logo
Suck up savings of 45% off the Shark Rocket Ultra-Light Corded Vacuum

Suck up savings of 45% off the Shark Rocket Ultra-Light Corded Vacuum

New York Post3 hours ago
New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change.
Each season presents unique cleaning needs.
In the wintertime, there are gingerbread crumbs to consider. In the spring, your floor might be littered with flower petals from recently picked new blooms. And as we head towards fall, beware of tracking in leaves!
But throughout all four seasons, regardless of climate, there's one essential cleaning need that stands above the rest: the humble vacuum cleaner. While there's never a bad time to invest in a high-quality vacuum, there are few better times to invest in this Shark Rocket Ultra-Light Corded Bagless Vacuum than today.
Right now on Amazon, you can pick up this bestselling robot vacuum for a whopping 45% off for a limited time.
Join the over 8,000 Amazon shoppers who also purchased this vacuum in the past month, and see for yourself why Shark is the first name in corded vacuum cleaning.
Amazon
Experience powerful cleaning with the Shark Rocket Ultra-Light Corded Bagless Vacuum. Weighing under 9 lbs, it's easy to maneuver and perfect for carpets and hard floors. The swivel steering and slim design let you reach tight spaces effortlessly. With strong suction and no bags to replace, this vacuum offers hassle-free performance for a spotless home. Best of all? It's available for 45% off this week on Amazon.
This article was written by P.J. McCormick, New York Post Commerce Deals Writer/Reporter. P.J. is an expert deal-finder, sifting through endless brands and retailers to deliver only the best savings opportunities on truly worthwhile products. P.J. finds Prime Day-worthy deals all year long on some of our favorite products we've tested and our readers' beloved best-sellers, from Wayfair furniture sales to the lowest prices on Apple AirPods. P.J. has been scouring sales for Post Wanted shoppers since 2022 and previously held positions at Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and Hyperallergic. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.
Hunting for a headline-worthy haul? Keep shopping with Post Wanted.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

An Android Amazon Tablet? Amazon Stock (NASDAQ:AMZN) Slides on Potential Change
An Android Amazon Tablet? Amazon Stock (NASDAQ:AMZN) Slides on Potential Change

Business Insider

time35 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

An Android Amazon Tablet? Amazon Stock (NASDAQ:AMZN) Slides on Potential Change

Online retail giant Amazon (AMZN) is known for its internal hardware, and for the Fire operating system (OS) that runs it. But there is a chance that the next Amazon tablet could feature something completely different: an Android OS built in. Investors did not seem particularly happy about this, however, and sent Amazon shares sliding nearly 2% in Wednesday morning's trading. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Reports note that, not only will the new tablet boast a whole new operating system, but also, it will be a 'higher-end' tablet, suggesting a significant performance upgrade. Currently, Amazon's tablets run on what is known as a 'forked' version of Android, which means that any apps made for the tablet have to be compatible with FireOS, and be distributed on the Amazon App Store. But with a tablet that runs strictly on Android, a whole new range of apps could be made available for Amazon tablets. Since this is a higher-end tablet, though, it will also come with a pretty hefty price tag. New reports suggest that this tablet will run about $400, a far cry from the $230 Amazon charged for the Fire Max 11. Though for those watching their budgets more closely, Amazon already plans some new devices running Vega, a Linux-based platform that Amazon uses in some of the Fire TV devices. A Raftload of Recalls But Amazon also offered word about several recalls of products sold on its site. The recalls impact about 190,000 total products, and cover a wide range of product classes from wireless power banks to a certain kind of hair dryer. The devices represent a range of different threats, from electrocution risk to '…potential child poisoning.' For instance, a hair dryer from Empower Brands apparently lacks an 'immersion protection device,' which means that the hair dryer could cause electrocution if it were ever dropped into water that someone was standing in. Amazon actually has a recall page, so more information on getting refunds and finding out if your purchases were impacted should be available therein. Is Amazon a Good Long-Term Investment? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Strong Buy consensus rating on AMZN stock based on 44 Buys and one Hold assigned in the past three months, as indicated by the graphic below. After a 26.59% rally in its share price over the past year, the average AMZN price target of $264.56 per share implies 18.67% upside potential. Disclosure

Hertz Jumps on Amazon Used-Car Sales Partnership
Hertz Jumps on Amazon Used-Car Sales Partnership

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hertz Jumps on Amazon Used-Car Sales Partnership

This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Hertz (HTZ, Financials) said Wednesday it will start selling pre-owned cars through Amazon (AMZN, Financials), expanding its retail presence beyond rentals. Shares of Hertz climbed after the announcement. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 7 Warning Signs with HTZ. Customers within 75 miles of Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles and Seattle can browse Hertz cars on Amazon Autos, complete paperwork online and pick up vehicles at Hertz locations. The rollout is expected to reach 45 markets nationwide. The deal expands Amazon Autos, which launched in December with Hyundai and recently began offering used cars. Hertz becomes the platform's first fleet dealer, adding brands such as Ford, Toyota, Chevrolet and Nissan. Hertz sells hundreds of thousands of cars annually in addition to its rental business. The partnership is part of CEO Gil West's Back-to-Basics Roadmap, which follows a bankruptcy filing during the pandemic and a failed EV push. The plan centers on fleet management, cost efficiency and growing car sales. Hertz reported its strongest-ever retail vehicle sales in the first quarter, driven by its Rent2Buy program, which lets customers test a vehicle for three days before purchasing. The Amazon partnership signals Hertz's push to build consumer visibility in used-car sales and diversify beyond rentals. Investors will watch whether the expansion boosts margins and retail demand. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

‘Fare adjustment'? Sorry, Janno Lieber: New Yorkers know a fare hike when they see one
‘Fare adjustment'? Sorry, Janno Lieber: New Yorkers know a fare hike when they see one

New York Post

time37 minutes ago

  • New York Post

‘Fare adjustment'? Sorry, Janno Lieber: New Yorkers know a fare hike when they see one

Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post 'Fare adjustment': That's what MTA boss Janno Lieber laughably calls the next subway-fare hike. Give us a break: A hike is a hike. And every New Yorker knows it. Lieber is resorting to Team Hochul's Orwellian-naming schtick for papering over bad news and rotten policy. Advertisement As in the faux-wonk term 'congestion pricing' for a $9-per-trip tax that's still headed back to the originally-planned $15 — which will doubtless rise on in what Lieber can call 'a congestion pricing adjustment.' More mush: Don't forget that Gov. Kathy Hochul bragged about 'saving' New Yorkers money by starting with only $9 when she socked them with that tax, not the full $15?) Advertisement OK: The subway hike is just a dime, to $3 (for now). But it comes atop countless other taxes that hit New York residents with the nation's heaviest state- and local-tax burden. 'While a small increase may seem like nothing to you at all, it makes a big difference,' one resident, Hannah Reed, told MTA board members. Get opinions and commentary from our columnists Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter! Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Advertisement Yet the brass won't admit the truth: 'I would not call this a hike,' board member Neal Zuckerman huffed. It's 'a very gradual raise, and I think very respectful of the inflation and affordability issues.' What arrogance. As one straphanger, Emmanuel Vasquez, fumed, 'There's always flooding, there's always a brake emergency, there's always a power outage' on the subway, but officials never stop zapping riders with hikes. And that's despite the billions the agency collects not just from fares but city, state and federal tax revenue, corporations, individual taxes and, yes, 'congestion pricing.' Advertisement And while it diverts money to politically-driven projects like Second Avenue Subway expansion: On Monday, the board OK'd a $1.9 billion contract for just a part of project; the final tab will run at least $7 billion for just three new stations. Lieber & Co. know darn well their repeated dips into New Yorkers' pockets sting; they just don't care to admit it. Why else hide behind weasel words?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store