Democratic Congressman Paul Hodes

By Laura Knoy on Friday, October 10, 2008.

Two years ago Concord attorney Paul Hodes defeated a popular Republican incumbent to represent New Hampshire’s 2nd District. In his first term Hodes has been elected president of his freshmen congressional class and served on the National Security and Foreign Affairs committee and the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Now he faces Republican challenger Jennifer Horn for his seat. We’ll talk with Paul Hodes about his two years in Congress and why he wants another two.

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Issues and Elections: Energy

By Laura Knoy on Thursday, October 9, 2008.

With rising fuel prices and more talk about alternative fuel sources, energy has become one of the top concerns for voters in this election. There’s the question of what to do about rising gas prices, and whether we should pursue more offshore drilling. Americans want to know the candidates' priorities on wind, natural gas, biofuels and solar power, and their positions on nuclear energy and on the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. We’ll see where the candidates stand on energy.

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Republican State Senator and Gubernatorial Candidate Joe Kenney

By Laura Knoy on Wednesday, October 8, 2008.

He’s a veteran of 14 years in the New Hampshire legislature as well as the Iraq war. Senator Joseph Kenney was born and bred in New Hampshire to a small business family. He was a member of the State House for four terms and in 2002 was elected to the State Senate. As a lieutenant colonel in the Marine reserves, Kenney was called to serve in Iraq during his term last year. Now Joseph Kenney wants to be New Hampshire's next Governor. We’ll talk with him about the campaign, as well as where he stands on issues from the economy to energy to health care.

Guest

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BIA Senate Forum

By Laura Knoy on Tuesday, October 7, 2008.

On Monday, Senator John Sununu and his Democratic opponent, former Governor Jeanne Shaheen, took part in a candidate forum based on business issues in New Hampshire. The event was a partnership between New Hampshire Public Radio, the New Hampshire Business and Industry Association, the Union Leader and New Hampshire Public Television. The candidates for discussed issues ranging from taxes and the federal budget, to health care and energy policy. Today we play that forum back to you.

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Sununu, Shaheen Trade Barbs at BIA Forum

By Josh Rogers on Monday, October 6, 2008.

Candidates criticize each other on the national economic rescue plan, taxes, social security and energy.

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State Democratic Party Looks Ahead

By Dan Gorenstein on Monday, October 6, 2008.

This year the New Hampshire Democratic Party has opened up 24 offices around the state, a few in long-standing Republican strongholds.

It’s part of an organizing strategy that Party leaders believe will make New Hampshire a blue state every election cycle.

But state Republicans say their rivals are just wasting money.

New Hampshire Public Radio’s Dan Gorenstein has more.

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The Twitter Election

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, October 6, 2008.

Today on Word of Mouth, we look at a web application that’s growing in popularity, even if it’s hard to explain why. Twitter is a social networking site with a minimalist approach. Users are asked to participate simply by writing what they’re doing at any given moment. If you’re baking a loaf of bread, twitter it. Getting ready for work? Twitter it. Thinking about buying a new sofa? Let the world know.

You have a small amount of space to type exactly what you’re doing at any given moment. Non-Twitter users usually scratch their head when they first hear about it. But once you try it out, it’s easy to find yourself hooked.

It started as a way for friends to follow the minutiae of each other’s lives. But now it’s become a window on public opinion – you can search for terms like “Wall Street” or “football” and see what thousands of people are saying about those topics. And now with campaign season heating up, Twitter is becoming the hot place to tap into the national political dialogue. Even some journalists were twittering during the first Presidential debate, including public radio hosts like Brooke Gladstone and John Hockenberry, sharing their thoughts with the world in real time.

New York Times editor Saul Hansell recently wrote about Twitter and the elections, and joins us with more.

Word of Mouth launched its Twitter page today! You can follow us at twitter.com/wordofmouth. Tell us how you use Twitter. For example, a listener named Christopher wrote to tell us that Twitter has evolved for him from a glorified text messaging service to a constant conversation with a growing number of friends. He also says it keeps him much more aware during this political season.

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Inventing The Future With Games

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, October 6, 2008.

A new online video game launches today that challenges users to invent what the future will look like.

Superstruct plunges players into the world of 2019. Multiple threats face humankind, and our role as players is to come up with solutions for survival. Players need to propose ways of dealing with devastating outbreaks of a pandemic respiratory disease, feeding the world’s hungry after the food supply chain is broken, a power struggle over which alternative energy will replace oil, climate refugees who have fled homelands destroyed by global warming, and hackers who are bringing down global information networks.

The world’s first massively multiplayer forecasting game is a project of a California thinktank called The Institute for the Future. We called the Institute’s resident game designer, Jane McGonigal, to find out more.

The much-hyped game Spore is billing itself as a massively single player game. The newest brainchild of game designer Will Wright, creator of the Sims franchise (SimCity, SimEarth, SimAnt, etc.) has gotten a lot of buzz, and incorporates elements of social networking. BBC reporter Molly Bentley attended the game’s official launch in California last month, and filed this report for BBC's Digital Planet.

Spore has done quite well, selling more than a million copies since it launched a month ago. Forbes reports that at least half a million people have downloaded the game illegally via file-sharing networks. Many Spore owners are upset, though, with the game’s publisher, Electronic Arts, for adding a copy protection system called SecuROM that limits the number of times you can install it on your hard drive. Gamers say it’s too restrictive - they’ve filed a class action lawsuit against the publisher.

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Meet The Numerati

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, October 6, 2008.

If the digital chatter flying around global computer servers and networks at this moment were visible, it would be difficult to move without bumping into it.

With every Google search we type, every email we send, every pass through a toll booth, and with every loaf of bread we pick up at the supermarket, we add more weight to our bloated digital dossiers - the numerical profile that help predict what we’ll buy, how we’ll vote, our potential for productivity or criminal behavior, and who we’re likely to date. Companies like Yahoo and Google are harvesting an average of 2,500 details about us every month. So who is looking at all this information?

Writer Stephen Baker calls them the Numerati. They are the numbercrunchers who read the minds of the people based on the ones and zeros we send flying around the Earth. His new book combs through what the Numerati look for - not just to target us, but to change our behavior. Stephen Baker has been writing for BusinessWeek for 20 years, and he joins us now to talk about his new book, The Numerati.

Watch Stephen Baker introduce The Numerati:


(Photo by Frédéric Solenthaler)

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Next Green Thing: Bike Recycling

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, October 6, 2008.

A federal highway administrator once called biking and walking the "forgotten modes of transportation." But rising gas prices have provided more reasons for commuters to get out of their cars and start using their feet to get around.

One bicycle enthusiast in New Hampshire is turning his hobby into a small business he calls "Re-Cycles Bicycles Unlimited" - and he’s bringing others along for the ride.

Word of Mouth correspondent Sheryl Rich-Kern visited Paul Keegan in his Nashua workshop, and she brings us this story for our "next green thing" series.

(Photo by Tristan Savatier)

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