Problem with computer software…?

Question by the fire within: Problem with computer software…?
My mom is trying to install a new TurboTax software-on the CD it says “Premier Investments & Rental Property”. However, the stupid computer is refusing to allow it….this is what the screen says when we try to install it:

Real-time Shield Action List
Blocked Process: E:/AUTORUN.EXE

Why do you think the computer isn’t allowing the software? And how can my mom and I make the computer allow it?

11 points minimum for the best answer. (You know, ten points for being best answer, plus at least 1 extra point from my thumbs up….)
Oh…*frowns* so we have a firewall. The thing is, my dad is the one who runs the computer and he’s out, Mom and I don’t know much about it to tell the truth. Thanks anyway, I’ll explore the computer to try to disable it…

Best answer:

Answer by DR!FT_ie
firewall is blocking it

you need to create a firewall rule to allow the program

your mum must have blocked it

or not allowed it

create a rule for E:/AUTORUN.EXE

and will run and install and work MINT!

goodluck babe

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Question by David M: Looking for sites where I can attract investment/loan of -0K?
I have patented intellectual property (“IP”) and majority interest in an unrelated, potentially lucrative lawsuit. I estimate my seed money needs at $ 50K to $ 100K, for which I will issue a UCC as security. Return of from 5 to 10 X principal depending on the amount of investment/loan and timing of return via licensing/sale of the IP and/or an award or settlement regarding the lawsuit. Question: Are there sites that have potential investors/lenders who may be interested in something of this nature? (Angels and VCs are not serious about this.) Looking for small individual investors/lenders or small groups.

Best answer:

Answer by Sam
Shoot me an email at melmunch@gmail.com Lets talk.

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Q&A: How much does pipe fencing cost?

Question by Julie M: How much does pipe fencing cost?
I am looking into buying some property, but I would need to put up some pipe fencing to make a pasture and riding arena. So I want to consider that cost into my over all investment into turning this property into “horse property.” Any rough estimates would help! THANKS

Best answer:

Answer by RScott
Here in the Dakotas we’re using it for corrals and feed lots. We use several sizes of drill pipe for posts and four to six pieces of sucker rod between. I haven’t priced it in years, but it usually sells by the pound which is very close to the price of scrap iron. Because we’re in oil patch country it’s stacked everywhere around here. RScott

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Economic Collapse: Retail Space Sits Vacant. The economic crisis has yet to recover for this local commercial investment retail real estate. Located on the corner of Yuma & Dean road in Buckeye Arizona we find that only 5% of the units are occupied. The rest are just sitting vacant. What a shame. Whenyou support your local retailer, You are supporting your local economy. Before you decide to pump your money into corporate giants, Please consider that your local corner mom & pop stores are working hard to make ends meet. They are your neighbors and would like to feed their family as well.. So Instead of contributing to corporate executives Hawaiian Vacations, Shop at your local retail stores. support Your Neighborhood, Your Town and Your Economy. Buckeye, Arizona January 25, 2011 ©arizonapublic TWITTER: twitter.com
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It’s interesting how rental real estate gets treated as an investment. Like Rodney Dangerfield, it gets no respect. While conventional investments like stocks and bonds get the Financial Post and the Wall Street Journal, do a search on “how to purchase real estate” and you’ll discover all kinds of no-money down schemes that seem designed to sell books and tapes instead of investment real estate. On TV there is Report on Business TV, but for real estate you’ll see flipping shows or infomercials. It strikes me as pitiful that such a solid investment vehicle gets such a bad reputation.

It is possible to buy with no money down, but it involves arranging a high ratio mortgage, and for rental property you only do that if you have equity in other properties. In other words, if you’ve got one property free and clear its relatively easy to arrange a line of credit at prime. A 0,000 property would cost about 0 per month, plus taxes and maintenance of about 0. In short, it would carry itself and give you income to pay the financing costs.

A more common method to buy income real estate is with a deposit. Usually is you can make investment property itself with less than 40% down its probably a good deal. These kinds of properties are easier to come across in stable markets.

There are lots of reasons to own investment real estate.

Reason #1 to own income real estate is because your renters buy it for you. Even if the other benefits didn’t accrue, that on it’s own justifies the investment. But the fact is, there are more benefits to buying rental property

Reason #2 is leverage. The most effective description of how leverage works comes from the book Buy, Rent, Sell, by Lionel Needleman (Needleman is not a fast talker; in fact, he’s an accomplished author and professor with many published books and articles on housing in Great Britain and Canada. His assumptions and math is a bit simplistic, and need to be tweaked for your local market, but the book is worth looking at).

He explains leverage in the following manner: John and Mary each buy a property 0,000. After a year both houses have increased 10% in value. Both buyers sell the properties and compare the profits.

John began with 0,000, and now has 0,000, which means he has earned a 10% return on his investment. Mary, on the other hand, put ,000 down on her property, and mortgaged the balance for,000. When she sells she clears off the mortgage and totals everything. She also received a ,000 profit, but since she only invested ,000 in the income property, she’s made a 100% return on her down payment. As you may suspect, the real kicker is that while John invested in one house, kept it for a year and then sold it with a ,000 profit, Mary acquired 10 houses, kept them one year, and then sold them for a 0,000 profit. Both started out with 0,000, but after a year John has only got 0,000 while Mary ,000 more. The numbers are simplified in this example, but they decisively demonstrate the magic of leverage.

Reason #3 is taxes. In most tax zones costs incurred on investment real estate is comes off income. And, you can generally incur depreciation expense on the structure that in effect are paper losses that reduce the tax burden. Depreciation works like this: we know that the value of a durable item, like a structure, decreases with the years. Even if the property is maintained perfectly, an old house is not worth the same amount of money as a new house. This loss is depreciation, and you can use that depreciation loss to decrease the total tax payable.

Of course, when we invest in income property we expect that it will go up in price, and over the long run it often does. What occurs with the depreciation in that case? The tax collector was told the property fell in price through depreciation, but at the end of the process we sold at a profit. The taxman usually says that you’ve “re-captured” the depreciation and levy tax.

Re-capture is no fun. It’s like discovering that you’ve already spent the money that you intended on spending in the future.

There is a great solution. When you buy the investment you cut up the original investment between the building value and the property value. Without cheating you set the value of the land as low as possible and the structure as high as reasonable (do the math and you’ll see it pays to be reasonable on your splits). When the property goes up in price and you liquidate, you tell the taxman that you didn’t recapture any depreciation since the structure did depreciate, while the land increased in value. This profit is capital gain, and capital gain is usually taxed at lower rates than income like…rent. You depreciate the money you make when you earn it as rent, and pay tax on it when it comes from capital gain.

Owning income producing property also enables you to write off the costs of things that you might have bought anyway, from office supplies to a trip to see the property.

Reason #4 is capital gain. Capital gain doesn’t always happen, but it often does. As we’ve seen with leverage, the capital gain can be leveraged. Even better, the capital gain can, sometimes, be greater than what some folks earn in a year of work.

Reason #5 puts everything together by combining cash flow, leverage, and tax planning. Rental real estate generate cash flow. Initially the cash flow could be neutral or even negative, but after some time it will often becomes positive. When it does you need to pay income tax on the excess rent. The solution for that is to re-mortgage and incur additional interest cost, reducing your taxes. You also re-leverage your initial property. The next step is to take that money and buy another income property. You pay no income tax, incur more depreciation, and still earn a capital gain. Better yet, with two properties you spread the risk, and when the time comes to sell you can stretch out the timeline and sell the properties in different years to minimize tax.

It can’t be repeated enough that you need to buy income property wisely. You need to know the location and the potential tenant. Properties that are desirable and are in a desirable area stay rented. “Desirable” doesn’t have to be “mansion”, but warm, clean, dry and well priced are critical. Whether you buy a 1 bedroom apartment or a three bedroom house with a suite isn’t important.

Metrics are critical. The first is price-to-rent ratio. What that means is that you take the price, say 0,000, and divide the rent, say 00/month, into that. In this case the result would be 100. Numbers between 75 and 175 are great, but never forget that projected capital gains and interest rates impact what numbers you go with. Low interest rates permit higher numbers, and solid capital gain projections will demand higher numbers. Over 200 is no good in almost every location unless all you need is dependable income, aren’t concerned about capital gain or don’t ever plan to sell.

Another excellent metric is the break even rate. This is the percentage of the price need for a down payment to allow the realistic rent to carry the property. The rent has to be a) market rent, not “hoped for” rent, and b) net rent, not gross rent. If the investment will carry at less than 45% down its worth looking at. Clearly, if interest rates are low the net rent will carry more, meaning the break even rate can be high. Remember that low rates don’t last forever, so unless you can lock in very long term you have to assume that the break even rate to be low in low interest rate environments, and can be higher in higher interest rate environments.

If you discover a piece of property that has a desirable price to rent ratio and a desirable break even rate (and is in a good area and isn’t a bad idea), its worth throwing the numbers onto a spreadsheet and determining the internal rate of return (a real estate investment metric that combines various income streams) and projected cash on sale. There are spreadsheets and programs that can calculate this for you, but the key is “GIGO” – garbage in, garbage out. Use correct taxes, the correct interest rates, your projections of income tax rate, and realistic estimates of capital gain and maintenance. Properties in bustling urban areas generally go up in value more than properties in rural or depressed locales. They also often have what seem to be inferior metrics – a downtown city condo could have a much worse price to rent and break even point than small house in a mill town. However, capital appreciation in a rural area is likely much riskier. Measuring mortgage pay down and tax benefits on a detailed spreadsheet let’s you fairly evaluate exactly how competing investments compare.

It would be foolish to ignore the issue of a property bubble, or crash. Buying on metrics both helps and hinders. It helps because if you are hard-nosed with break even rates and rent multipliers you wouldn’t purchase overpriced investment property (underpriced income property doesn’t really turn up in a bubble, and it doesn’t crash in value). It hinders because you can’t buy on metrics in a bubble, no matter how much you want to, because metric compliant properties don’t exist.

The other side of this is that when a market crashes there are lots of metric compliant properties, but often little mortgage financing and plenty of scared buyers and stressed sellers.

All in all, a balanced market is the optimum for purchasers, although buyers who acquire on metrics and exit the market near the peak often feel like they’ve hit the jackpot.

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Written by Honestwiseguy30
hey guys, Im a keen philosopher, fitness obsessed, lover of enjoyment but in all still god fearing ( but never boring ) respect to those who respect

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Question by chicabonita: Prenuptial Agreement in a Community Property State?
I am definitely not planning on getting divorced, but considering the divorce rate, I decided that I want a prenuptial agreement. I live in California, and am wondering if there is a way around the “community property” law when entering into a prenuptial agreement. I don’t think that it is fair that half of what I earn would go to my husband if we happened to get divorced. I am going to inherit a significant amount of assets (real estate and investments) from my parents. Is it possible to get a marriage license in a different state even though we live in California? Can you rewrite the prenup during the marriage to protect assets earned after the marriage? I will become a practicing patent attorney in 2 years, while my future husband is a management consultant. His salary is approximately 150-200k, while mine will be significantly higher. Any suggestions?

Best answer:

Answer by spaznskitz
No you can’t re-write the pre-nup post marriage. It will invalidate it. It is why is it called a”PRE” nup…

Just to ease your mind a bit – your “significant inheritance” is not something he can touch. Family Code Section 770-772

As far as what you earn, if you are going to be that uptight about it – keep seperate bank accounts and protect it if you feel it is so necessary…

are you sure you are ready for marriage? You seem to have a difficult time with the idea of combining your life with someone else’s…assets previous & potential inheritance (which are exempt in CA,pre-nup or not) are understandable concerns…but to want to keep every penny you make that is more than your husband WHILE married – not so sure you are sending a message that marriage is right for you.

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Question by David M: Looking for sites where I can attract investment/loan of -0K?
I have patented intellectual property (“IP”) and majority interest in an unrelated, potentially lucrative lawsuit. I estimate my seed money needs at $ 50K to $ 100K, for which I will issue a UCC as security. Return of from 5 to 10 X principal depending on the amount of investment/loan and timing of return via licensing/sale of the IP and/or an award or settlement regarding the lawsuit.

Question: Are there sites that have potential investors/lenders who may be interested in something of this nature? (Angels and VCs are not serious about this.) Looking for small individual investors/lenders or small groups.

Best answer:

Answer by Indychen
This Forum is NOT meant for making business propositions, or carrying out any sort of financial transactions.
The Yahoo! Answers’ Community Guidelines are very specific on this point :

http://answers.yahoo.com/info/community_guidelines.php

So, kindly try your sales pitch elsewhere.

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Visit www.neworleansrealestatenow.com for real estate investing tips on buying tax lien properties and tax foreclosure properties. In this video real estate coach Ben bought property at a government auction for K and sold it for over K in a down market. Learn proven strategies for buying investment properties at http tax lien properties tax sale properties tax foreclosures tax foreclosure properties

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Question by Eric W: Can you really buy investment homes with little money down?
I see these late-night infomercials from Carleton Sheets and other people, talking about purchasing “distressed properties” and flipping them for substantial profit. I am selling my house now, and will soon have about $ 45K in cash to invest – my credit is absolutely terrible and I have only been in my current employment a short period of time. Are there ways I can purchase forclosures/mortgage defaults/”distressed properties” for a few thousand down and flip them, as these TV informercials say you can really do? How might I get more information without spending the damn $ 200 for this “wisdom”?

Best answer:

Answer by bull_rooster_aardvark
Yes you really can, but it ain’t easy (like he seems to say). Its like a job you are looking for houses all day, putting down lots and lots of offers to have a few accepted. Spending most of your time either fixing up the last purchase or looking for the next one.

Still, having said that I think it is a great way to make a living. The money is fantastic (but you do really have to put in alot of hours) and once you know what you are dong and have some money built up it gets easier and easier and you can even do several at the same time. I was flipping about 1 per month a few years ago – now I do other stuff (note I was not buying and resellilng the same house in one months time but if it took about 4-5 months to flip a house I’d have 5 in the works at one time so it averaged about 1 per month).

I think this is a great path to be on but the learning curve is steep and it really is hard work. As to the how, I would suggest just going to the bookstore (or even library) and reading lots of books on real estate investing. Watch the tv show about this too for more info, and join an real estate investment club. Also, I strongly advise getting a realtor license – you never need to buy or sell any houses but your own, but the license gives you access to so much more info and saves so much on commissions that you really need it.

Good luck, fyi I’ve read many, many books on real estate investing over many years. The main reason I stopped was I kept finding so little new info in each consecutive book there was no longer much point in reading more books.

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When buying your first investment property, something to think about is the possibility of being a property manager or maybe hiring one if being a landlord is not appealing. Research is crucial when buying investment property, so learn what to look for when buying land with tips from a financial planner in free personal-finance video. Expert: Julie Asti, CFP Bio: Julie Asti works as a financial planner for Asti Financial. Filmmaker: Bing Hu
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Kenn Renner discusses the real estate investment climate of Austin, TX in a seminar. For more information, go to www.buyaustin.com
Video Rating: 0 / 5

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