by David Brooks | Nov 3, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
Every year ISO New England, the organization that runs the six-state New England power grid, issues its Regional System Plan, which reports on the current situation and makes predictions over the next decade. Below is their summary of highlights – including the...
by David Brooks | Nov 3, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
A week after a windstorm caused more power outages than any previous storm in the history of New Hampshire Electric Cooperative, the utility’s last few hundred customers are still being hooked up – but there’s a reason it’s taken so long: They’re on islands in Lake...
by David Brooks | Nov 3, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
There’s an embarrassment of riches for science cafes next week: Due to scheduling issues, both Nashua and Concord will hold their Science Cafe NH on the same night. The following night will see the Piscataqua Science Cafe in Portsmouth. Nashua: Narcan and The...
by David Brooks | Nov 2, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
New Hampshire has long been a bitcoin hotbed, thanks in large part to the influx of libertarian/Free State folks, for whom the idea of currency operating outside of government control is pure catnip. They claim – and it seems very likely – that we have the...
by David Brooks | Nov 1, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
From UNH News Service: Inspired by a color changing mechanism found in cephalopods, like squid, cuttlefish and octopus, researchers at the University of New Hampshire have conceived a design for a unique sequential cell-opening mechanism that has many potential...
by David Brooks | Nov 1, 2017 | Blog, Newsletter
Bob Sanders of NH Business Review has an excellent look at why a lot of very large (by NH standards, anyway) solar projects are being proposed in the states: All the projects being proposed in New Hampshire total 210 MW of capacity, triple the state’s solar capacity...