For much of the first year or two in the life of Web services - and indeed all of their history up to that point - they were about remote procedure calls (RPC); exposing remote APIs across the Internet in order to facilitate machine-to-machine communication and ultimately, business-to-business integration over the Internet. It didn’t take very long however, for Web services proponents to realize that they needed to distance themselves from RPC and its well-deserved reputation as a poor large scale integration architectural style, due to the failure of systems such as CORBA, DCOM, and RMI to see any widespread use on the Internet. So, sometime in 2000/2001, collective wisdom in the space shifted towards a preference for “document oriented” services. Vendors quickly jumped on board with upgraded toolkits, and that was that; documents were the New Big Thing.
There could be people who forge the property title deed and might offer the same for selling. Property verification helps the buyer not to indulge in fraudulent transactions and makes it a happy deal for both the parties as both shall be enjoying the right deal with proper and verified documents.
PROCESS OF PROPERTY VERIFICATION:
FIRST PURCHASE:
If you have less knowledge in buying a property, the following documents should be verified and looked into before finalizing the deed:
Approval and Licenses
Title Deed
Release Certificate
Check Encumbrance Certificate
Verify Land Use
Approval by Local Body
Property Tax Receipts
List of banks financing the Project
Calculate the Cost Yourself
Verify the Builder
Buy Vs. Rent
The Right Payment Plan
Size of the Property Involved
Checking of Infrastructure Plans
Checking the Site
Registration of the Plot
author: Thomas Krichel
Abstract:
This document describes current version of the Research Documents Information Format (ReDIF). This is a simple "field: value" data format inspired from the IAFA templates. A primitive nesting stucture syntax is enabled through the use of clusters of fields. ReDIF is currently used by RePEc.