13 January 2026 | 11 replies
We acknowledge responsibility for correcting the error and ensuring that you are made whole.
22 January 2026 | 4 replies
This will rarely change, but you need to tell AI how to think like you by telling it what you would be looking for when reviewing your data. b) a data injection prompt (uploading your report exports from Stessa/RentRedi) c) comparison prompt (feed prior year outputs into the model for YOY analysis.Each section that you listed should have its own prompt template so that results stay clear, errors don't contaminate the project, you can improve each module independently and rerun only the sections that you care about.
15 January 2026 | 4 replies
Is there an error on the appraisal?
27 January 2026 | 35 replies
But it is definitely an error in the filing and could have a hefty consequence if discovered.
19 January 2026 | 2 replies
Tax sales are filled with errors and pitfalls including unrecorded liens, state liens, and workman liens.
1 February 2026 | 7 replies
One thing I’d add from the lending/execution side is that Scranton can still work well, but the margin for error has tightened.
23 January 2026 | 39 replies
They can check the panel to look for common issues like double-tapped breakers or wire sizes that don't match the breaker size.
20 January 2026 | 2 replies
A lot of first-time out-of-state investors end up looking toward Midwest markets because entry prices are lower, rent-to-price ratios are stronger, and the margin for error is much bigger on a first deal.
13 January 2026 | 2 replies
The Govstream pilot is designed to reduce errors at the front end by checking applications against city code, zoning rules, floodplain data, GIS mapping, and historic overlays before plans bounce back and forth for months.In simple terms: fewer surprises, fewer resubmissions, faster answers — with people still making the final decisions.This also feels long overdue.
21 January 2026 | 7 replies
We also had a realtor error at closing that jacked up tax assumptions and had our own fault of waiting too long as interest rates rose.