Category Archives: Bedford Corners NY

Bedford Corners Real Estate finds “12 cool tools for handy dads” | Inman Newsfor the Bedford Corners Real Estate Market

12 cool tools for handy dads

Make painting, woodworking easy for under $300Flickr image courtesy of <a href=

When it comes to a gift for Father’s Day, you know you can never go wrong with a cool new tool! So here are some great suggestions, listed in order of average street price, for you or the family to consider for Dad this year.

Kreg Square-Cut ($14.98): Here’s a simple, easy-to-use tool that lets you accurately align your circular saw to your pencil mark when cutting wood to length. Adjustable to align perfectly to your specific saw, for fast, repeatable cuts in lumber, siding, and a variety of other materials up to 12 inches wide.

Craftsman Ratcheting Wrench Sets ($17.99 and up): Craftsman is offering a wide range of open-end and box-end wrench sets with ratcheting mechanisms for added convenience. There’s a four-piece open-end set in metric or SAE (standard size) that lets you turn nuts and bolts without removing the wrench. There are also seven-piece open-/box-end Elbow Ratcheting sets, also in metric and SAE ($79.99), with ends that adjust and lock at different angles.

True Temper Graphite “Shock Zero” Hammer ($19.99 and up): A very comfortable hammer with a tough graphite handle and non-slip grip. It features a wider striking face, and a handy magnetic nail holder that helps save your fingers. Well-balanced and virtually indestructible, these 16- and 20-ounce hammers should last a lifetime.

Craftsman Max Axess Mechanics Tool Set ($70): This is a truly unique, open socket and wrench design that allows the bolt to pass through the socket and even through the ratchet. It eliminates the need for deep sockets, and even allows the use of a socket wrench on threaded rods. The complete kit includes 42 sockets in SAE and metric sizes, 1/4-inch and 3/8-inch ratchets, extensions and other fittings, in a great case that holds things very well. It’s all the sockets a do-it-yourselfer should need around the house or shop.

Black & Decker 12V Piranha Pruning Saw ($79.99): This handy pruning saw cuts through branches up to 3 inches thick, and features a pivoting clamping jaw that grabs the branch for a clean cut with less vibration. The 12-volt lithium battery has enough power to cut more than 50 one-inch branches per charge. The saw also accepts any “T” shank jig saw blades, so you can use it for cutting PVC pipe, copper pipe, plywood and lumber.

Dremel Trio ($99): A versatile tool for a variety of DIY projects, the Trio gets its name from its ability to cut, sand and route. The handle pivots 90 degrees for more versatility, and the non-marring foot telescopes for accurate depth control. Great for wood, plywood and drywall. Features variable 10,000 to 20,000 RPM speed control, and comes in a kit with a case and several handy accessories.

DeWalt DCF815S2 12-Volt Max 1/4-Inch Impact Driver Kit ($139): DeWalt offers several different tough, compact tools that utilize the new 12-volt lithium ion battery technology. This is their impact driver, which drives screws and lag bolts with ease. Three LED lights circle the bit for great visibility, and the clever flat, bottom-mounted battery design lets the tool stand up on its own. Very powerful, but light enough and small enough to easily fit in a tool belt. The kit includes two batteries, charger and a soft case.

Ryobi TEK 4 Inspection Scope ($139): If you need to know what the framing’s like inside the wall, where that leak’s coming from, or exactly what’s going on behind the dishwasher, here’s the perfect tool at an affordable price. With a bright LED light, 3-foot waterproof cable, 2-times digital zoom, and a bright, clear viewing screen, now you can see inside walls and behind hidden objects with ease. Uses interchangeable 4-volt TEK 4 batteries. Charger and battery included.

Milwaukee 2411-22 M12 38″ Cordless Hammer Drill Driver Kit ($159): This is one of Milwaukee’s line of compact, heavy-duty 12-volt lithium ion tools, offering 275 inch-pounds of torque while weighing only 2.8 pounds. Has a two-speed gear box (0-400 RPM and 0-1,500 RPM), with 0-22,500 beats per minute (BPM) in hammer mode. It also has an bright LED work light, on-board fuel gauge, and 30-minute charger, all in a fitted case. It’s a lot of tool in a small package.

Wagner 515040 Procoat Max Airless Paint Sprayer ($299): Here’s an affordable airless paint sprayer that can tackle all your big projects, including home exteriors. Sprays 0.26 gallons per minute at 2800 PSI, with a 1/2-horsepower motor and variable pressure for spraying a variety of materials. Includes a 25-foot hose with a professional-grade, all-metal spray gun with reversible tip and filter. Telescoping cart allows painting from a 1- or 5-gallon can.

Husqvarna 356BT Back Pack Blower ($479.95): For larger yards, Dad will really appreciate the unique design of this lower-emission, two-stroke, gas-powered backpack blower. The engine, fan housing, and exhaust tube are all designed and insulated specifically to dampen noise. The blower operates at only 64 decibels, which meets many community noise ordinances, and the tone is a lot gentler on the ears. The comfortable padded and ventilated backpack harness has nice wide shoulder pads and a hip belt. The fan generates 177 MPH of air flow, with a tube-mounted throttle control.

Porter-Cable 77240 24-Inch Omnijig Joinery System ($579.95): If Dad’s a woodworker, here’s the ultimate gift that you might want to get the whole family in on. The well-designed Omnijig works with any router to cut a variety of dovetail and box joints in wood up to 24 inches wide, and from 1/8 inch to 1 1/2 inches thick. Templates allow half-blind dovetails to be cut with a single pass of the router. There are also fingers that are independently adjustable for a unique, hand-cut dovetail look. The various color-coded on-board instructions, depth guides, and bit stops minimize test cuts and ensure greater speed and accuracy.

Remodeling and repair questions? Email Paul at paulbianchina@inman.com. All product reviews are based on the author’s actual testing of free review samples provided by the manufacturers.

   

Bedford NY luxury real estate market down 14% this year | RobReportBlog June 2011 | Bedford NY Luxury homes for sale

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Bedford NY Homes selling for over $3,000,000 have seen a 14% drop in market transactions this year compared to last year.  Prices have also dropped about 5% in this luxury real estate market.

 

2011 Bedford NY Luxury Home sales (six months)

12   homes sold

$3,500,000    median price

8129   average size

$505   average price per foot

370   average dom

87.38%  average sold to ask price

 

2010 Bedford NY Luxury Home sales (six months)

14  homes sold

$3,712,000   median price

8503   average size

$608  average price per foot

206  average dom

89.86%  average sold to ask

 

Bedford NY Luxury homes for sale

Bedford Corners NY real estate asks how to “Fix a flood insurance shortfall” | Inman News for Bedford Corners NY real estate

Fix a flood insurance shortfall

Must borrower boost coverage after lender’s mistake?

Mortgages are complicated instruments subject to a myriad of rules and regulations from the many private parties and government entities that are involved. With so much complexity, mistakes are inevitable.

Q: Last December I did a refinance, which required a flood insurance policy on my home. Everything was fine when, out of the blue, I receive a letter from the bank that purchased the loan stating that I needed to increase the coverage on my flood insurance policy within 30 days or the bank would buy the additional coverage for me. Can the bank do this when the policy I bought met the requirements of the lender I dealt with?

A: This letter is typical of many that I receive about mistakes committed by lenders. First, the mistake arose out of the complexity of a process involving multiple players. The lender was required, as a condition of granting a mortgage, that the borrower purchase flood insurance, because the property was located in an area designated a Special Flood Hazard Area by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

The required coverage, which the originating lender did not get right, is set forth in the Flood Disaster Protection Act.

Another common feature of the letters I receive from borrowers about mistakes is a presumption on their part that because the mistake was not theirs, they should not be required to bear any of the cost of fixing it. That is not the case.

While there are exceptions, in general the law does not allow a borrower to profit (or avoid loss) from a lender’s mistake.

A third common feature is that ownership of the mortgage changed hands before the mistake was discovered. This shouldn’t matter, except that it seems to strengthen the borrower’s presumption that the cost of a fix is someone else’s problem by identifying who that someone is (the originating lender, for example). If the mortgage had changed hands more than once, as is often the case, resolution could become even more complicated.

I advised the borrower in this case to take the path of least resistance, which was to buy the additional coverage and avoid further hassles. I warned her that if the current lender purchased the additional coverage, it could cost her two or three times as much. I also pointed out that the originating lender had no self-serving reason to have her buy inadequate coverage. On the contrary, it exposed that lender to a possible buyback demand from the purchasing lender.

Taking an ex off the hook

Q: You break up with the one you have been living with, and part of the break-up agreement is that you get your ex removed from the loan so that she is no longer liable. Is there any way to do that, aside from refinancing?

A: The only way is to induce the lender to take her name off. That isn’t easy because, from a lender perspective, taking her name off the note weakens it.

What is in it for the lender?

If you have a $1 million deposit or trust account at the bank that holds the mortgage, they would probably do it for you, but that is very uncommon. Most loans are serviced by firms that don’t own them, and these firms don’t have discretion to make changes in the note unless the changes are in the interest of the owner.

The one point of leverage that you may have is that you will refinance if you can’t get her name off the note, which means that the owner would lose the loan. In such case, the servicer might agree if you can demonstrate that you have the assured capacity to make the payments on your own. Documenting that you have in fact been making the payments on your own for a year or more would probably do the trick.

Use a reverse mortgage to repair a home?

Q: I heard a financial expert on the “Today Show” say that using a reverse mortgage to fix up a house was a terrible idea. Do you agree?

A: No, I read the statement and it makes no sense.

Reverse mortgages are for elderly homeowners who need income and are not concerned with the size of their estate. How the additional income will be used, so long as it is the considered judgment of seniors in full command of their faculties, is totally irrelevant. If, rather than leaving the equity in their homes to heirs, they prefer to fix them up, or take a trip around the world, or raise orchids, it is their call to make. Second-guessing the call is presumptuous, to say the least.

The writer is professor of finance emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Comments and questions can be left at www.mtgprofessor.com.

Google Product Extensions Come to Mobile Ads | Search Engine Journal for Bedford Corners NY Real Estate

Google Product Extensions Come to Mobile Ads

Mobile advertising is a large and rapidly growing chunk of Google’s arena, especially thanks to the company’s work with the Android platform. While much of the ad space is taken by Ad Mob–related, interactive ads on applications and similar mediums, Google Search itself gets plenty of traffic. To help local businesses connect with mobile users when they’re nearby, Google has released two product extensions for mobile.

The product extensions in question, “Product Extension Ads” and “Product Local Ads,” have been available on the desktop version of AdWords for some time. The new implementation, however, allows for and optimizes the contained data in the mobile platform. Additionally, users who opt-in to have their current location shared with Google will receive advertisements for local availability of products based on which stores are nearby and have the products in stock.

Here’s a more in-depth description of each extension:

Product Extension Ads allow you to show a picture of your product, its title, and the price you’re asking for it in the search results alongside your ad.

Product Local Ads let you show what items you currently have in stock, assuring customers of availability.

In either case, the extensions function by connecting your Google Merchant Center account and information with Google AdWords. In addition to registering for those two services, groups who want to use Product Local Ads will need to apply for the use of the extension, since it is currently in a limited beta stage.

With 79% of smartphone users turning to their phone for help when they’re out shopping, webmasters would do well to pay attention to these new mobile extensions.

Top 10 language translation apps for iPad and iPhone | Inman News for Bedford Corners NY real estate

Top 10 language translation apps for iPad and iPhone

An updating list of the most popular free and paid mobile downloads

A continually updated list provided by app-ranking site TopAppCharts.com of the top three most popular free and paid iPad and iPhone apps for language translation, based on a keyword search for “translate”:

Source: TopAppCharts.com.


    Bedford Corners NY Homes finds the Hidden Opposition between Social Media and Viral Marketing | Search Engine Journal for Bedford Corners Real Estate

    The Hidden Opposition between Social Media and Viral Marketing

    The generally accepted definition of viral marketing is that it refers to a marketing technique in which some marketing objective (often brand awareness) is enhanced by way of a viral process – the brand and/or message spreads like a disease or virus, infecting people, who in turn infect their peers. Something struck me as remarkably odd about this – we are comparing something harmless that requires voluntary user participation with something over which we have no control, that actually inflicts pain and suffering!

    The Semantics

    A virus by definition is something that ‘infects’ organisms. The term is inherently negative – nobody wants to catch a virus! It seems strange that in the online world, where we are under constant threat from computer viruses, we would refer to a positive marketing experience as being ‘viral’! It is an analogy of course, but does it really work?

    Viral marketing relies upon participation. Indeed there are measures for the SNP (Social Networking Potential) of individuals in order to determine who might have the most influence in spreading a viral marketing message (with my lowly Twitter following I doubt I’ll be making it to the top of any lists!). Of course, viruses require a sort of participation but it is involuntary and this is where the analogy doesn’t quite seem to fit.

    Have you seen the “Spread” button on Facebook? What about the “Infect” button? No… me neither. On Facebook we ‘share’ content with our friends. Did you notice the juxtaposition there – ‘share’ is inherently positive. It is actually almost impossible to think of a negative use for ‘share’ – try it!

    Share Vs Infect

    So, on the one hand we have Facebook and Twitter inviting us to ‘share’ with our loyal, well-meaning friends. On the other hand we have these ruthless marketing types wanting us to ‘infect’ the same poor, unsuspecting souls! The thing is, these two separate titles refer to the exact same process, so why the difference in tone?

    Viral Marketing Gives Marketers Power

    The people who are targeted with viral marketing campaigns are not made aware of the fact that they are being ‘infected’ – so whilst the term is a negative one, it is only really shared amongst industry insiders and by people discussing a campaign rather than participating in it. The term has been adopted on a broad scale and one theory is that it empowers the marketers and particularly marketing agencies. People are apparently powerless to resist the spread of this disease – the marketing is forceful and direct.

    Imagine an agency pitching a ‘viral’ marketing idea to a business. Which one sounds more convincing?

    1. This video will go viral; once it starts to spread there will be no stopping it.
    2. This video relies upon people to share it on Facebook and Twitter, and if they do, and then their friends do too, there is potential for it to be seen by lots of people.

    The examples are crude and exaggerated but the opposition is clear for all to see. There is a great deal of competition in the marketing industry and most companies want results and they want them fast. This is one reason why many still fail to accept that social media is important and why option “b” here may be less appealing to them – because the ROI remains less clear than it does with the more traditional marketing techniques.

    Is the Term Viral Marketing Here to Stay?

    In short, it would look that way. Once a term becomes accepted language use, it is not often that it will then be rejected within a short space of time, although I maintain that the analogy is just a little off. Something like ‘snowball marketing’ would work better because a snowball only grows when it is deliberately pushed. Feel free to use that one!

    Overwhelmed by My Garden in Bedford Corners NY | Bedford Corners NY Real Estate for sale

    garden spring 2011

    My garden is a daunting thing at this time of year. In fact I often stand looking at it in stark terror, the way that I would look at the prospect of crossing one of those decrepit rope bridges over a gorge of sharp rocks while being chased by zombies.
     

    2garden spring 2011

    It never used to be this way. I think it’s a combination of factors this year, but mostly the weather. We basically had rain every day in May. And lots in April too. My sandy soil, which can look like a desert during an August drought, has been saturated. The lower part of my garden near the dug well is basically a quagmire. It’s like quicksand and I worry that my boots will be pulled off my feet when I try to walk through it.

    Even the upper parts of the garden that usually dry out quickly have been too wet to inspire me to plant. Plants need some sun, and heat, and got next to none of it in May. So while I usually start planting as soon as I can in the spring, this year it was so wet I was afraid the seeds would rot.
     

    seeds in kitchen

    At this time of year everyone that I meet asks, “So have you got your garden in yet?” It’s usually non-gardeners who would ask this, because they view rain as something that requires you to take an umbrella to work as opposed to something that can prevent you from getting your vegetable garden planted.

    At the beginning of March our kitchen was taken over by the new three-shelf grow light and seed table. We just moved the grow light to storage in the barn since at this time of year we move our seedlings from the back porch to the back lawn and then back to the porch on cold nights. Our nights here are still as low as 7 or 8° Celsius (40°F) so I’m still keeping my heat-loving plants like peppers, eggplants, sweet potatoes and tomatoes, inside. I have planted some tomatoes under cloches but I’ve discovered after many, many years of gardening that even if I put a few tomato plants in early, they produce ripe tomatoes at about the same time as the plants that I put in later. I think the reality is that they just need a certain number of heat units to mature so you’re not much further ahead putting them in earlier.
     

    There is still an enormous amount to be done otherwise and I’m overwhelmed. When I spend the whole day in the garden on the weekends I start to feel like I’m making progress. But during the workweek when I get out there by 6 am and have to stop at 9 or 10 am to head to my home-office to work on the computer, I feel like I’ve hardly made a dent. That’s when I ask myself, “If I worked in the garden all day, every day, how much money could I make?” Unfortunately I realize that at my scale it would be very difficult to support my meager lifestyle by just growing food. I would really have to scale up the gardens to the point where all the cleared land around the house was in production. It’s a huge task, especially without a tractor. And a tractor would cost me $20,000 or $30,000. I’d have to sell a lot of garlic to pay for a tractor.

    Then I would need to find a way to sell it. I could go the Community Shared Agriculture (CSA) route but the question is how many people could I get to join and what could I charge? There are a number of them operating in Kingston but it’s almost an hour’s drive, so the economics of that is questionable. I could try to get local people to join a CSA but there is a much smaller population within an easy drive and many have their own vegetable gardens. We will be selling in town on Saturdays but right now that’s an unknown commodity in terms of what we’ll be able to make in a day.

    To a certain extent I believe with growing food I’m in the “go big or go home” zone and being a fair drive from a reasonable population center, it seems I’m still advised to not quit my day job. Not that it’s a real job. Running your own electronic publishing does not guarantee a paycheck. Not in this economy anyway.

    I have thousands of dollars worth of computer equipment and sophisticated software to lay out books and produce DVDs and to do websites, so this is where I should be concentrating my efforts. But my heart’s not in it anymore. I still believe in spreading the word about renewable energy and living sustainably, but what I really want to do when I grow up (i.e. now) is to earn a living growing food.

    I think this is kind of unfortunate. I believe our society is misdirected in terms of who gets rewarded financially. The most important people in the economy are caregivers who look after children and people who grow food, and most often the people who perform these jobs receive the lowest pay. Who does get paid well in our society? Guys (people) in suits. People who don’t DO anything really.  They push paper around, or bits of digital information on a computer. Any business has an impact on the planet; so the people we pay the most, tend to have the greatest impact. They make “stuff”. They sell “stuff”. They mine stuff from the earth and take from nature to make that “stuff.” And pretty much all of it is “stuff” that we can do without. Food, like air and water though, we need.

    Please don’t get me wrong. I’m not complaining,  “Oh woe is me, wannabe farmer who can’t figure out how to make enough money while growing food.” I am extremely grateful to even own the land and have the luxury of dreaming about such a prospect. I just know how much easier it is for me to earn an income on a computer. And safer. I’m not at the mercy of the sun and wind and insects and commodity prices. Or raccoons when the corn’s ripe.

    I believe this paradigm is about to change though and peak oil is bringing it on. You can’t pick up a paper without reading an article warning about how much food prices are going up. And in the process farmers are making more money. And there’s a real movement with many consumers to want to know where and how their food was grown, and to try and eat as sustainably as possible. And that just makes it that much easier for young, smaller scale farmers to make a go of it.

    So be advised that come the third week of July I’m going to be turning this blog into one big advertisement for our “mail order garlic”. You can think of it as a contribution to the “Cam Mather attempt to make money growing food project” and you will get some of the most delicious and amazing garlic in return! I grow great garlic. I take infinite pride in it. We process every head with love. It has countless proven health benefits like lowering your cholesterol, and best of all, you’ll feel good, helping out that wannbe farmer who lives off the grid in the woods in Eastern Ontario fulfill his love long dream. I don’t want a sports car, I don’t want to walk to Manchu Pichu, I don’t want to go Disney World, I just want to grow food.
     

    half the garlic

     

    For more information about Cam Mather or his books visit www.cammather.com or www.aztext.com