it [the looming shortage of workers],” Simpson added. “There’s a lot being done to address it.”

Sashaw cited several large non-residential construction projects in the next few years, including $1 billion in expansion projects by the Vancouver Port Authority; $600 million for new facilities at the University of B.C.; $1.7 billion for the RAV line; and $350 million for the MSA Hospital in Abbotsford.

Palm/Nettwerk deal seeks high-tech harmony

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

Peter Wilson
Sun

The sounds of the likes of Sarah McLachlan and The Mediaeval Babes from Vancouver-based Nettwerk Records can now be heard on Palm Treo 650 smart phones from Bell Canada in the first music deal that Palm has made in Canada.

As well — Palm Canada and Nettwerk, an independent label, announced Tuesday — users of the LifeDrive Mobile Manager will not only be able to hear music from artists like Barenaked Ladies, Swollen Members and The Be Good Tanyas, they’ll also be able to download videos of Nettwerk groups.

Nettwerk general manager Brent Muhle said that the music deal was an opportunity to get the company’s artists heard by people who might not otherwise know about them.

“We tried to create a playlist that was representative of a bunch of different demographics,” said Muhle. “So there’s a little bit of something for everybody.”

Palm’s initial foray into music in Canada is also all for free — helping Palm to exhibit the versatility of its products as well as getting the Nettwerk Records acts exposures to a new audience, said Michael Moskowitz, general manager, Americas International, Palm Inc.

The users of the Treo 650 and the LifeDrive have been generally defined demographically as “over 25 years old, frequent Internet users and optimistic about new technology and entertainment vehicles.”

“We really want to show off our technology and how great it is, that it’s more than just a connected organizer and a smart phone,” said Moskowitz in an interview. “And the second part is that we really want to highlight great Canadian artists and both of those are very powerful.”

The tunes, which will come in MP3 and will not be copy protected, can be downloaded from the Nettwerk site (at www.nettwerk.com/palm) by those who got their Treo 650 through Bell or by all LifeDrive owners.

Videos will come in Windows Media and Real Player formats.

In order to get access to the music and videos, Palm users have to type in the serial numbers of their devices.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Online tool will help with car purchase

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

Driving.ca will provide vehicle shoppers with access to thousands of listings from dealers, classifieds

Patricia Cancilla
Sun

Consumers have a new online tool to help them buy or sell a new or used vehicle with driving.ca, a new automotive website from CanWest MediaWorks.

The site, which launches today, “provides vehicle shoppers with access to thousands of listings from dealers and from the classified ads in our newspapers across the country,” says Laura Pearce, general manager of driving.ca.

“Shoppers can search by make and model or by body type or even use Instant Search to get to common listing categories such as vehicles under $15,000, in just one click of the mouse. In addition, driving.ca features a new vehicle configuration tool that allows you to build your dream car and even see what colour you would look best in.”

The new driving.ca website complements CanWest’s newspaper driving sections.

“The local newspaper driving section allows consumers to browse for the vehicle they are looking for … then, consumers can go online for more details — full feature lists, multiple photos, digital and video advertising on specific vehicles or on dealer specials,” says Pearce. “Driving.ca is a great extension of the paper because it is available any time people are shopping for their next vehicle.”

And if someone is searching for a road test that appeared in their local driving section but can’t locate a copy of the newspaper, driving.ca can help them track it down.

“We have a comprehensive database of vehicle reviews and road tests from our newspapers across the country,” says Pearce. “We have an easy-to-use comparison tool that allows you to compare up to three vehicles side by side so you can make the right purchase decision.”

The site also allows users to search for road tests by their favourite writers. Automotive news and industry events can also be found online.

And what good is a website if one can’t comment on, well, just about anything automotive-related? Readers can make their feelings known by participating in driving.ca polls and soundoffs featured regularly on the new site.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

 

New hotel to grace new golf course in Squamish, hotel group says

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

Clare Ogilvie
Province

WHISTLER — A major West Coast hotel group plans to build a swank new resort in Squamish.

Executive Hotel and Resorts has awarded a franchise to Atlific Hotels and Resorts for a $23.3-million, 111-suite strata hotel at the junction of the 9th and 18th holes of the new Garibaldi Springs Golf Course.

“It is one of the projects that will set a new milestone for Squamish and a new standard for Squamish,” said Mayor Ian Sutherland.

“We are excited about the fact that a major hotel like this does see the benefit of doing business in Squamish.”

The population of the former forestry-dependent town is expected to grow from just under 15,000 to 20,000 by 2010 and 30,000 by 2030. A new private university is planned, Capilano College is looking to expand its campus and a 7,897-square-metre Wal-Mart is in the works.

The district is also involved in the development of the town’s oceanfront lands and is pursuing using wind as an alternate energy source.

Thirty-nine of the suites at the Executive Hotel have already been sold. Most have gone to Lower Mainland buyers, said Guy Young, president of ForSite Developments Inc., but people in Europe, the U.S. and Alberta have also bought units.

The units, designed by the group that produced the Whistler Four Seasons Resort and Spa, are selling for between $145,000 and $330,000.

[email protected]

© The Vancouver Province 2005

Hang the expense, B.C. life is wonderful

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

We owe more than most Canadians, but relax, it’s invested

Michael Kane
Sun

CREDIT: Peter Battistoni, Vancouver Sun Mark Sturrock and Cari Hawthorne purchased a house in Richmond last year as an investment from Realtor Anita Chan (right). The house has appreciated 20% over the year.

It’s a wonderful life for most British Columbians, even if it is costing us more than we earn in a year, the province’s chartered accountants say.

Not only do bigger mortgages mean we owe more than other Canadians, our savings rate is zero and we’re the only jurisdiction monitored for the annual BC Check-Up where personal debt, divided between every man, woman and child, exceeds current disposable income.

But take a deep breath because we’ve got the best air quality and the highest health care spending per capita, which helps to explain why we are among the healthiest Canadians.

We also have the fewest young people without high school diplomas and the second lowest level of people dependent on social assistance, according to Tuesday’s third instalment of the BC Check-Up, in which the Chartered Accountants of B.C. rate the province as a place to live.

Crime remains markedly higher than the national average but we’re no longer the worst in the land. That dubious honour goes to Saskatchewan.

And all that household debt is no cause for alarm because more than three-quarters of it is invested in real estate, which has been soaring in value while the share of disposable income required to service our debt is smaller than ever.

“I am not worried about getting into debt because I see it more as investing in my future,” said Richmond‘s Cari Hawthorne, 29, who bought her first condo when she was 22. She sold that to buy another last year, and also purchased a $347,000 house as an investment property with Mark Sturrock, 30. The house generates enough rent to cover most of their payment on a five-year mortgage locked in at 4.3 per cent.

Hawthorne, a personal trainer who owns Catalyst Conditioning Studio in Richmond with a partner, credits her parents with encouraging her to get into the housing market early. “They taught me well.”

Sturrock, who owns a painting business, For Your Walls Only, also bought a condo about two weeks ago.

Per person debt exceeds disposable income by 18 per cent in B.C. but the accountants say that’s not menacing at all if we look at net worth rather than the debt-to-income ratio.

When the appreciation in the value of personal assets like homes and investments is counted, B.C.’s average savings rate goes from zero to an impressive 52 per cent, according to TD Economics. Throw in contributions to social insurance and employee pensions and it climbs to 60 per cent, says Scotiabank.

Across Canada, individual net worth increased in 2004 to an all-time high of almost six times disposable personal income, the chartered accountants say.

But what if interest rates climb? They are going up but the Bank of Canada says most households would begin to have debt servicing difficulties only if they hit a “highly unlikely” nine per cent.

In addition, three-quarters of borrowers have fixed-rate mortgages which will protect them for two to five years while personal disposable income is expected to increase.

But what if West Coast house prices plummet as they did in the early 1980s? The accountants cite “significant differences” between conditions today and then, including higher incomes, slower price appreciation, much lower interest rates, and fewer unoccupied homes, a sign of less speculation.

“While housing prices are predicted to soften, especially as interest rates rise, a major reversal in the positive trend in housing prices is not anticipated, particularly in British Columbia where population is growing,” the Check-Up concludes.

Chartered accountant Anita Chan, a Richmond realtor who helped Hawthorne and Sturrock with their purchases, says she is as busy as ever and finds first-time buyers are more concerned about home prices going up than they are about rising interest rates.

“They are excited about getting into the market because they don’t want to rent,” Chan said in an interview.

Richard Rees, CEO of the Chartered Accountants of B.C., said “If you have debt, mortgage debt is a better kind to have because it is connected to an asset, your home.”

Burst water pipe floods new UBC condo building

Sunday, October 9th, 2005

Province

The Promontory, a new building on the UBC campus, was evacuated Friday night because a water pipe burst in an unoccupied top-floor unit. SAM LEUNG — THE PROVINCE

A posh, brand new highrise condominium at the University of B.C. where Premier Gordon Campbell has a suite was evacuated after a water pipe in an unoccupied top-floor suite burst Friday, flooding some floors below.

“The alarm went off and the elevator shut down and the firemen came and escorted us down the stairs,” said an elderly resident who lived relatively high up in the 18-storey building and didn’t want his name published. “It was flooding from the top down. We were wading in water.”

He said the firefighters gave him and his wife only enough time to grab their medications during the suppertime evacuation. The pair spent the night in a hotel and weren’t sure yesterday morning if they would be allowed to return.

“I went out in my wet clothes and all I want to do is go back and get some dry clothes,” he said.

The resident, who said some of the 95 two- and three-bedroom suites in the building are worth $1 million, said Campbell lives in the building, finished this summer, near Thunderbird Stadium.

“I don’t think he was home last night,” he said.

Another resident outside the building yesterday, where a number of water restoration trucks and moving vans were parked, said the premier is his neighbour.

Campbell‘s spokesman said the premier lives in the UBC area but wasn’t home during the flooding. It was unclear if Campbell‘s sub-penthouse suite flooded.

Vancouver Fire Department Capt. Rob Jones-Cook said that campus firefighters responded to the routine call and that the flooding was caused by a broken pipe in an unoccupied top-floor unit that supplies the sprinkler system.

© The Vancouver Province 2005

It’s safer to buy a toaster than a home

Saturday, October 8th, 2005

Sellers can ignore offers requiring pre-inspection in this superheated housing market

Pete McMartin
Sun

Erica Leyland sells real estate for a living, which, given my last disastrous experience with a real estate salesman, would not have normally predisposed me toward her, except for the fact that she arrived in my office wearing a pink rubberized raincoat and pink rubber boots appliqued with a floral print. She was the colour of Dubble Bubble.

She also happens to be, by all appearances, an ethical realtor — and please, no chortling or spitting up one’s coffee. This is a serious matter.

Leyland approached me after what she saw was becoming — in this insane, overheated real estate market — a disturbing trend.

It was a trend that was costing her sales and putting her clients at risk.

“In this market, where you have five or six buyers putting bids on one house, I’m seeing more and more sellers, or their realtors, demanding that most or all of the conditions in their bids be dropped if they want the buyer’s bid to be considered.”

These could be conditions, she said, like a request for a building inspection prior to sale, or an agreement to provide to the buyer details of current insurance coverage if the house had outdated wiring, or an assurance from the seller that any out-of-commission underground oil tanks will be removed at the seller’s expense.

A client of hers lost a bid recently because she had included one of those conditions — asking the seller to provide details of current insurance. The house was old and had outdated wiring. Leyland did not want to expose her client to the possibility of not getting house insurance because of it.

The home had been put on the market at $429,000.

There were seven bids.

Leyland‘s client offered $450,000.

It wasn’t enough.

“The seller’s realtor came back to us and told me that our bid was the only one with that condition in it, and gave the deal to someone else.”

Well, one could argue, hard cheese. It’s a seller’s market: sellers can dictate the terms. If the buyer doesn’t like it, the buyer can look elsewhere.

But dropping conditions like these, Leyland argues, can put all home buyers at risk, especially first-time home buyers carrying a lot of debt. They can end up with unsafe homes, or saddled with unforeseen expenses they can’t afford. The old admonition of caveat emptor — buyer beware — seems facile in the face of half-million dollar indebtedness. (It’s also why I’ve had a change of heart about the leaky condominium crisis.)

The reality is, there are more safeguards for used car buyers than there are for home buyers.

By law, auto dealers must declare, among other things, whether a used car has had repairs of over $2,000, or whether it was a lease or a rental.

But for a home? For the largest investment most people will ever make in their lives?

Well, by law, a seller, or his or her agent, must disclose a property’s “latent defects” — those which aren’t apparent by ordinary inspection, and which affect the property’s value.

But a seller might not be aware of any latent defects, or might claim not to know of any.

The buyer’s recourse? They can take it to court, usually, which can be costly and time-consuming. And many buyers have no idea they even have that avenue available to them.

Additionally, the B.C. Real Estate Association has a property disclosure statement for use by realtors so that buyers might be made more aware of a property’s condition.

But the disclosure statement isn’t mandatory. And it doesn’t have to be made out in full.

Sometimes, buyers might have recourse to a home inspection prior to sale, but there, again, there are problems.

Home inspection is not a licensed profession. While there are home inspection associations with standardized qualifications, anyone can call themselves a home inspector.

And as Leyland says, in a superheated market like this one, sellers can pick and choose between offers, and can ignore any that require an inspection be made prior to sale.

This — in the modern world of real estate — is insane. A consumer buying a $39 toaster has more protection than a couple mortgaging their lives away for a down-at-the-heels $600,000 two-bedroom bungalow with attractive orange circa-1970s shag carpeting throughout and carpenter ants in the basement.

The world of real estate has been turned on its head.

So, too, then, should be the rules governing it.

We might start by legislating the mandatory inspection of any home being put up for sale, by government-approved licensed home inspectors, before it be allowed to go on the market. This isn’t an infringement on the push-and-pull of a free market. It’s an argument for honesty.

A man’s home is his castle:

It needn’t be his ruin.

It’s safer to buy a toaster than a home

 

Sellers can ignore offers requiring pre-inspection in this superheated housing market

 

PETE McMARTIN VANCOUVER SUN

 

   Erica Leyland sells real estate for a living, which, given my last disastrous experience with a real estate salesman, would not have normally predisposed me toward her, except for the fact that she arrived in my office wearing a pink rubberized raincoat and pink rubber boots appliqued with a floral print. She was the colour of Dubble Bubble.
   She also happens to be, by all appearances, an ethical realtor — and please, no chortling or spitting up one’s coffee. This is a serious matter.
   
Leyland approached me after what she saw was becoming — in this insane, overheated real estate market — a disturbing trend.
   It was a trend that was costing her sales and putting her clients at risk.
   “In this market, where you have five or six buyers putting bids on one house, I’m seeing more and more sellers, or their realtors, demanding that most or all of the conditions in their bids be dropped if they want the buyer’s bid to be considered.”
   These could be conditions, she said, like a request for a building inspection prior to sale, or an agreement to provide to the buyer details of current insurance coverage if the house had outdated wiring, or an assurance from the seller that any out-of-commission underground oil tanks will be removed at the seller’s expense.
   A client of hers lost a bid recently because she had included one of those conditions — asking the seller to provide details of current insurance. The house was old and had outdated wiring.
Leyland did not want to expose her client to the possibility of not getting house insurance because of it.
   The home had been put on the market at $429,000.
   There were seven bids.
   
Leyland’s client offered $450,000.
   It wasn’t enough.
   “The seller’s realtor came back to us and told me that our bid was the only one with that condition in it, and gave the deal to someone else.”
   Well, one could argue, hard cheese. It’s a seller’s market: sellers can dictate the terms. If the buyer doesn’t like it, the buyer can look elsewhere.
   But dropping conditions like these,
Leyland argues, can put all home buyers at risk, especially first-time home buyers carrying a lot of debt. They can end up with unsafe homes, or saddled with unforeseen expenses they can’t afford. The old admonition of caveat emptor — buyer beware — seems facile in the face of halfmillion dollar indebtedness. (It’s also why I’ve had a change of heart about the leaky condominium crisis.)
   The reality is, there are more safeguards for used car buyers than there are for home buyers.
   By law, auto dealers must declare, among other things, whether a used car has had repairs of over $2,000, or whether it was a lease or a rental.
   But for a home? For the largest investment most people will ever make in their lives?
   Well, by law, a seller, or his or her agent, must disclose a property’s “latent defects” — those which aren’t apparent by ordinary inspection, and which affect the property’s value.
   But a seller might not be aware of any latent defects, or might claim not to know of any.
   The buyer’s recourse? They can take it to court, usually, which can be costly and timeconsuming.
   And many buyers have no idea they even have that avenue available to them.
   Additionally, the B.C. Real Estate Association has a property disclosure statement for use by realtors so that buyers might be made more aware of a property’s condition.
   But the disclosure statement isn’t mandatory. And it doesn’t have to be made out in full.
   Sometimes, buyers might have recourse to a home inspection prior to sale, but there, again, there are problems.
   Home inspection is not a licensed profession. While there are home inspection associations with standardized qualifications, anyone can call themselves a home inspector.
   And as
Leyland says, in a superheated market like this one, sellers can pick and choose between offers, and can ignore any that require an inspection be made prior to sale.
   This — in the modern world of real estate — is insane. A consumer buying a $39 toaster has more protection than a couple mortgaging their lives away for a down-at-the-heels $600,000 twobedroom bungalow with attractive orange circa-1970s shag carpeting throughout and carpenter ants in the basement.
The world of real estate has been turned on its head. So, too, then, should be the rules governing it. We might start by legislating the mandatory inspection of any home being put up for sale, by government-approved licensed home inspectors, before it be allowed to go on the market. This isn’t an infringement on the push-and-pull of a free market. It’s an argument for honesty. A man’s home is his castle: It needn’t be his ruin.

 

© The Vancouver Sun 2005