- June 29, 2006 • 8:47 am PDT
- + responses
1
What Does Teaching Creativity Look Like?
2
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
3
This Valentine's Day, Celebrate All Kinds of Love
4
Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
5
Birth Control Costs More Than You Think—Even for the Lucky Ones
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
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork
For my money, there's no better overview of the net neutrality issue than John Hodgman's classic segment for The Daily Show. Take a...
Net Neutrality, a big issue for a few minutes a few years ago, hasn't had its place in the sun recently, despite candidate Obama's promises to...
Last year, after Comcast attempted to strangle the bandwidth of BitTorrent users, the Federal Communications Commission ruled that all internet...
There are plans for a 50,000-person, city-sized development in Abu Dhabi, called Masdar City, that will run entirely on renewable energy and be...
If you like learning about potential environmental utopias, you should take a look at this Inhabitat post on The Logroño Montecorvo Eco City...

A prolonged period of low or zero growth might present us with an opportunity to design a more sustainable and equitable world.

The Seattle City Council decided to become carbon neutral by 2050. To get there, they'll need to cut car use in half — just for starters.
If the FCC Chairman Kevin Martin has his way, the Internet might become freely available. Three cheers for the potential future..
A Silicon valley start-up company led by Indian web prodigy Rakesh Mathur has developed software enabling users to search the web from anywhere...
The United Nations Foundation's Nothing But Nets is an organization you can count on in crunch time. It delivers much needed bed nets that protect...

This 110-year-old Victorian home in Ann Arbor is America's oldest and Michigan's first Net Zero home.
A German NGO called Alimon has figured out a smart way of providing water to a neighborhood in Lima, Peru that's been struggling without...

A new development just west of Seattle is looking to upend the way homes are designed, built, sold, and lived in.

Keen Footwear, Honest Tea and gDiapers are GOOD Companies—and we'll be meeting them in Portland this week.

Nothing But Nets reports good news about the spread of malaria nets in the Central African Republic
Back in 2006, off the coast of California, the Infidel, a trawler (or commercial fishing vessel), sank near Santa Catalina Island. Since that...

A social business attaches insurance policies to products for poor people, creating a safety net for millions.

GOOD Business heads for Portland this week to meet the next generation of social impact leaders.

In this issue we celebrate the people taking on the energy challenges of the 21st century.
Michael Lewis, the author of the Wall St. narrative Liar's Poker, has an exhaustive exploration of the forces behind the current financial...

