Today mDialog debuts a new video service platform designed to support HTML5, live streaming and dynamic ad-insertion in video streams.Publishers and content providers can now not only encode and serve live stream or Video On Demand content in HTML5, b…
Tagged APIs, Channels, geolocation, html5, ipad, iPhone, mdialog, Video, Web Apps, Web Development, web video

Bourne Energy has created a portable hydroelectric generator that weighs less than 30 pounds and can be worn like a backpack.
The appropriately-called Backpack Power Plant is capable of generating 500 watts and can quietly produce electricity from a stream four feet or deeper. To install the generator, the user digs a trench on either side of the stream or river for two lightweight anchors. A rope connects the anchors to the generator, keeping it afloat through tension.
It performs best at flow speeds of 2.3 meters per second, but can work at a variety of speeds. It produces no heat or exhaust emissions.
Bourne has designed a more-powerful and lighter version for military use in remote locations. The civilian version will sell for $3,000 and could be used in developing countries or by any hydroelectricity enthusiast.
via Wired Science
Nuit Blanche (from Spy Films) is a surreal, beautifully-rendered, partially-CG short film directed by Arev Manoukian. Two strangers see each other for the first time, prompting a reaction so strong (spoiler) that not-Matthew-Modine steps into traffi…

The University of British Columbia is claiming the title of North America’s greenest building for its impressive $37 million Center for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS), currently under construction and to be completed in 2011. What makes this building the greenest?
According to UBC, it will be a net energy producer with fuel cells, a solar PV array, solar hot water heaters, ground source heat pumps and a biomass co-generation system on site. The building will collect, store and use rainwater and stormwater, so that it’s not only providing its own electricity needs, but all of its water needs as well.
CIRS will be a testing ground for sustainable building technologies and all activity, including energy use and human behavior within the building, will be logged. It will also host simulations and performances to educate the public on sustainability as part of its Group Decision Environment Theatre.
Sounds pretty amazing to me, but we’ll have to see how it stacks up when it’s completed to know if it’s truly the “greenest.”
via Ecofriend

In between writing hits like “Sugar Magnolia” and “Franklin’s Tower,” it turns out The Grateful Dead were pretty shrewd businessmen. The Atlantic took a look at the band to find out what managers and freelancers can learn from them.
