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Kids, parents forced into street by unplowed sidewalk in front of East Boston elementary school

Kennedy snow

The scene this morning outside the Kennedy Elementary School on Saratoga Street. Snapped by a concerned citizen.


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We Watch TV FIVE HOURS a Day on Average... WHAT?

Covering technology events is a breeze, but sometimes - as with today’s #TVNext panel in Boston at Hill Holliday - you sometimes run into a challenge. Today's event is a challenge for me because I've already heard some astonishing facts and it's only 10AM. We now watch TV five hours a day, on average, in America.

Let me paint the picture and then I'll share where that five-hour figure came from.

Sitting on the 35th floor at a State Street high rise, about 100 or so broadcast pros, media reps, social media folks and marketing people have gathered to hear where TV is headed. Specifically, they are anxious to find out the new ways in which viewers consumer content and embrace entertainment.

From technicolor to betamax to all home-entertainment devices, the crowd has been presented this morning with a historical perspective of how people watch TV. Even something we take for granted these days - the DVR - is now something that seems dated. Especially when you can access all your shows remotely via handheld devices wherever you go.

Here's a quick recap of the first few speakers and the keynote at this summit on the future of television.

Baba Shetty - the Chief Media and Strategy Officer at Hill Holliday - told the crowd, "Television sometimes gets pigeonholed as this thing that was.”

He assured the folks in the audience that that is NOT the case. He said there's a ton of innovation around networks and content and he promised that today people would learn about the new entrants bringing technology-based devices to market that provide different access to content. These are things like streaming Netflix boxes, Apple TV, Boxee boxes and more.

During the keynote from James McQuivey, VP Principal Analyst of Forrester Research, we learned that we've all watched 25,000 hours of television by the time we are 21.

“That’s huge,” he said. In the past - and even now, television fulfills our needs.

He added, “It educates, it informs, it connects us socially.”

McQuivey said we have urges and “television starts us off fulfilling those needs.”

And these days, the most recent research says we’re watching TV five hours per day.

In closing, McQuivey said, "This is not a story about an industry's decline."

I'll share more on this later today - but in the meanwhile, you can watch the summit live stream at...... http://ustre.am/rtdu


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At one Dorchester school, teachers needed to bring shovels this morning

Snowe- in streetDanube StreetThis morning, a concerned teacher at the Winthrop School in Dorchester reported to the city:

I came at 6:30 this morning and had to shovel out a spot for myself. Yesterday, the custodian said that Danube street was not plowed ALL DAY! Our jobs are difficult enough, having to spend 45 minutes shoveling so I can work is not fair, to the teachers or the students. Had we known that the roads would not be plowed, we would have come yesterday. It is also not safe or passable for the buses.

State Rep. Tony Henriquez followed up, reports:

I just spoke to the city. They are sending a truck. 2 way resident parking makes the street hard to plow.


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The 215 bus line has two nice drivers

Yesterday, Kate Norton praised a driver on the 215 route from Quincy to Ashmont who picked up people who weren't at bus stops. Channel 25 followed up by interviewing a driver on the 215 route who picked up people who weren't at bus stops - but not the driver Norton meant.


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Because 'Hey, baby, wanna eat fresh?' wasn't working as a pickup line, apparently

The Herald reports a Subway "sandwich artist" was pretending to be a US Marshal as a way to pick up and scam chicks on Craigslist. Dude even had "handcuffs, a pellet gun that looks like a real handgun, black boots, black tactical pants and a phony badge," when arrested at the TGI Fridays in Norwood, the Herald says.


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New York Times takes dig at Boston's lack of municipal Snowzillas

The paper of record for the City that Never Plows journeys to New England to take note of our towering snow mountains and snipe:

Some snow-savvy cities, like Minneapolis, have invested in machines called Snow Dragons that can melt 30 tons of snow an hour, filter out pollutants and trash and send the snowmelt down a storm drain. Boston has rebuffed the idea in the past, but [DPW Director Joanne] Massaro said that "any option is on the table" at this point.

Earlier:
MBTA Snowzilla in action on the Mattapan Line.


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How Jackson Square could support an indoor hockey rink and field

Urban Edge has posted a copy of an analysis of the financial underpinnings of a proposed indoor sports center that would house both a hockey rink and a turf field, which says demand from the immediate neighborhood and higher fees charged to people and groups from outside the Jackson Square area would be enough to keep the facility running.

The report adds:

The opportunity for inner-city kids to participate in affordable ice skating activities is limited when compared to the programs offered in most other major cities. Surprisingly, Boston, widely considered a "hockey town", has not been on the forefront on inner-city skating program development.

Additionally, there are no accessible indoor fields in the Community.

Via Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Council.


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When plow operators get home, do they curse the other plow operators who have plowed them in?

Way up on lofty Fairmount Hill in Hyde Park, Mike Ball shakes an angry fist at the plow guy who kept pushing snow onto his hard-won shoveled-out driveway.

The evil plowman returned three times after his initial run, each time undoing considerable of my work, replacing open spaces at two points on our 50 feet of sidewalk as well as the wide driveway. I even waved him off twice, to no response. I have no doubt he was hanging around the neighborhood and reworking dry streets just to keep his hourly rate in play. He is an imp of no breeding and low morality.

Pro tip: If you're not going anywhere for the day, don't shovel all the way out to the street. The wall you leave behind will act like a dam and keep some of the plowman's handiwork out.


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What is it about the Riverside line?

Dead trolley at Chestnut Hill this morning.

7:35 update: One could ask the same thing about commuter rail: As I type, there are 17 alerts about delays at the MBTA Web site.

9:00 update: Probably should have written "What is it about the T?" since switch problems at Oak Grove AND a dead train are causing agita on the Orange Line. Or as Boon Sheridan tweets: "Orange line from inbound from Oak Grove dead in the water. Seek alternate routes and aspirin."


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South Station Snowdecahedron

Snowdecahedron

Either the guy who sculpted a snowdecahedron in Porter Square a couple weeks back took the Red Line to South Station today or the Kelvans have distilled the entire crew of the Enterprise into a solid. Either way, Jeff Tamagini took the photo.

Copyright Jeff Tamagini. Tagged as universalhub on Flickr.


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