The closing of the browser tabs, so the poor thing can reboot, brings some worthies:
- Work from home is proving sticky in New York. The number of workers going into NYC offices is well under half of what it was pre-Covid. They're looking to turn underused commercial skyscrapers. That's what living with Covid looks like, in places that have been living with it longer than us. I don't think removing NZ's traffic light settings are going to return us to December 2019.
- Nice. Now do contracting for PCR testing.
- Face it. The NIMBYs are going to try to block your development in court no matter what you do to appease them. Spread the costs of inevitable lawsuits across more dwellings.
- It's not cancel-culture, it's cancel technology.
- The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment warns against locking into hydrogen. Always the danger with winner-picking: you might bet the wrong one. Why not just let ETS prices take lead?
- Oh this is neat. ORBIS gives you the travel time between places in the Roman world. Rome to Alexandria in July? 14 days by fastest route and by cheapest route. Rome to Londinium? 39 days by cheapest route; 27 days by fastest route.
- Fix the select committees already.
- Covid testing is cheap relative to the alternative, but costs are still adding up for businesses.
- The return of the shibboleth.
- This looks fun: Townscaper.
- NZIER's tallied up employment, contribution to GDP and such for the alcohol sector. Here's the media release from the NZ Alcohol Beverages Council, and here's the report. We have 134 distilleries! There's a lot of the usual drill in portraying employment as a benefit rather than a cost, but it's a useful compilation of a pile of stats. I expect I'll be regularly googling the blog here to re-find the link to it.
- Paranoia about the Mont Pelerin Society. Alas, it's just not that influential.
- Would that more public goods could be coin-operated.
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