Monthly Archives: September 2013

How Much For A One-Bedroom Condo In Long Island City? | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Where/What: A 1BR/1BA condo in Long Island City
Square feet: 842
Maintenance/CC: $636
The Skinny: The listing for this apartment touts its 14-foot-high ceilings, hardwood floors, and “oversized casement windows.” Perhaps as a result of the slightly awkward layout, there’s a smaller extra room (not pictured) with a washer/dryer that could be used as a slightly claustrophobic home office or for extra storage. You also get a dishwasher, as well as a ginormous bathroom with a monolithic tub and a tiled shower. The building itself has a roof deck, courtyard, and a gym with a pool and sauna. How much is the seller asking?

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· Pricespotter archives [Curbed]

 

 

How Much For A One-Bedroom Condo In Long Island City? – Pricespotter – Curbed NY.

Practice safe security: 3 ways to protect your real estate data | Cross River Realtor

As a real estate agent or broker you may find yourself going paperless more and more. And even if you’re not fully “in the cloud” as you make a transition into a paperless lifestyle, you need to consider how basic data security measures can help prevent future headaches.

This WIRED article proves just how easy one’s life can come crashing down because of lax security measures.

Here are some quick tips to help get you started:

Gmail and two-step verification

Gmail 2-step verificationGoogle and its two-step verification is just one simple way to help keep hackers out of your account. Simply sign into your Google account as normal, enter a code that you receive via text message and you’re set! To get started or learn more, click here.

Twitter and login verification

We have all seen plenty of situations where someone’s brand/company Twitter account is hacked. Twitter’s two-step authentication is an easy way to help prevent this from happening to you and your brand.

Visit your account settings page in Twitter and check the box next to “Send login verification requests to my phone.”

– See more at: http://www.inman.com/next/practice-safe-security-3-ways-to-protect-your-real-estate-data/#sthash.BZBeGrGJ.dpuf

 

Practice safe security: 3 ways to protect your real estate data | Inman News.

10 Must Have WordPress Plugins of 2013 Every Blogger Should Know About | Katonah Realtor

How many of you think that having a lot of WordPress plugins slows down your site? That’s only true if you use poorly coded WordPress plugins.

With over 26,000+ WordPress plugins in the repository, it’s hard for bloggers to pick the right WordPress plugin.10 Must Have WordPress Plugins of 2013 Every Blogger Should Know About Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/?p=29720#58xgLayr0OZDBLu5.99

I own and mange the largest free WordPress resource site WPBeginner, so I get to test and review tons of free and paid plugins on a regular basis. The site runs over 40 plugins, and it is very fast.

Myth Debunked…”Plugin quantity doesn’t matter

In this article, I will share the 10 must have WordPress plugins of 2013 that every blogger should know about.

#1. Floating Social Bar

Most social media plugins for WordPress are slow and bloated. Floating social bar is the fastest social media plugin for WordPress that adds a horizontal floating share bar to your content.

10 Must have WordPress Plugins

Floating Social Bar is easy to use with its drag-drop interface, and its eye-catching floating display allows you to maximize your social shares.

#2. WordPress SEO by Yoast

Yoast’s WordPress SEO is the most comprehensive SEO plugin for WordPress.

Not only does it allows you to optimize your articles for SEO, it also comes with comprehensive features such as XML sitemaps, Twitter cards, Google Authorship and Facebook meta data.


Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/08/30/10-must-have-wordpress-plugins-of-2013-every-blogger-should-know-about/#hv8rCXJxyBuXUlqw.99 

 

 

10 Must Have WordPress Plugins of 2013 Every Blogger Should Know About – Jeffbullas’s Blog.

Bedford Car Wash Subject Of Dispute | Bedford Real Estate

 

A judge has ordered a Bedford area car wash to vacate its site by Sept. 30, in the latest battle between a landlord and tenant.

Bedford Town Justice Erick Jacobsen recently ruled that Greenwich-based Splash Car Wash must vacate its site at 527 N. Bedford Road in Bedford Hills by Sept. 30.

Splash Car Wash has a suit pending in State Supreme Court in White Plains in its attempt to remain on the site. Splash has been at the site since 1995.

The judge ruled in favor of Shullman Family Partnership, which has been trying to force Splash off the property for months, though Splash has refused.

The Shullmans have owned the property since the 1960s, and decided not to review Splash’s lease on April 30.

Bob Shullman said he went to Splash on May 1 to pick up the keys and found out they weren’t giving up property, leading to a lengthy court battle. After taking Splash to court, Splash counter-sued asking for a temporary restraining order. When that was denied, Splash filed the injunction.

“I have learned things I never wanted to learn about restraining orders, temporary injunctions and permanent injunctions,” Shullman said. “This is not something enjoyable but you have to do it.”

Shullman said he first noticed something was up when Splash, who pays the real estate taxes, sent a check to cover costs for the end of the year, even though they were only billed until the end of April.

“That gave me an indication that these people were not planning to leave,” Shullman said. “This is not going to be good. I walked off the property. I’m not going to have a fistfight.”

Jacobsen rejected Splash’s argument since they had paid taxes until the end of the year they were entitled to stay until the end of the year.

Splash wants to stay on N. Bedford Road until they get necessary approvals for a new car wash they plan on building at 562-570 N. Bedford Road.

“That’s not our problem,” Shullman said. “That’s a problem between them and the Town of Bedford.”

Mark Curtis, the executive director Splash Car Wash, said that their attempts to build a new car wash in Bedford Hills have been undercut by the Shullmans, who are helping to fund a campaign by nearby residents at Valerio Court against the site. Splash has spent three years trying to get the necessary approvals, finally getting a final site plan approval in Feb.

“They have hired lawyers, sound engineers to fight this under the pretense their property values were going to go down if the property was developed into a car wash,” Curtis said. “They want to defeat us or delay us. They want to take over the business we have developed for 18 years.”

Curtis claims one neighbor who claimed his property was going to be devalued, recently sold his house at 93 percent of the asking price for a profit.

“That’s completely disingenuous, if not dishonest,” Curtis said.

Curtis argued that had the Shulmans not led an opposition campaign against his proposed car wash, he would’ve been happy to hand them the keys and move on.

“By working against us, either surreptitiously or openly, they are breaching an implied contract,” Curtis said. “It’s tortuous interference.”

Curtis said Splash has been a good corporate citizen, donating to DARE, the school district and Boys and Girls Club.

“We love the community and we want to stay,” Curtis said. “We never anticipated it would take this long. We would have our new location built if they hadn’t gotten involved.”

 

Bedford Car Wash Subject Of Dispute | The Armonk Daily Voice.

When Will Solar Get Cheap Enough for Everyone to Use? | Armonk Real Estate

The prices of solar cells are falling rapidly, and will keep doing so for the next few years. The big questions revolve around the rate of the price declines. And the panels themselves aren’t the only place where cost reductions will be found. America has very high “soft costs”—installation, permitting, marketing etc. Whittling down these expenses will help, too. Check out https://wiredsolar.net/how-much-do-home-solar-panels-cost/ to know the home solar panel cost.

Check out, HOW SOLAR PANELS WORK FOR YOUR HOME: A BEGINNER’S GUIDE

Solar is taking off at a breakneck pace (admittedly from a tiny base). Stephen Lacey at Greentech Media provides the striking figures illustrating the exponential growth of solar photovoltaics (PV) in the past few years:

It took nearly four decades to install 50 gigawatts of PV capacity worldwide. But in the last 2 ½ years, the industry jumped from 50 gigawatts of PV capacity to just over 100 gigawatts. At the same time, global module prices have fallen 62 percent since January 2011. Even more amazingly, the solar industry is on track to install another 100 gigawatts worldwide by 2015—nearly doubling solar capacity in the next 2 1/2 years.

Even though prices of modules—the solar panel itself—have plummeted in the last few years, a report from the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory reveals that other costs haven’t been so easy to bring down:

Non-module costs—such as inverters, mounting hardware, and the various non-hardware or “soft” costs—have also fallen over the long-term but have remained relatively flat in recent years. As a result, they now represent a sizable fraction of the total installed price of PV systems.

When Will Solar Get Cheap Enough for Everyone to Use? | Mother Jones.