- June 20, 2006 • 12:49 pm PDT
- + responses
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Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
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Apple’s Brand Is at Stake as Customers Demand Better Labor Practices
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Want to Raise Young Leaders? Don't Hand Out Rewards So Easily
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Bad Girl: Does M.I.A. Live Up to Her Revolutionary Claims?
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People Are Awesome: Man Embarks on Year of Random Kindnesses
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Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
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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Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
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Apple’s Brand Is at Stake as Customers Demand Better Labor Practices
3
It's Time for Some Disruptive Innovation in Higher Education
5
Bad Girl: Does M.I.A. Live Up to Her Revolutionary Claims?
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork

Twitter has become an essential source of news for the Arab revolts. Here are four lists you can follow to get the latest developments, unfiltered.
The economist Samuel Bowles has an interesting theory about why it's good to keep wealth inequality in check. When there's lots of wealth...
This new tilting bookshelf puts form and style way above function. It doesn't totally fail as a bookshelf, but we'd suggest you don't put any...
MIT's great SENSEable City lab recently announced a project to tag thousands of pieces of trash in New York and Seattle with wireless location...
The photographer Mark Abramson chronicles the struggles of undocumented immigrants who have "come out" to fight for the DREAM act.

Want to visit the brothels where the most famous writer in the world got drunk? There's an app for that.
Yesterday, I (and everyone else on the internet) noted that Bobby Jindal sounded a lot like 30 Rock's Kenneth the page when he gave his response...

With the success of the "Jasmine Revolution" and protests in Egypt, are more national uprisings imminent?

Call of Duty's latest release might just be the highest grossing media launch of all time.
Baltimore announced yesterday it plans to start enforcing garbage limits by reducing collection to once a week. That limit? Originally proposed at...

In China, where suicide is the leading cause of death among young people, 68 percent of adults say kids are overworked.

From our latest print issue, GOOD 025: The Next Big Thing

The internet is down in Egypt but there are still valuable resources you can use to follow the protests as they continue after the evening prayer.

The enduring crisis at Fukushima, plus some incredible long-form reads for the weekend, in today's roundup from GOOD Environment HQ.

The UPS of Piracy, or a new model for content distribution? What's behind the latest crackdown on internet file sharing.

Rather than battle rivers with expensive dikes and levees and canals, the Dutch give them more room to flow freely. Maybe we could learn from them.

Finding the work you love isn't simple, but it's worth the effort.

All of Florida's public schools will switch to digital textbooks by 2015. Yes, it sounds expensive, but other states should be following suit.
