from SLATE magazine (7/17/00):
>  The NYT leads with a trend story about how some utility companies are 
> now trying to use pricing to manage energy demand. The main examples: 1) 
> a power company paying--at a rate considerably lower than the cost of 
> buying electricity on the open market--a coal mine to shut down during a 
> day of high demand, and 2) paying customers a bonus for accepting into 
> their homes thermostats controlled (via the internet) by the utility.

of course, the thermostat would be run using Windows 98, so that it would 
crash at least twice a day...

strictly speaking the above isn't about the "market" as much as about the 
utility's "planning" of our lives.

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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