Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Reviews the Tamil album, Endhiran (Robot).

Every film of director Shankar or superstar Rajnikanth beaten previously set box office successes after Sivaji, their first venture together.

Now with Sun Pictures' Endhiran, science-fiction adventure, the hype has only increased. This time the dynamic duo has join hands with another icon, A R Rahman

A scene from Endhiran

Proof of their excitement is evident in the way Shankar and A R Rahman have penned their thoughts in the helpful lyric-booklet that accompanies the CD: "How do I describe Endhiran? It is excitement, entertainment, a huge, fresh dream ..." goes on the director, while the music maestro calls it the movie "that will define Tamil cinema."

Endhiran, a perfect superstar album

A score of lyricists such as Vairamuthu, Madhan Karki and Pa Vijay have contributed the words to this much vaunted blockbuster in the making. Here's a look at what Endhiran has to offer.

First off we have what sounds like machinery powering down, followed by a forlorn echo. You can't really recognize S P Balasubramaniyam's voice without his name being mentioned. A R Rahman's voice is easier to make out, as it really suits the robot format -- unemotional, crisp and metallic. The lyrics are themselves meant as an awakening, and Khatija Rahman's young voice adds an almost reverence to it. This of course, is only the prelude to the much more zest-filled Pudhiya Manitha. Veteran SPB's voice gives full vent, touching the high and low notes with equal ease. The ending is strangely peaceful. It's a song that celebrates a new birth, and it does justice to the event.

There's no doubt at all about what kind of song Kadhal Anukkal is going to be -- the melange of instruments that warble in a delighted fashion tell you that it's yet another scientifically romantic number, bringing Newton along for the ride. It does remind you, in parts, of an earlier Rahman number, Omana Penne, but has enough drive to carry it on its own strength. The refrain in particular is catchy, even as Vijay Prakash and Shreya Ghoshal [ Images ] sing with enthusiasm. Though it doesn't scale heights of brilliance, it manages to be sweet.

The Chitti Dance Showcase, as a departure from other numbers is, as you might expect, a piece meant to display the many perfections of the robot. Rendered by Yogi B, Praveen Mani and Pradeep Vijay, it's a mixture of synthesized rhythms and carnatic music, even bringing in a dash of melodious western symphony on occasion. It's short and to the point.

Irumbile Oru Idhayam begins with heart-thumping enthusiasm, while a female voice kicks off the refrain with energy practically flying off the CD. The futuristic mood is ever-present, and appropriately, the number starts in English. Rahman himself takes the vocal reins in a voice modified to suit a robot. It fits in quite well, especially in accompaniment with Kash n Krissy. The song itself is abrupt and has a choppy feel, entirely suitable for the mood of the song. It's all romantic, this number, but suffused with equal parts of sensuality. You can't help but smile at phrases where the robot "fails to shutdown" at night. In fact, it's the English rap that rather fails in its appeal. The robot's "voice" in itself, and the faint angst in it are quite pleasant; it's easy to fall into its rhythm.

The lion-king arrives as Arima Arima kicks off with trumpets blaring and then into ominous, royal-esque music that heralds, not surprisingly, the arrival of a king. The song is typically hero-centric, with both male and female lavishing praises on the hero. Certainly, the superstar's image stands up well to the praise, and the rumbling background arrangement adds to the depth. Like a good many of Rahman's numbers lately, the song, sung by Hariharan [ Images ] and Sadhna Sargam seems to slip away from a structured format. There's a good deal of English thrown in too. Still, certain phrases, like "Akrinaiyin arasan naan," and "Kaamutra kanini," are unique and intriguing. Others, like "Aisukke Ice," though a direct and flattering reference to the former Miss World, aren't that appealing. The second instrumental interlude has certain interesting variations, before returning to the charanam which heaps accolades on Aishwarya Rai Bachchan [ Images ] as well. There's a certain majesty to the song; the refrain works quite well, which goes a long way towards elevating this song from just another praise-filled number to one that gives you something, musically.

A  scene from EndhiranKilimanjaro begins, expectedly, with a distinctly African feel -- drums, what feels like a spider chittering across a table-top, a gaggle of words, a thumping beat. Javed Ali and Chinmayi kick off the high notes. It's simplistic, steady, and the words are a jumble of Thamizh and who-knows-what, but when accompanied by the rousing rhythm, make you forget. Rather jarring are the "oohs" and "aahs" that add an erotic note to the song for this is a rather modified kuthu song. Not the pick of the selection, but it has the instrumental arrangement going for it.

Thundering rhythms take you into Boom Boom Robot Da, which kicks off in the best synthesized music style. Lyricist Karki has mixed and matched Isaac Asimov, Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein in his ode to the robot, while Keerthi Sagathiya, Swetha Mohan and Thanvisha sing with enthusiastic abandon. Yogi B contributes a touch of rap to the proceedings, even as the music rapidly becomes Indian. The instrumental arrangement takes some getting used to, particularly as its meant to be a futuristic compilation of sorts. One moment it sounds like something out of the 25th century, while the next it goes to the past, even sounding at times like one of Rahman's earliest hits from Thiruda Thiruda. The second interlude, a mixture of humming and piano notes is pleasant. There's lot of love for the robot, with plenty of the superstar's own epithets thrown in. It's fast, loud and furious, but only mildly appealing.

Endhiran is, in fact, a perfect superstar album. Where the collection does manage to veer from the usual, Rahman has managed to add his own quirky, creative notes to the songs.

Parts of the album actually rise above the usual flattering themes and do create a unique musical experience. It might not be the brilliant effort reserved for off-beat works but this is a mainstream entertainer, and the maestro has put together numbers that make an intriguing listen.

இனி வருஷத்துக்கு மூணு படம்! அஜித் அதிரடி முடிவு!!



இனி வருஷத்துக்கு 3 படத்தில் நடிக்க நடிகர் அஜித் முடிவு செய்திருப்பதாக தகவல்கள் வெளியாகியுள்ளன. இளம் முன்னணி நடிகர் விஜய் வருஷத்துக்கு மூன்று அல்லது நான்கு படங்கள் என நடித்து வருகிறார். இதன் மூலம் அவரது ரசிகர்களுக்கு மூன்று மாதங்களுக்கு ஒருமுறை கொண்டாட்டம்தான். ஆனால் அஜித்தோ... ஆண்டுக்கு ஒரு படம் நடிப்பதே அபூர்வமாகி விட்டது. இதனால் அஜித் ரசிகர்கள் வருத்தப்படுவது என்னவோ உண்மைதான். நம்ம தலயும் வருஷத்துக்கு ரெண்டு படமாவது நடிக்க மாட்டாரா? என அஜித் ரசிகர்கள் எதிர்பார்த்து வருகிறார்கள். ரசிகர்களில் இந்த எதிர்பார்ப்பு தலயின் காதுகளுக்கு எட்டி விட்டதோ என்னவோ... இனி வருஷத்துக்கு மூன்று படங்களில் நடிக்கும் முடிவை அதிரடியாக எடுத்து விட்டாராம். அடுத்து ஒரு ஆண்டுக்குள் நடித்து முடிக்க மூன்று பட ஒப்பந்தங்களில் கையெழுத்திட்டிருப்பதாக தகவல்கள் வெளியாகியுள்ளன.

அவரது முந்தைய முடிவுகளில் எந்த மாற்றமும் இல்லை என்கிறது அஜித் வட்டாரம். முன்பு கதை கேட்டு ஒப்புக் கொண்டபடியே வெங்கட் பிரபு, கவுதம் மேனன், கிரீடம் விஜய் ஆகிய மூவரது படங்களையும் வரிசையாக நடித்துக் கொடுக்கப் போகிறாராம். இதில் வெங்கட் பிரபு, கவுதம் மேனன் படங்களை க்ளவுட் நைன் நிறுவனம் தயாரிக்கிறது. விஜய் இயக்குகிற படத்தை ஏஜிஎஸ் நிறுவனம் தயாரிக்கப் போகிறது. இனி தல ரசிகர்களின் காட்டில் சந்தோஷ மழைதான்!

அஜித்தின் பில்லா பார்ட் 2 : விரைவில் அறிவிப்பு!!



2007ம் ஆண்டு வெளியான பில்லா படம் சக்கை போடு போட்டு வசூலை வாரி குவித்தது. டைரக்டர் விஷ்ணுவர்தன் இயக்கத்தில் ‌வெளியான அந்த படத்தில் அஜித் ஜோடியாக நயன்தாரா நடித்திருந்தார். நமீதாவும் முக்கிய கேரக்டரில் நடித்திருந்தார். நயன் - நமீதா இருவரும் போட்டி ‌போட்டு கவர்ச்சி காட்டினார்கள். நயன்தாரா அதுவரை இல்லாத அளவுக்கு டூ- பீஸ் உடையணிந்து நடித்திருந்தார். இதுவும் படத்தின் வெற்றிக்கு உதவியது. பில்லாவைத் தொடர்ந்து அஜித், ஏகன், அசல் படங்களில் நடித்தார். விஷ்ணுவர்தன் சர்வம் படத்தை இயக்கினார். இவர்களது படங்கள் எதுவும் எதிர்பார்த்த அளவுக்கு வெற்றி பெறவில்லை.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Online facility to pay electricity charges in three districts

Easy way: Tamil Nadu Electricity Board has introduced online power charges payment facility for consumers in Coimbatore region.

COIMBATORE: The Tamil Nadu Electricity Board has introduced online facility for the payment of power consumption charges in Coimbatore region.

According to an official of the board here, the facility was first launched for the Chennai consumers and was extended to consumers here recently.

Tie-up

The board had tied up with some banks for this purpose.

Electricity consumers in Coimbatore, Tirupur and the Nilgiris Districts could log on to www.tneb.in and register their name and service number.

They would be able to remit the current consumption charges through internet banking, credit or debit cards.

Internet banking

Consumers could pay through internet banking if they had account in Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, Indian Bank, Indian Overseas Bank or City Union Bank.

Credit card

Payment facility using credit card was available for Axis Bank and ICICI Bank and debit card facility for Indian Bank and Indian Overseas Bank.

The facility was available for this region from June 24 and the system was expected to stabilise in a month.

The board proposed to introduce payment though ATM and post offices too here.

The region had about 13.17 lakh domestic consumers and three lakh commercial consumers. The official added that the board had restored load shedding here for two hours every day.

Load shedding

It had lifted the two hour load shedding for about 10 days last month.

COIMBATORE - Mega city proposal sent to Central Government

The Coimbatore Corporation has submitted to the Central Government a proposal to add three municipalities, 11 town panchayats and 18 village panchayats to it and expand the city area from 105 sq.km. to 476.54 sq.km.

“A city development committee from the Central Government will visit the city to assess the Corporation's requirements and also what it can do for the areas it wishes to merge with the city,” Mayor R. Venkatachalam says. The proposal has now moved up to this point after a series of discussions with the other local bodies

The Corporation will list all the infrastructure development, solid waste management, drainage and energy saving schemes it has already embarked upon and explain how these can be implemented in the other local bodies that will be merged with it, he adds.

The Mayor explains that villages and towns adjoining the city will benefit immensely from major schemes that are approved for a corporation when they are merged with it.

The Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, originally meant for 63 cities across the country, later added an urban agglomeration component that aimed at including the peri-urban areas (along the city border) for infrastructure development.

The city expansion will naturally bring development to these areas.

“There is a demand for metro rail facility for the city. But, it cannot be implemented with the current size of the city. The expansion will be of great help in this regard. Only big cities can get big schemes,” Mr. Venkatachalam points out.

If there are reservations over the expansion in some of the targeted local bodies, it is only because of the reluctance to give up posts of municipal chairman and panchayat presidents, the Mayor says.

“I was a member of Ward 8 of Sanganur Panchayat, before it became a part of the Corporation. Now, I am the Mayor of the city. Apart from development, expansion can bring about greater opportunities in terms of posts too,” he says.


Monday, July 12, 2010

A satellite for students, made by students

It was more than three years ago that D.V.A. Raghava Murthy, Project Director, Small Satellites Projects, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Satellite Centre, Bangalore, was addressing a group of college students in that town on what a fascinating subject space was and how students should get interested in it. His speech was so riveting that at the end of the meeting, a group of students met him and

asked him why ISRO could not help them in building a satellite. Thus began the story of Studsat, a tiny satellite that was built by 35 students belonging to four engineering colleges in Bangalore and three in Hyderabad. Studsat was put in orbit by the PSLV-C15 from Sriharikota on Monday. “Studsat is part of the encouragement given by the ISRO to colleges and universities to learn space technology and learn how to build, nano, micro and pico satellites,” said Mr. Raghava Murthy. Indeed, Shewata Prasad, one of the students from Bangalore, was fascinated enough by the Studsat project that she gave a wide berth to a well-paying job, her teachers said.

“The contagion” has caught on, and four other nano satellites are in the pipeline. According to Mr. Raghava Murthy, these are a three-kg “Jugnu” satellite being built by the students of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kanpur; a 3.5 kg satellite called Pradhan being built by the students of IIT-Mumbai; and two other satellites, each weighing less than 10 kg, that are being assembled by the students of SRM University and Sathyabhama University, both in Chennai. Anusat, a 40-kg satellite, built by Anna University, Chennai, had been put in order by one of the earlier PSLV missions.

The Studsat employed several frontline technologies that were designed and developed by the 35 students themselves with guidance from ISRO. “It was a multi-disciplinary effort,” said Professor B.S. Satyanarayana, Principal, R.V. College of Engineering, and Prof. S. Jagannathan, Head of the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering in the same college. It took the students about a year and a half to design, build and test the Studsat. (The project began in August 2008). The lead institute in the project was Nitte Meenakshi Institute of Technology (NMIT), Bangalore.

How it works

The satellite has a camera which can take pictures in the HAM code. The camera can take pictures of the earth, which can help in predicting the weather. The resolution of the images, taken from an altitude of 637 km, was 90 metres, said H.C. Nagaraj, Principal, NMIT and Professor Jharna Majumdar, Professor, Department of Computer Science Engineering in the same college.

“The ground station built by the students in Bangalore is one of the achievements of this project,” said Prof. Satyanarayana. It received the signals from the satellite soon after the Studsat was put in orbit and the students also built a clean room for testing the satellite.

While NMIT contributed Rs. 45 lakh for the project, six other colleges chipped in with Rs. 45 lakh. The six colleges are Rashtriya Vidyalaya College of Engineering. M.S. Ramaiah Institute of Technology and B.M.S. Institute of Technology, all located in Banglore, and Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology, Institute of Aeronautical Engineering and Vigyan Institute of Technology and Science, all located in Hyderabad. The Department of Science and Technology, Karnataka Government, gave Rs. 5 lakh to the project.

"Initially, we found it funny, how can we develop a satellite? We are only electronic students of second year and third year, but something started ticking in our head, and we got in touch with ISRO," said the team leader of the STUDSAT project, Chetan Angadi.

Their guide Professor Jharna Majumdar, a former scientist with the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), can barely conceal her pride.

"Some attempt has started in the country with nanosatellite, microsatellite, but picosatellite is the smallest satellite weighting one kg. The students wanted to do something which is not there, which they will be the first person to do," said Majumdar.
The satellite would also have an on-board computer, communication system, power system and altitude control system.

Majumdar said the data would be analysed at a ground station, Nitte Amateur Satellite Tracking Centre, at her institute.


STUDSAT is the lightest ever satellite to be flown by ISRO. Therefore, accuracy had to be 100 per cent.


"We had to match the satellite with existing system. We spent endless nights in developing satellite, three to four models so that we could choose the right model, maintain weight considerations as we had to build a system under a particular weight," said the structure co-leader of the STUDSAT, Kiran.

Now, that the big moment is near, the STUDSAT team has only one prayer.

"We pray to god that the satellite goes to orbit, gives the data which inspires other younger students," said Professor Jharna Majumdar.



(Team members from different colleges who built the first Inidan PICO Statellite "STUDSAT" seen with dignitaries while handing over the 1st Indian PICO Satellite STUDSAT to ISRO in Bangalore )


Coimbatore TIDEL Park


About 90 per cent of construction work is over

The Park is located on a 56-acre SEZ

Coimbatore: The Tidel Park here is expected to be inaugurated next month.

According to an official of the park here, about 90 per cent of the construction work is over. Of the total built up area of 17 lakh sq.ft, the park has nine lakh sq.ft. Information Technology (IT) space. It would also have six lakh sq.ft area with a capacity to park about 1,200 cars and one lakh sq.ft of utility area.

The Tidel Park is located on a 56-acre SEZ. Apart from the Tidel, the park would have three IT companies setting up facilities at the SEZ. The SEZ also has 12 acres earmarked for social infrastructure.

IT and IT enabled services (ITES) companies can occupy minimum 5,000 sq.ft. at the park and the space is available at Rs. 30 per sq.ft. At least 35 companies are expected to set shop at the park.

Enquiries so far are encouraging, says the official. And, some companies have already booked space. Most of these are core IT and ITES companies.

The total project cost of the park, coming up at the Special Economic Zone at Peelamedu here, is estimated to be Rs. 380 crore. More than Rs. 250 crore has been invested so far.