by David Brooks | Feb 17, 2016 | Blog
Science Cafe New Hampshire in Nashua will discuss the science, medicine and policy needs of heroin and opioids. Panelists are pharmacist Vahrij Manoukian of Hollis Pharmacy; Chris Shambarger, liaison to the NH State Police, Paramedic Patty Stolarz of AMR Nashua, and...
by David Brooks | Feb 16, 2016 | None, Science-Technology
The controversy that erupted in September over the West Lebanon public library’s participation in a privacy network known as Tor has led to a proposed state law to make it clear libraries are free to “allow the installation and use of cryptographic privacy platforms”...
by David Brooks | Feb 16, 2016 | None, Science-Technology
If you are, like me, at an age where AARP solicitations constitute half of your mail, then you’ve probably noticed that you can’t read highway signs at night as easily as you once could. Turns out this is a pretty complicated issue, which is why it’s the subject of a...
by David Brooks | Feb 15, 2016 | Blog
The twisted compact fluorescent light bulb has long been used as a design element to represent up-to-date technology, but at the rate things are going it will soon be representing out-of-date technology. This begins a brilliantly written, deeply insightful and yet...
by David Brooks | Feb 15, 2016 | Blog
Today’s Concord Monitor has a great piece in The Forum section recently about “shed hunters” – a term that refers to people who hunt for antlers that have been shed in the woods, as compared to people who try to find their garden shed in the...