- June 21, 2007 • 9:36 am PDT
- + responses
1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
3
Apple’s Brand Is at Stake as Customers Demand Better Labor Practices
4
The Subway Falafel Sandwich and the Americanization of Ethnic Food
5
Want to Raise Young Leaders? Don't Hand Out Rewards So Easily
1
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
3
Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
4
What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
5
A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
1
Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
2
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 grist
How tweeting, googling, and McJobs have changed the way we use branded words. When the American Dialect Society met in Baltimore in early...

No one’s arguing that we should cut back on internet searches, in part because Google doing a good job decreasing its data centers' energy use.

Armed with advice from both UPS and a group of sustainability experts, DODOcase is starting to formulate a long term green strategy.
No more botox emails! The latest daily deal site only promotes businesses that improve the environment, your wellness, the community, or all three.
Here's how you can help find missing people, or let the world know someone is safe through Google and Ushahidi's crisis maps.

Google is looking to discover the best young scientists in the world, and is throwing a big global science fair to find them.

If Resisting the Green Dragon is to be believed, you working to prevent climate change is outright blasphemous.

In this edition of the new business video series Green Room: how selling eyeglasses can fight poverty.
Ruth Kedar, the graphic designer behind Google's instantly recognizable, primary-colored (plus that rogue green 'L') logo walks us through the...
Even Less Evil Fact: Google is a Really Important Company. Sure, it boasts massive profits, and it fights with Microsoft, and there is still...
Last year, Google announced it was going to help the world by soliciting world-changing ideas that help as many people as possible. The project,...
It's like losing an old friend. Google has fixed their algorithim so that when one googles "miserable failure" the first result is no longer...
Who ordered the fresh perspective? New York writer Clive Thompson offers an astute take on the billion dollar Google-Viacom debacle..
Step through the looking glass into a world where an AIDS vaccine is in the last stages of successful trials, China and Tibet are making nice,...
Christoph Niemann, who did that incredible series of simple Lego illustrations "I LEGO N.Y.," has produced an equally incredible series of clever...
Driving around the block over and over to find a free parking spot wastes everything: time, gas, space on city streets, patience. It would be...
Google employees make an "It Gets Better" video. Good for Google.
In spite of its China problems Google still has some good things going for it. For example, its transparency (at least, in its American...
God's Eye View is a photography project by Australian artists The Glue Society, depicting biblical events as seen with Google Earth.The Glue...
Google (YouTube, more specifically) put out a call for classical musicians all over the world to participate in the web's first collaborative...