by David Brooks | Jan 13, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
I cover lots of non-tech/science stuff as part of my job, and one of the things I’ve done for a couple of years is to cover the Concord Chamber of Commerce’s annual Economic Forecast Luncheon in which an analyst from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston...
by David Brooks | Jan 9, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
New Hampshire town meetings are concerned with the local-est of local issues – two-acre zoning or buying a new fire truck or whether to spend money on a municipal fireworks display for July 4. But some folks are trying to get a national, even global, issue on...
by David Brooks | Jan 8, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
An unusual bill that would allow an online college based in Nashua called Signum University to grant degrees, many for majors that are heavy on fantasy literature such as “Lord of the Rings”, will likely go before the N.H. House of Representatives later...
by David Brooks | Jan 8, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
By now you’ve probably heard of electric-vehicle “range anxiety,” where drivers worry they’ll run out of power before they can get to a charging station. If your vehicle propels itself by blowing up liquefied dinosaur remains you might feel smug but maybe...
by David Brooks | Jan 8, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
NHPR’s Annie Ropeik has a story about EPA approving a sort of group-hug methodology for reducing the amount of nitrogen that ends up in the Great Bay from surrounding towns. This is a common situation where the problem is worse than the sum of the parts because...
by David Brooks | Jan 7, 2020 | Blog, Newsletter
There’s a bill before the state Legislature “establishing April 8, 2024 as solar eclipse day in New Hampshire.” It’s part of the state’s preparation to enjoy (and profit from) the fact that eclipse totality will pass through Coos County...