- January 3, 2009 • 6:17 pm PST
- + responses
I wonder what the economics are to produce this card relative to regular plastic credit cards...? Anyone have ideas on how to figure it out?
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What Does Teaching Creativity Look Like?
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Wastelands Around the World Unite! Cities' Forgotten Spaces Become Artists' Canvases
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Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
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Birth Control Costs More Than You Think—Even for the Lucky Ones
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This Valentine's Day, Celebrate All Kinds of Love
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Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
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Give Komen the Pink Slip: Five Ways to Support Women's Health for All
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Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
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What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
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A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
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The Tricky Calculus of Setting a Price for MIT's Online Courses
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Lessons from Prop. 8: Why We Shouldn't Put Our Civil Rights Up for a Popular Vote
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Intermission: The Most Beautiful Valentine Ever Made
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Labor of Love: 4 Lessons From My Imperfect Love Life
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Wastelands Around the World Unite! Cities' Forgotten Spaces Become Artists' Canvases
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork
The first affordable mass-produced electric vehicles will hit the streets of America later this year. Once the Nissan Leaf begins to make its...

As our nation comes to terms with the possibility of its credit score being downgraded, a reflection on never having credit debt in the first place.

Historically, products have been created in the developed world and then move to poorer nations. But recent "indovations" are reversing that path.

You can't use his Starbucks card to get free coffee anymore, but Jonathan's card inspired a community of sharing that will carry on.
Publishers should think artistically when packaging novels I am a book snob. Not your standard, "I won't read trashy chick lit" snob-I weep...
Check out this list of books with excellent covers, covers so excellent, it's worth buying the book even if you don't like the story, just for...

Welcome to Make It By Monday, GOOD's weekly DIY feature in which we curate, demystify, and add our own tips for craft projects from around the web.
Make these hearts with your hands.

A crazy man from Florida is suing Wikileaks Founder Julian Assange for 150 million "dollors" for "serious personan injury."

This weekend, dive into some projects that will get you organized for the new year.

DIY crafts for your second shot at the New Year.

A guide to creating crafty new homes for your flowers.

Most people can tell a dominant chimpanzee just by looking at it. Can you? Test yourself now.
Irony: "A state of affairs or an event that seems deliberately contrary to what one expects and is often amusing as a result." The New York Times:...
Great news. While as many as 27,000 species become extinct every year, new ones are being discovered and they are mighty cool looking (I...
Life on Earth requires an energy-transporting molecule called ATP to survive. And as experts point out, you need enzymes to make ATP and ATP to...
Without a doubt, we spend a fair amount of time fixated on finding new and improved ways to please Mother Nature (and our wallets) around the...
One of the biggest mysteries of science is why the universe is made up of matter and not antimatter. But The New York Times reports...
Since 1995, astronomers have discovered about 450 exoplanets that exist outside our solar system. Recently, they found more than they bargained...
Among the safety provisions you might have presumed were already intact, you can finally add the ground beef served in school cafeterias to the...