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Red Line not only thing that stopped working today: Bank of America computer systems are down

Max Silver reports:

Scary - all Bank of America systems in Boston area are down. No account management possible.


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Train of the damned: Red Line riders stuck for three hours before being evacuated through tunnel

Red Line evacuation

Carly Marie was on the dead Red Line train between Harvard and Porter this morning and took this photo before stepping down to the tracks for a tunnel walk. She adds:

Made it through two episodes of @ThisAmerLife and today's @nytimes crossword, plus some Angry Birds and Tetris during today's MBTA fiasco.

Elizabeth Bond was also on the train:

In the tunnel

Bond reports:

I was in the last car of the train so I had to wait for the 13 cars ahead of me to evacuate and didn't make it out until 12:30. When they decided to evacuate us they had to cut the power off so they could cut the third rail off. For the last hour, hour and a half, there was no AC but the firemen were passing out water bottles.

Wicked Local Cambridge interviewed some of the trapped passengers:

"There's some camaraderie," said Flynn, 34, who was headed to work in Harvard Square. The tunnel between Porter and Harvard squares is one of the deepest in the system and passengers marveled at the earthen walls and stalactites hanging from the ceiling.


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Rousted chickens: Zoning board rules hens not allowed in Roslindale or Jamaica Plain

The Zoning Board of Appeals today denied a Roslindale resident's request to keep hens in her Firth Road backyard because city zoning codes expressly forbid poultry in Roslindale and Jamaica Plain - but nowhere else in the city.

City Councilor Rob Consalvo (Hyde Park, Roslindale), vowed to work with Audra Karp to change the regulations that now prohibit chickens in the two neighborhoods - they are allowed with a zoning special permit in other parts of the city. He said it seems to make little sense to have the zoning board, which normally deals with matters such as building heights and setbacks, to deal with animal issues. However, he acknowledged that could be a lengthy process, saying if this were a baseball game, we'd only be in the first inning.

Zoning board member Michael Monahan acknowledged a contradiction in city ordinances that says "pitbulls are OK, chickens are not," but he voted to deny a variance because the code is so explicit.

Karp got several chickens last fall, but city animal inspectors ordered them out, citing zoning for the neighborhood. She said the chickens are now at her father's place in hen-friendly Ashland.

"It was important for us to grow and raise our own food and know our food comes from," she said. Until the city ordered the birds out, she said they had a great life in Roslindale: Out in the morning to forage around the back yard, often under the admiring glances of neighborhood children enjoying the novel site. With no roosters, the coop was so quiet even Rebecca Gutman, who lives in a unit in the same building, said she couldn't hear them.

The board's vote came despite letters and petitions signed by a number of her neighbors and other people across the city. Consalvo said he reluctantly opposed their request for a variance only because he always opposes allowing anything expressly forbidden in the zoning code. He said he was unsure why Roslindale's zoning regulations had an anti-chicken proviso added when they were updated within the past few years.

One neighbor said she was concerned about hens as disease vectors and that they attract predators, including raccoons and opossums (Ed. note: Yep, opossums). Karp, however, said avian flu is just an issue for migratory birds and large commercial flocks and that people only have to worry about salmonells from factory-raised eggs, not from small flocks like hers. She said ten chickens produce less waste than a 40-lb. dog - and that their manure makes excellent fertilizer. Predators? Roslindale already had raccoons and coyotes, she said, adding the chicken feed was kept in special containers to keep rats out.

Ken Phillips of Greening Rozzie, said the chickens exemplified everything Mayor Menino wants in his effort to make Boston "the greenest city in the country." The mayor's office, however, joined Consalvo in opposing a variance because of the way the zoning code is now written.


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MBTA Web site going commercial

The MBTA has started selling ad space on its Web site, with the first ad scheduled to start tomorrow. The T hopes to make "hundreds of thousands" from online ads.


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Could you empathize with the family of your daughter's alleged murderer?

Charles Griswold, a philosophy professor at BU, considers the public statements of Malcolm Astley of Wayland, whose daughter was murdered, allegedly by a former boyfriend.

I was astonished by his apparent ability to stay his anger and to express, if not feel, empathy for the alleged murderer’s family. I am struck by his determination to contextualize his daughter’s death in a way that gives it meaning and provides room for some sort of reconciliation. I note that he is not quoted as speaking the language of forgiveness, but does indicate a sort of empathetic understanding for what he takes to be the alleged murderer’s motivations. This seems to lead him to something more like excusing rather than forgiving his daughter’s alleged murderer.


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In less than two days, one Jamaica Plain driver killed, another injured

State Police report that Ronald Snee, 50, died early Sunday in Quincy, when a Plymouth man crossed the median strip on Quincy Shore Drive and hit Snee's Explorer head on. The Plymouth man was charged with motor vehicle homicide while operating under the influence.

Around 5:30 p.m., another JP motorist was taken to the hospital in Newton after his car collided with another vehicle turning onto Needham Street, Wicked Local Newton reports.


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Vacant house catches fire in Hyde Park

Fire crews responded to Pond St. for a fire that broke out shortly after 9:30 p.m.

Mon, 07/11/2011 - 21:40


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If you just can't get enough of the whole Whole Foods issue

The Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Council holds a special meeting (no doubt, a very special meeting) to talk about that ad-hoc committee report, the one that demands Whole Foods provide everything from "culturally appropriate food to contributions to a fund that would subsidize purchases at competing markets.

The meeting begins at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, July 12 at the First Baptist Church, 633 Centre St.


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She hearts Menino over new stance on Homeland Security arrest program

Carol Rose, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts explains why she's proud of Tom Menino:

Mayor Menino deserves credit for staying true to Boston's reputation as a city that welcomes newcomers and citizens alike, while focusing on community-based policing as the best way to keep our streets safe. Let's hope that the Mayor continues to be smart on public safety and makes a final decision to scrap S-Comm for good.


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The Future of Digital Media. Content is Still King. Long live Content.

Here's the second of two posts on the #branducambridge event at Ryles. Overall, most of the evening's panelists were focused on how digital is changing our lives and how technology and content will affect everything we do going forward. Our behaviors, consuming patterns and communication will eventually be the activity that changes how businesses approach and fete us in the future. Some more thoughts from the panelists...

Paid media has a role. Weber

Social media has changed the game by allowing a hidden world of what happens before news hits the air. Miller

Social media has transformed journalism. It's allowed different stories to be told. It's transforming storytelling. Miller

Social media is about getting people to recognize brands and drive sales - on the business side. Miller

Imagine if you got a tour through Santa's workshop. Social media lets you behind the curtain. Miller

Bad things about social. Sexting, cyberbullying. It's a different experience than what we had when we were young. Because it's so new...it becomes a little too naked. Miller

Just like life, you're going to have those evils. Weber

There's huge potential for using social media as a propaganda tool. Weber

Reinventing yourself is no longer possible because your social graph follows you through your life. Hewitt

Future is supporting video across platforms. Hewitt

We have a big filtering problem with content. Who's doing it, who's sharing it. Hewitt

The cloud - all that is is a bunch of servers you don't own. Weber

Most important change this year - and going forward - is content strategy and the power of content. Weber

You're not going to see a giant wave of change. But you'll see innovation within the existing environments that we have for a while. We're just catching up to that. Weber

Think about the need to present content as video first. Hewitt

Looking at NFC and mobile wallets. Proulx

Ultimately, the entire panel sees the future bright for content creators, software and services that can filter content intelligently.

You decide. Is content becoming the reason you read, watch, share and live? And what's the future of the way you communicate - both as an individual and as a business person?

For more, check out the hashtag #branducambridge and you can find the description of the event at http://digitalmedia3.eventbrite.com


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