by David Brooks | Mar 15, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
The snow is gone or going, depending on where you live in the state, so it’s time to start worrying about ticks. There’s a new study of two similar methods to get small rodents to apply pesticide to themselves: tick tubes and bait boxes. I I wrote about...
by David Brooks | Mar 12, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
UPDATE: Town meeting passed this easily. The town of Bristol wants to build a 200-kw solar array to cut costs for their wastewater treatment plant. Their energy committee has created a terrific 17-minute video pitching it to voters that covers a lot of questions you...
by David Brooks | Mar 11, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
By Targeted News Service The following patents were assigned in New Hampshire from March 7 to March 14. ***Centripetal Networks Assigned Patent for Systems for Protecting Secured Network Centripetal Networks, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, has been assigned a patent (No....
by David Brooks | Mar 11, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
From UNHInnovation: Xiaowei Teng is a professor and chair of chemical engineering at UNH. His research focuses on aqueous electrochemical energy storage devices that use a water-based electrolyte, which is less likely to burn if exposed to air or moisture. Teng...
by David Brooks | Mar 10, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
There’s no better measure of how New England’s winters are changing than this: February a bit colder than average in New Hampshire but it was a bit warmer than normal. Confused? Blame terminology – and climate change, of course. In this case, “average” is a comparison...
by David Brooks | Mar 10, 2021 | Blog, Newsletter
A N.H. legislative committee has narrowly given a thumbs-down to a watered-down version of a “right-to-repair” law, continuing the trend of lawmakers in the Live Free or Die state saying people shouldn’t be free to fiddle with things they buy. The...