by David Brooks | Mar 27, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
Two new buildings going up in south Concord near a host of hiking and biking trails will hold storage and maintenance facilities for some state agencies, including one that will be glad to move out of an often-overlooked bit of Concord’s history at Sewalls Falls....
by David Brooks | Mar 25, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
Some cryptocurrency fans make Tesla fans look restrained, and a Canadian company that has started building modular bitcoin-mining machines in Berlin, NH, is one of them. As Bob Sanders reports in New Hampshire Business Review, the Canadian company Cathedra Bitcoin...
by David Brooks | Mar 25, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
Business N.H. magazine has a short profile of a New Hampshire firm that’s part of the plant-based-nonplant-food market – in this case, a “cheese” made from cashews rather than dairy products. The story is here. Nuttin’ Ordinary (ugh...
by David Brooks | Mar 25, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
By Targeted News Service WASHINGTON, Jan. 23 – The following federal patents were assigned in New Hampshire from March 20 to March 27. *** Hypertherm Assigned Patent for Consumable Cartridge for Plasma Arc Cutting System Hypertherm, Hanover, New Hampshire, has been...
by David Brooks | Mar 25, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
A more contagious COVID-19 variant is on the rise in New England, but experts still don’t know whether that’s bad news. When scientists talked about the Omicron variant this winter, they were most likely referring to the subvariant called BA.1, which was responsible...
by David Brooks | Mar 24, 2022 | Blog, Newsletter
New England’s last coal-fired power plant, Merrimack Station in Bow, N.H., has won yet another year of guaranteed funding ($750K per month, roughly) under the annual forward capacity market, but there are signs that cheap power from renewables might be started...