It looks like Barack Obama may be entitled to another pledged delegate from North Carolina, with Hillary Clinton losing one, for a net shift of two. Relying on the votes reported on election night, CNN and NBC have been reporting Obama as getting 65 of the the 115 pledged delegates, with Clinton getting the remaining 50. The AP has left two delegates unallocated pending a more complete count, giving a split of 64-49, and CBS has left one unallocated, giving a split of 65-49. The Green Papers generally have the most complete and reliable count (and are the source of the DemConWatch numbers given on the Daily Kos front page); they've got it at 66-49.
But -- the count isn't complete yet, and it looks like Obama may be in line to get at least one more delegate.
The North Carolina Board of Elections has been continuing to compile votes and post the totals both for the whole state and for the 13 individual congressional districts. You can find the statewide results here and the congressional district results by clicking on the "Results" tab and clicking through the various filters. So far, the totals from the districts come to about 90,000 fewer than the statewide total, so evidently these votes haven't yet been allocated to their proper districts; I presume quite a few provisional ballots are still being processed as well.
The votes in several districts are very close; a few hundred votes either way could flip a delegate. The one I've been watching especially closely is CD 13, whose 7 delegates were initially reported as being split 4-3 for Obama. The latest BoE numbers, however, put it at 77,678 for Obama and 43,026 for Clinton. In calculating the delegate allocation, the votes for Gravel and "No Preference" are dropped, since they both fell below the 15% threshold for "viability." That gives Obama just enough to put his proportion of the head-to-head vote in the district closer to 5/7ths than to 4/7ths -- and so entitles him to 5 delegates from the district, and Clinton to only 2.
The upshot of all this is that, given the current vote totals from the NC Board of Elections, Obama should get 67 of the 115 pledged delegates and Clinton 48. This could change a bit further as more votes are counted; Obama is very close to nabbing another in CD 6, while it is conceivable that the total could shift Clinton's way CD 2 -- though given how the late-reporting votes have been running, that looks unlikely.