Monday, August 24, 2009

The Boat That Rocked


One fine film which has been released without much hype but a must-see for the people of the current generation.

In 1966—British pop music’s finest era—the BBC played just two hours of rock and roll every week. But pirate radio played rock and pop from the high seas 24 hours a day. And 25 million people—more than half the population of Britain—listened to the pirates every single day.

Recently expelled from school, Carl (Tom Sturridge) has been sent by his mother to find some direction in life by visiting his godfather, Quentin (Bill Nighy). However, Quentin is the boss of Radio Rock, a pirate radio station in the middle of the North Sea, populated by an eclectic crew of rock-and-roll deejays.

They are led by The Count (Philip Seymour Hoffman)—big, brash, American god of the airwaves and totally in love with the music. He’s faithfully backed up by his cobroadcasters Dave (Nick Frost)—ironic, intelligent and cruelly funny; Simon (Chris O’Dowd)—super-nice and searching for true love; Midnight Mark (Tom Wisdom)— enigmatic, handsome and a man of few words; Wee Small Hours Bob (Ralph Brown)— the late-night deejay, whose hobbies are folk music and drugs; Thick Kevin (Tom Brooke)—possessor of the smallest intelligence known to mankind; On-the-Hour John (Will Adamsdale)—the newsreader; and Angus “The Nut” Nutsford (Rhys Darby)— possibly the most annoying man in Britain.

Life on the North Sea is eventful. Simon finds the woman of his dreams, Elenore (January Jones), and is married on the boat…only to be left by his bride the next day.

Gavin (Rhys Ifans) returns from his drug tour of America to his rightful position as greatest deejay in Britain and, in doing so, clashes with The Count. And Carl discovers the opposite sex and who his real father is. Meanwhile, pirate stations have come to the attention of government minister Dormandy (Kenneth Branagh), who is out for the blood of these lawbreakers. In an era when the stuffy corridors of power stifle anything approaching youthful exuberance, Dormandy seizes the chance to score a political goal, and The Marine Broadcasting Offences Act is passed in an effort to outlaw the pirates and to remove their ghastly influence from the land once and for all.

What results is a literal storm on the high seas. With Radio Rock in peril, its devoted fans rally together and stage an epic Dunkirk-style hundred-boat rescue to save their deejay heroes. Some things may come to an end, but rock and roll never dies. --© Universal Pictures

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Michael Phelps-The greatest swimmer, eater?!?!


Swimmer Michael Phelps’s next career may be in competitive eating. Besides grabbing a record eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics , making him the 'winningest' Olympic athlete ever, he’s got to be setting new marks on the chow line.

A New York Post account of Phelps’s… wait for it… 12,000-calorie-a-day diet, gave me a stomachache. Could one human being really consume that much and still be in Phelps’s shape? And could this possibly be healthy for Phelps, even considering his five-hours-a-day, six-days-a-week exercise regimen?

The post reports,

"Here’s Phelps’s typical menu. (No, he doesn’t choose among these options. He eats them ALL, according to the Post.)

Breakfast: Three fried-egg sandwiches loaded with cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, fried onions and mayonnaise. Two cups of coffee. One five-egg omelet. One bowl of grits(thick maize-based porridges). Three slices of French toast topped with powdered sugar. Three chocolate-chip pancakes.

Lunch: One pound of enriched pasta. Two large ham and cheese sandwiches with mayo on white bread. Energy drinks packing 1,000 calories.

Dinner: One pound of pasta. An entire family sized pizza. Upto five different energy drinks.

Does a diet like this make sense even for a calorie-incinerating human swimming machine? We checked in with Mark Klion , a sports medicine doc and orthopedic surgeon at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York. He reminded us that the eating game all comes down to basic math.

If you eat fewer calories than you burn exercising, you lose weight. But an athlete like Phelps, who exercises up a storm, has to worry about eating enough to replenish the scads of calories he’s burned. If he doesn’t, Klion explains, his “body won’t recover, the muscles will not recover, there will not be adequate energy stored for him to compete in his next event.”

But what about the choice of foods? All those eggs and ham and cheese can’t possibly be good for him, can they? Says Klion, “I think for him, because of his caloric demands, he can probably eat whatever he wants to.” And besides, Klion says, if you’ve got to eat that much, it better be enjoyable, or you won’t be able to keep up. Phelps might not be so eager to shovel down a pound of tofu in a sitting, Klion points out.

Still, Klion cautions that he knows plenty of athletes who’ve been training for marathons and have gained weight because they thought they could eat whatever they wanted. So it really does take some planning. Some resources on the Web might help, such as this calorie-use chart from the American Heart Association and a calorie calculator from Runner's World magazine. This calculator from the Calorie Control Council includes a bunch of different activities, from dusting to playing ice hockey.

But these kinds of calculators don’t really apply to a someone like Phelps, who exercises way more vigorously than the typical person. Even by athletic standards, Phelps is in his own league. Example, Cyclists in the Tour de France, considered to be toughest test of physical endurance, commonly consume a paltry 8,000 to 10,000 calories a day.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

One of the most meaningful songs of MJ

"Will you be there"-perhaps MJ's most powerful lyrics and it stands among the other great hits like 'Heal the world' and ' You are not alone'.
Download at- http://beemp3.com/download.php?file=1500691&song=

Watch it - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvYygjcMDdQ

Saturday, July 18, 2009

The Swine Flu - some essential facts

According to wikipedia, "Swine influenza (also called swine flu, hog flu and pig flu) is an infection of a host animal by any one of several specific types of swine influenza virus . In 2009 the media labeled as "swine flu" caused by 2009's new strain of swine-origin A/H1N1 pandemic virus just as it had earlier dubbed as "avian flu" flu caused by the recent Asian-linage HPAI (High Pathogenic Avian Influenza) H5N1 strain that is still endemic in many wild bird species in several countries."

So now we know what it is,let's analyze what are the symptoms that we should be aware of if in case we are unfortunate enough to contract the virus.

Symptoms
The symptoms of swine flu are very similar to the common flu that occurs in humans. The symptoms are mostly fever, cold, cough, runny nose, body aches, diarrhea, vomiting, headache etc. In swine flu the symptoms might be more severe like breathlessness, very high grade fever, loss of appetite and fluid intake, listlessness etc. The important fact is to prevent the spread of this infection. Since it spreads through fomites i.e. through air, infected articles like tissue, paper, pen etc, the preventive measures are very important.

The swine flu virus is resistant to the antiviral medications amantadine (Symmetrel) and rimantadine (Flumadine), but is sensitive to oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir (Relenza). There is no vaccine available right now to protect against swine flu.

Preventive Measures
As the saying goes "Prevention is better than cure". So the measures that can be taken to prevent spread of this particular swine flu are –
  • Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue in the trash after you use it.
  • Wash your hands often with soap and water, especially after you cough or sneeze. You can also use alcohol-based hand sanitizers.
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth. Germs spread this way.
  • Try to avoid close contact with sick people.
  • Stay home from work or school if you are sick.
  • Consult a doctor immediately when in doubt about your symptoms.
Important thing to remember is that people with swine flu are likely contagious for one day before and up to seven days after they began to get sick with swine flu symptoms.

Stay safe.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince


One of the more anticipated films of this summer, HARRY POTTER AND THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE can be summed up in one word - boring. This movie wasn't even an hour long before I found my eyelids starting to droop. Millions of dollars, a built-in audience, merchandising galore and the best they can do is this?

Adapting the mammoth, latter Harry Potter books was always going to be a challenge. What to keep? What to eject? Until now, the movies have made fairly intelligent choices, sacrificing non-essential subplots and background detail; losing only the kind of elements that people who'd read the books would be sad to see them cut.

All that’s changed. Director David Yates and screenwriter Steve Kloves seem to have come over deliberately obscure with their choices this time, devoting huge portions of the film to subplots about Harry and his chums’ teenage romances, while treating the plot with apparent disinterest – an unfortunate necessity to be dealt with in as few lines as possible.

Strange, really, since there are many other angles the film could have taken. This could be Voldemort’s film: the book details his origins in a series of flashbacks, which here are reduced to two (arguably three – one’s revisited). It could have Dumbledore’s film (considering his fate), but the relationship between Harry and his mentor remains as underdeveloped as ever, cordial and distant when it should be poignant and charming.

Not that Half Blood Prince is a disaster, just a disappointment. There’s much to enjoy. This is the wittiest film so far, with plenty of genuinely funny moments. The opening scenes of the Death Eaters wreaking havoc in the real world are simply stunning (so much so, you wonder if that’s where all the budget went and why the climax is so dull), and the film has the most exciting Quidditch scenes yet. Jim Broadbent is superb as new Hogwarts teacher Slughorn, a bumbling has-been who at one point delivers a confession of such touching sincerity that it’s the unexpected highlight of the film. And, at last, Alan Rickman’s wonderfully adopted Snape gets more than a cameo appearance for the first time since film one, and he makes the most of every glacially-delivered line(maybe they could've taken care of his hair properly, greasy and oily remember!?). Even the romance stick is well-handled, to be fair... there’s just too much of it.

In the end,the plot is left rattling around and forced to agree with Hermione’s line in the last scene that it’s all been "a waste of time".Quite why Yates and Kloves decided to move the series so far away from its fantasy adventure heartland is puzzling. Then again, maybe our Twilight generation will lap it up. Snape does look a bit like a vampire...

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Most anxiously awaited Web page of my life

Anna University

Results for B.E/B.Tech./B.Arch./MBA/MCA/B.Sc./PT B.E - May / June 2009

Degree & Branch: B.E. Computer Science and Engineering

Register No 71205104001 Name ANANDRAJ S
Subject
Internal
External
Result
CS1020
14
50
P
CS1022
10
48
P
CS1451
30
144
P
IT1252
14
41
P
IT1402
11
39
P
MA1256
14
36
P

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Top 5 reasons to explain why Jackson was the best




1) Billie Jean. Pop’s most thrilling bassline. You can’t think of it without your shoulders starting to jerk.

2) The Moonwalk. Slow down the footage as much as you like, it’s still impossible for a mere mortal to work out how he did it, let alone to replicate it.

3) I Want You Back. Pure pop joy from the Jackson Five. Jackson was 11 years old on its release. Let’s say that again: 11 years old.

4) The Thriller video. Yes yes, everybody always says it’s the best pop video ever. Well, they’re right. And the music doesn’t really start till about half way through. People watch it for the masks and the dancing.

5) Earth Song. Oh I know the words are ridiculous (”WHAT ABOUT ELEPHANTS?”), but that chorus… Never has one man been able to express so much with a mere wail.

But there are endless other reasons…

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Will Harry potter and the Half Blood Prince be good enough??



Anyone following the Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince news for the past year knows that things have been rocky. Die-hard fans winced as reviews flooded in after the preliminary screenings (particularly one in Chicago), preaching mostly disappointment and negativity. Following the screenings, the November 21, 2008 release date was pushed back to July 17, 2009 and then eventually changed to July 15. With all the speculation and the date changes, fans around the globe have been, understandably, apprehensive.

Make no mistake: hard-core fans are still buying the first tickets, still prickling with anticipation and excitement because at the end of the day, let's face it, hard-core fans would stop at nothing to see this movie. And hopefully they won't be disappointed: initial reviews to date have been overall very positive. Consensus seems to be that David Yates, director Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, has created an exciting and well crafted film. Most of the critics are raving about Bruno Delbonnel’s amazing cinematography, Nicholas Hooper's brilliantly crafted score, Stuart Craig’s imaginative designs, and the performances of Hollywood greats Jim Broadbent, Helena Bonham Carter ,Alan Rickman ,and somewhat surprisingly, youngster Daniel Radcliffe. Apparently DRad has taken what could have been a frivolous family movie and made it into a respectable cinematic experience.

So why are fans – myself included – still nervous? As with all of the previous books, every detail can make or break the movie for an individual who's entered Harry's world as completely as most of us have. And despite this, any good filmmaker knows that every single detail simply cannot be included in a movie adaption of a book. Key plot points have been dropped every movie and there is always a contingent of fans who are appalled. This year will be no different. Horcruxes, Slughorn, romances, potions, Quidditch, and so much more must be included and clearly conveyed within the 153 minutes. How do you build all that up without letting fans down?

Friday, July 10, 2009

Transformers-Revenge of the Fallen

I happened to watch 'Transformers-Revenge of the fallen' on its debut day,and i have mixed feelings on it.Transformers is an extreme summer movie; it's not exactly all action and special effects, but it should be, because the action and effects are spectacular. During its best sequences, it's like watching the most expensive and elaborate fireworks display ever. But the storytelling and relationship stuff is all but unendurable.
The action-chase-battle sequences of Transformers are cutting-edge and undeniably powerful.
From the opening chase-and-battle set in Shanghai to a tour-de-force finale that seems to blow up every ancient edifice in Egypt, Bay proves he can deliver on the whoosh-and-wow factor. Best-in-show honors go to one of the Transformers in this movie, the giant Devastator who lumbers up one of the great pyramids and starts eating it.
Another eye catching feature of the movie is Megan Fox,
with her porno-doll sultriness, she's like Angelina Jolie before Jolie got too serious to be irresponsibly sexy, and Revenge of the Fallen needs her jovial, flirtatious chemistry with LaBeouf,without her the movie would be too much of a juvenile boys' bash.
Revenge of the Fallen may be a massive overdose of popcorn greased with motor oil. But it knows how to feed your inner 10-year-old's appetite for destruction!.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Random Thoughts and Reflections on Love


How do you define love?

Some say it's mysterious, magical, complex, difficult, imaginary, thought-provoking, inspirational, intuitional, joyous, immeasurable, ecstasy, and undefinable. Perhaps.

"Love is a feeling directed at someone which acknowledges their goodness."

"The willful intent to serve the well being of another."

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. - 1 Corinthians 13:5-7

Paramahansa Yogananda says: "To describe love is very difficult, for the same reason that words cannot fully describe the flavor of an orange. You have to taste the fruit to know its flavor. So with love."

Love itself is a universal experience. Yet, every individual occurrence - while perhaps bound by a common thread - seems absolutely unique. Love is what love is! To everyone it expresses itself differently.

Love is the answer to "all" questions!

It is important to stand in Love, not fall into it.

Love is waking up to find the object of your affection in the dream you were having asleep on your shoulder.

Could it be that Love is a story that can never be fully expressed?

Love is seeing an imperfect person perfectly.

Love is friendship set on fire.

The opposite of Love is fear. Think about it.

Love is a decision.

Love has no meaning other than the meaning "we" give it.

God is love.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Discussion about “Google Releasing Chrome Operating System [Google]”


In a sudden, if not unexpected, announcement this morning, Google said it would release an open-source operating system based on its Chrome browser. The OS will be free, geared (at first) toward netbooks, and focused on "speed, simplicity, and security." Google executives told the New York Times that Google Chrome OS would be available online "later this year" as a free, open-source download, while specially tailored netbooks running the operating system are targeted for the second half of 2010. The release will not be a remixed version of the Android phone platform, but a "minimalist user interface," with more screen space and computer power given over to web applications.

My First Post

Hi, this is officially my first post. What i intend to do with this blog is just share my views so that people who see it will find it to be thought provoking, useful, and sometimes even shocking to hear my point of view. Well feel free to comment cause i am a good listener. And mostly I'll share stuff which interests me.