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" ... Meanwhile, several other New York zips made the list’s top 10. Sagaponack (11962), a posh enclave in the Hamptons, is No. 2, with a median of $4.3 million. In Manhattan, 10007, which encompasses part of the start-studded downtown hotspot Tribeca (home to the likes of Taylor Swift, Jennifer Lawrence and Steven Spielberg), is fifth, with $3.9 million; 10013, which also includes Tribeca, in addition to neighboring SoHo, placed eighth with $3.515 million. ... "
" ... Ring Always Home Cam is sure to become a family favorite as it zips around the house playing with your dog, searching for your phone, and scaring away intruders. No street date announced yet, expected to retail for $249. ... "
" ... So the premise is dumb. The behavior of the random driver (who, apparently, is played by Brie Larson, who I didn’t even recognize until I had to Google this for the link) is also dumb. To demonstrate rear automatic braking, for example, she zips backwards down a dead end side street to avoid traffic backed up at a light. Dumb. Who does that? Even if it’s to prove a point — that rear automatic braking, included in every Sentra trim level, will save you if you decide to throw the car in reverse to spare you and your passenger from smashing into concrete poles, just because your passenger is having a crappy day at work. ... "
" ... Thirty-five years after getting out, I was living in approximately the same square footage, but at a better address than 964 Sherman Avenue. The Trump Tower zips up from 57th Street and Fifth Avenue, an elongated glissando of glitz some 65 stories high. For $1 million you got 1,200 square feet there, probably the most expensive residential-square footage in the world. The Beverly Hills crowd made their pads here. Seasoned Gucci-wise Asians, Latinos and Arabs bought these apartments because the boards of cooperative buildings preferred less-peripatetic owners. We called it “The closet in the sky” and it was just about big enough to store all of my wife’s clothes. For a while we considered making it one giant-cedar closet, but the implicit cost – over $10,000 a month in interest lost on our $1 million – made the hurdle rate a bit steep. ... "