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Instant Reverse Address Lookup

When making important decisions about new people, it is advisable to conduct a thorough search of them. It helps you understand what you are getting into, especially when dealing with new individuals or looking for the best candidate for your business.

However, searching for people and business information can be challenging, the reason public records search engines like Radaris exist today. A website such as Radaris offers free reverse address lookup services, allows you to perform reverse phone number lookups, do property information searches, and more.

This write-up will help you understand how instant reverse address lookup works, including what your property record entails, ways to use property owner search, and the records that can be linked to someone's address.

What is an Address Lookup?

An address lookup or address verification refers to the process of using a street address to run a background check on a person. In most cases, it is used to find information about who works, lives, or owns property at a particular location.

Doing an address reverse lookup on sites such as Radaris produces many results, including a person's complete history. These search engines go through millions of publicly available information, including criminal, marriage, and divorce records, as well as social media profiles and court documents, to give you the most accurate data about an individual.

A reverse address lookup also provides people's property information, such as the name of the owner, address, the property's physical description, sale and listing history, foreclosure activity, neighborhood demographics, local market statistics, and more. Usually, these service providers offer basic information for free and more detailed information at a cost. Note that the report offered may also vary depending on the address you are reversing.

Besides providing people information, performing a reverse lookup by address can help you confirm the accuracy of a particular location's data, including ZIP code, state, street name, postcode, and city. For data mapping, you can also use advanced features to search for latitude and longitude coordinates of specific geolocation. So, what does a property report include?

Information Included in a Property Report

Property owners' search engines like Radaris feature billions of public records in their database to help you search property ownership online. As stated earlier, most of this information comes from public records, including government agencies like state property offices, US Postal Services, Patent Office, as well as national data agencies.

However, the platform does not feature confidential information such as people's health data, confidential financial data, or social security numbers. With that in mind, let's look at some of the information that may be included in the property report.

  • The date of birth of the property's owner
  • The date of birth of the owner property's owner
  • Past and current addresses of the owner
  • The owner's real name
  • Physical description of the building (layout and design)
  • History of the property, including improvements
  • Tax reports
  • Sales and listings, including the previous market sale information
  • Neighborhood demographics
  • Site reports
  • Foreclosure activity
  • Listing photos of nearby schools
  • Associated transfer data

Real estate agents and brokers can visit Radaris to get a complete picture of various properties across the US. This information may be helpful, especially for someone planning to build a house, add a garage, patio, or fence an existing property.

However, you cannot use the information found on Radaris for purposes covered under the FCRA (Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act). Radaris is not a credit reporting agency; therefore, it does not offer consumer reports.

Besides, Radaris does not verify all its collected information. So, ensure you contact a licensed surveyor if you need more accurate information for purposes covered under FCRA.

Ways to Use Property Owner Search

If you are a real estate agent wondering how to search property records, Radaris gives you more than five ways to do so. In fact, the site comes with an all-in-one property-owners search page to make it easier for you. In this case, you will be required to search real property records by address using the following steps:

  • Enter the address in question into the provided search bar.
  • Click the "Search" button and wait for a suggestion list to pop up.
  • Select the correct address from the list and click on the "Property Detail Report" tab to access a comprehensive report.

Now let's look at some of the ways you can use to conduct property owner searches at Radaris.

  • Reverse lookup the address of the property owner
  • Reverse lookup the phone number of the property
  • Search the property owner by name
  • Lookup the property owner's email address
  • Run a mortgage lending history on them
  • Do a background check on their business

Records that Can be Linked to an Address

There are many records that can be linked to an address. These records allow you to look up information about individuals and businesses. They include but are not limited to:

Owner Information

When engaging in a critical venture, such as buying a property or home from an unknown person, it's essential to check their personal history first. In this case, you can run a background check using their phone numbers, addresses, and names. As a result, you may find details such as their marriage records, date of birth, and criminal records.

Contact Information

Another record that can be linked to someone's address is their contact information. This includes phone numbers, addresses, names, social media accounts, relatives, and more. However, Radaris requires you to pay $5.95 for a comprehensive reverse phone lookup report.

Court Records

You can also find criminal records linked to specific addresses on Radaris. All you need to do is enter the city or state you are concerned about on the "Search By Location" or "Search By Name" option and click the search button. In this case, Radaris offers mugshots of sex offenders in specific areas and the date they committed the crimes.

Property Records

Property records can also be linked to an address. Therefore, Radaris allows you to search people's property information, including location, transfer information, prior sale information, tax information, and more. However, there is a catch if you want to get a more detailed report. You must choose between a “Property Detail Report” option for $9.95 or “Property Detail Membership” option for $24.95.

Match-all
Works with any smartphone and HUD apps
Big pic
Produces 20% larger image
Assists without distracting
Glass transparency allows for a clear road view
Glass transparency
Allows for a clear road view

#nofilter #nophotoshop

#nofilter #nophotoshop

Use cases

To get the right reflection image, you need to have your smartphone screen image reversed — HUD apps offer this.
You can find plenty of them in the app stores by “HUD” keyword.
We recommend you to start with the following ones:

  • HUDWAY — GPS Navigation with Head-Up Display HUD for drivers

    By RIT LLC

  • Navmii GPS: Offline Navigation, Maps and Traffic (Navfree GPS)

    By Navmii Publishing Ltd

  • Sygic: GPS Navigation, Maps, Traffic, Speed Cameras

    By Sygic a. s.

  • Speedometer by HUDWAY — speed limits, cameras and radars with HUD mode

    By HUDWAY LLC

  • Navmii GPS: Offline Navigation, Maps and Traffic (Navfree GPS)

    By Navmii Publishing Ltd

  • Speedometer - Speed Limit Alert with Map, HUD and GPS Black Box Recorder

    By Stanislav Dvoychenko

  • Speedometer by HUDWAY — speed limits, cameras and radars with HUD mode

    By HUDWAY LLC

  • Navmii GPS: Offline Navigation, Maps and Traffic (Navfree GPS)

    By Navmii Publishing Ltd

  • Speed Cameras & Traffic by Sygic

    By Sygic a. s.

Find more in app stores

Testimonials

HUDWAY sits among the most innovative companies of 2016, together with Tesla, Ford and Hyundai — for creating the only app that keeps drivers' eyes on the road.
Fast Company
A unique glass that gives you a crystal clear picture of what is coming up next on roads.
iGeeksBlog.com
Keep your phone out of your hand and lap while driving with HUDWAY Glass.
POPSUGAR.
In the days of smartphones with tweets, texts, selfies, and phone calls, HUDWAY Glass makes sure you keep your eyes on the road.
GadgetFlow
HUDWAY gets your eyes off your smartphone and back on the road while driving.
TechCrunch
HUDs are normally just the province of high-end cars, but Hudway offers you the same technology for your older car — allowing you to keep your eyes focused on the road instead of darting around at your GPS.
askmen
If you want a heads-up display to help you drive but aren't in the market for a brand-new vehicle, this new device might be for you.
tom's guide

Video

FAQ

Technically, it will work with any smartphone if at least 90% of its screen size caught by the glass. But the thing is that the screen reflection size directly correlates with the glass adjustment angle and can vary pretty much. This is why we'd take iPhone 6 Plus for the benchmark, and wouldn't recommend anything larger, since we have little confidence in the performance.

Look, although the phone is a bit longer than the accessory cradle, the screen still fits well.
Here’s a pic to illustrate it: https://hsto.org/files/6bf/a2b/60a/6bfa2b60a0fe4b05a64f45bc90f38c7e.jpg

So, make sure your phone length and width are within 158x77 mm (6.2x3.1 inches) and feel free to make a pledge.

Now about phone+case combo. We can't check all the phone model + case model combos. But what we recommend is that the overall weight of your combo is within 300-350 g (10-12 oz) — and most combinations meet this requirement. Beyond that the adjustable mount may get instable. The compact one wil still be OK to some extention.

Thus, the advice: know the weight of your phone+case combo.

Both adjustable and compact mounts stick to the surface — and by surface we mean any dashboard surface — thanks to the industrial strength adhesive. It firmly holds the accessory, and is completely removable, too. Looks like it needs a proper illustration. In the next update we’ll shoot a video about it.

1. Initially, we planned to make only the adjustable stand adhesive reusable, and the compact one non-reusable. This is because of the different size of the sticky area that attaches to the dashboard — the adjustable mount has a bigger bottom platform. Also, the compact mount in no way interferes with the visibility area, and doesn't require frequent detachments. If we manage to find a reusable adhesive that will work well on a smaller surface area, we'll definitely use it, and thus make both stands reattachable.
2. Mounts "reusability" degree will largely depend on how well you wipe the dashboard surface before attaching the mount, and how you store the mounts when ou're not using them. As we know that it's almost impossible to make users diligently follow the recommendations we may give on that, we could say that adhesion characteristics of any modern materials would fade quite soon.
3. Well, we can enclose supplementary adhesive layers in the box. This question is still open with us. Or, we may sell them at a small price in some online shop.
4. We'll test all the issues we doubt about before the production starts, and will be more exact about it after the environmental tests.

We've had previous experience with shipping, and want to arrange the shipment in such a way that will deliver backers from all the problems related to getting their orders.

This is the reason why we arrange the produced batch delivery to the large logistics centers in the US and Europe, manage the customs clearance, and arrange the end delivery — so that you get the shipment arrives where you need it, and not the customs notification prescribing you to collect some documents, pay the customs fee, and wait in the queue to get the shipment.

When indicating the delivery costs, we just wanted to reflect the rates of shipping companies for the delivery and customs clearing services. Yes, the cost of delivery for different countries varies, but there's no option in Kickstarter to indicate the delivery info for each region, and we had to give average figures.

Looks like the audience doesn't like short answers :) OK guys, here is an abstract of a person who tested HUDWAY Glass prototype (#nofilter #nophotoshop #nocorrections):

«Daytime driving. Performance depends upon time of day and brightness of the sunshine. Let me explain. In general, you can see the image clearly in HUDWAY Glass. Not unexpectedly, the level of detail that you can see at night is not present during daylight hours. Large image objects (arrows, lane markings and such) have good resolution but smaller image objects (text and numbers) may be a bit harder to discern. For example, in Awesome HUD there is a compass that is displayed on top that fades out a bit. This issue can be corrected somewhat by adjusting the angle of the glass but it is still present to some extent.
Whenever you drive directly into the sun, the performance degrades significantly to the extent that the smaller image objects disappear.
However, the large image objects remain visible. This is to be expected but cannot really be helped unless you can adjust the brightness of the display on your device so that it reflects better onto HUDWAY Glass».

And, this clearly explains why HUDWAY app deliberately avoids small elements (like texts or icons), and shows only the most important info — shows it large. Also, the visual info is supported (or duplicated) with voice assistant.

Long journeys in intense summer sunlight blazing in your face may cause phone overheating, yes — please bear in mind that HUDWAY Glass is a passive accessory, and it is not equipped with any temperature sensors and cooling elements. Smartphones have their own methods to detect overheating, switch off and cool down, you may know that.

Also, air conditioner and cooler temperature inside the car will considerably help the situation.

Additional note for those who plan to use their old smartphones for that purpose: make sure you don't leave your phone on the dashboard when parking it in hot days under harsh sunlight.

Short answer: no.
We'd love to introduce something for motorcycles, but so far can't figure out any universal solution. For that, tech requirements will be rather different — and we need to properly study it to offer a good and safe product.

We'd love to. The least complicated solution is to add an inductive charger, but the thing is that only a very limited range of smartphone models can benefit from it. For everybody else, it bears zero value.
Now, if we start thinking of some really convenient and universal solution — say, a kind of battery, so that HUDWAY Glass cradle could work as a powerbank, — this requires major revisions of the prototype we came to through several series of tests and modifications. And it goes well beyond the product we offer — moreover, it becomes a new product we cannot offer you within this campaign, as it in no sense fits the estimations on production and shipment time.

Look guys, it's very simple. The glass in the Glass works like a mirror — and to see the right picture in the mirror, we need the screen image to be reversed. This is what we mean when we say that the app should support HUD mode to be compatible with HUDWAY Glass.
Neither Google Maps, nor Waze support this. And it's not us who can do anything about that.
For those with jailbroken iPhones, there is a tweak: http://www.iphonehacks.com/2015/03/how-to-turn-your-iphone-into-an-hud-for-your-car-heads-up-display-mode.html
For everybody else — sorry guys, no universal cure.

With this said, just a gentle reminder that HUDWAY app works off Google Maps, Apple Maps and OpenStreetMap — these two have pretty good coverage globally. You can switch among these in the app settings, and see which work best for your region. And we don't charge for navigation functions.

Our special recommendation for China: guys, Baidu maps rock there! Ad we do plan to implement it in HUDWAY.

What you get for free as a backer is HUDWAY Glass app (a bit awkward name, but OK so far).

HUDWAY Glass app is made to match the accessory and offers a set of simple use cases for immediate use when at wheel. The first version released in the App Store and Google Play will have about 6 display options, from compass and speedometer to trip calculator and land meter simulation that can be used for cross-country navigation. The first version will offer no complicated things like navigation — these will be added step-by-step in the following updates.

HUDWAY app is already available in Google Play and App Store (http://hudwayapp.com/store/). This app works off Google Maps, Apple Maps and OpenStreetMap, which allows for its global coverage. It was designed specifically for navigation in low visibility, mainly outside the city. This is where it works best alerting on the upcoming road curves when you can’t see them yet in your car headlights.

All the navigation functions are forever free in HUDWAY. Paid features, like route view customization, and Voice Assistant are available by subscriptions. There are two subscriptions, 1-year (€2.99) and lifetime (€8.99).

Here we have a more detailed guide on HUDWAY app: http://support.hudwayapp.com/hc/en-us/categories/200118408


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