Via Kottke.
Via Kottke.
1
A Geodesic Dome Promises Fish from the Sky
2
Debunking 'Green Living': Combatting Climate Change Requires Lifestyle Changes, Not Organic Products
3
Billr: The App for Dining on a Budget (Without Annoying Your Friends)
4
TED's Taboo: What's Too Controversial for the Hipster Confab?
5
Companies Value Internships, So Why Don't They Hire Interns?
1
Debunking 'Green Living': Combatting Climate Change Requires Lifestyle Changes, Not Organic Products
2
Infographic: Understanding Social Enterprise
3
Billr: The App for Dining on a Budget (Without Annoying Your Friends)
4
TED's Taboo: What's Too Controversial for the Hipster Confab?
5
Is it Time to 'Occupy Teach For America'?
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork

Hydrocolloids, like you've never seen them before.
Angered at their Democratic representatives' unwillingness to support health-care reform, and apparently not content to express their anger by...
Our friends at SeeClickFix-an online tool for reporting pot holes, grafitti, and anything else that's making your neighborhood unpleasant-had a...

More signs that the era of the personal automobile may be slowly coming to an end: BMW's new car-sharing system looks great.

Cash-strapped Czech towns have found a solution for dealing with speedy drivers: Female police officers in mini-skirts.

The Craigslist founder has a new mission: to "connect and protect organizations that are doing good stuff."

Pneumonia vaccines rolls out today across Sub-Saharan Africa, expected to save lives of children under the age of five.

Pearl Jam, Bonnie Raitt and Philip Glass may sound like an odd ensemble, but they've all joined forces to sell tunes for the environment.

GOOD's second Food Studies blogger is Leslie, who is applying design thinking to the Slow Food movement.
Treehuggers were all over the map this week: Brian Merchant sat down with Bill Clinton on the sidelines of the Clinton Global Initiative,...
What follows is the introduction from GOOD Issue 18: The Slow Issue. You can read more articles from the Slow Issue here, or by clicking the "read...
You may have heard of the Slow Food movement. It got started in Italy and promotes local, small-scale and ethical shopping and eating.Its new...
By John Collins Rudolf Woody Tasch says we need to put the brakes on our investment portfolios. Don't worry, though: He still has a way for...

Become an "apple activist": Check out Slow Food USA's new guide to apple preservation.
Since 1998, Slow Food USA, the American branch of the Slow Food organization, has spearheaded community organizing and national policy...
For people with disabilities, many videogames have long been off-limits. Times are changing, though. "The continuing existence of unfair and...

School programs and libraries often encourage reading by holding summer programs that offer rewards to top readers. For example, finish 10 books...
Here's how you can help find missing people, or let the world know someone is safe through Google and Ushahidi's crisis maps.
One of our Choose GOOD partners has been receiving heaps of hard-earned, positive press. Slow Food, whose name distills its mission statement into...
The GOOD (and ReadyMade) Guide to Slowing Down originally appeared in GOOD Issue 18: The Slow Issue. Use the table of contents below to...