by David Brooks | Jun 28, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
(This is my column from the June 26 Monitor – and boy, was it fun to report and write) This is the story about one of New Hampshire’s roadside historical markers – actually, two of them that say the same thing – and how they’re not quite accurate for interesting...
by David Brooks | Jun 28, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
I got my pilot’s license many decades ago at a Tennessee airport so small that you had to buzz the runway once before landing, to scare off the deer, but I haven’t flown since Reagan was president. But I remain interested in what is known as general...
by David Brooks | Jun 27, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
Concord TV records every monthly Science Cafe Concord, broadcasts it and posts an edited version online. Here’s their take of the most recent cafe, about citizen science. Check it out!
by David Brooks | Jun 22, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
I do not write software, but I am fascinated and/or perplexed about the weirdest claim I have encountered in a long time: This survey that says programmers who use tabs to indent their code make less money than coders who use spaces: Indeed, the median developer who...
by David Brooks | Jun 22, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
In the 2004-2015 decade, N.H. reduced the total amount of electricity it produced through burning coal by 77 percent, the 8th-biggest decline of any state, according to federal data. That’s one of the reasons it is so hard to determine how much...
by David Brooks | Jun 22, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
One of the big questions regarding energy in New Hampshire at the moment is the pending sale of more than a dozen power plants still owned by our utility, Eversource, including a large coal-fired plant in the town of Bow, just south of Concord. That power plant came...