Listen to the interview here. Rick Ganley: So, Casey, let's back up. Why did you decide to start tracking this data in the first place? Casey McDermott: Well, to be blunt, state officials weren't doing it, at least at first. For the first few weeks or months, there wasn't really any central place where someone in New Hampshire, or someone who cared about someone who lived in New Hampshire, could go to look at how case counts or other key pieces of data were evolving over time. So in March, when all of this began, the state put out kind of bits and pieces of information and press releases, press conferences, things like that. I started logging that data in a single spreadsheet with the goal of measuring how those different metrics, infections, hospitalizations and tragically, eventually deaths were going up and down over time. But I also thought that we could turn this into a tool for the public. So we created a series of charts tracking the pandemic and put those online for everyone to see.