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Kollywood’s Young General (a.k.a Ilayathalapathy in Tamil) Vijay must be crying himself silly into his beer over the sorry fate of his recent movie Azhagiya Tamil Magan.

This much anticipated movie of our self-styled Young General turned out to be a disgraceful affront to his fans and has deservedly met with a less than enthusiastic response at the box office.

As one critic wrote in a stinging review:

Asingamana Tamil Magan would be a more apt name for this repellent farce of a movie featuring Vijay in a double role opposite the young Delhi girl Shriya Saran.

Even in the long gone days of silent movies, film-makers would not dare to unleash an abomination like Azhagiya Tamil Magan on viewers.

Horribly amateurish, completely bereft of a story or any semblance of logic, Azhagiya Tamil Magan brings disgrace to the entire Tamil movie industry.

To make matters worse for our Young General , his rival Surya Sivakumar’s movie Vel (released at the same time) received a far superior reception at the box office.

Yes, Tamil movie fans are not the smartest bulbs on the planet but even they refused to put up with rubbish like Azhagiya Tamil Magan.

Let’s see what Ajith brings us next week with the Billa remake.

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In preparation for its February 27 launch, Microsoft rolled out Windows Server 2008 Release Candidate 1 for beta testers on Wednesday.

Customers can download and test Windows Server 2008 at http://www.microsoft.com/ws08eval

Microsoft claims that 1.8 million customers have obtained Windows Server 2008 evaluation code so far.

Windows Server 2008 is the next generation of the Windows Server operating system and an upgrade to the ageing Windows Server 2003.

Key enhancements in Windows Server 2008 include those related to networking,  security features, remote application access, centralized server role management, performance and reliability monitoring tools, failover clustering, deployment and the file system.

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India’s active Internet user base in 2007 is still a pathetic 32 million, according to a new survey report put out by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI).

This represents a growth of 10.9 million active users over 2006.

The IAMAI is also throwing out a figure of 46 million Internet users in the ever used or claimed used category, representing a 42% growth over the previous year.

IAMAI President Subho Ray expressed disappointment over the Internet usage in the country:

[A]lthough a growth of 40 per cent year on year makes us happy, especially since for the last couple of years the rate of growth was between 30-35 per cent, relative to what can be achieved and what needs to be achieved, the growth rate is not very satisfactory….Broadband which would drive more applications, functions and businesses and therefore more users, now really needs to take off in India in order to make the growth sustainable.   

The cities covered by the survey included Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Pune, Patna, Lucknow, Ludhiana, Coimbatore, Guwahati, Surat, Nagpur, Bhopal, Bhubaneshwar, Durg, Vishakhapatnam, Trichy, Bellary, Panipat, Trissur and Jalgaon covering 65,000 households.

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They say that even the rats desert a sinking ship.

While Padmasree Warrior is certainly no rat, this shrewd corporate warrior has abandoned the sinking Motorola and sought refuge in the safe harbor of networking leader Cisco.

Padmasree is joining Cisco as CTO, the same position she held at struggling Motorola where she was responsible for the company’s $4 billion research and development investment and had operational responsibility for Motorola’s global team of 26,000 engineers as well as Motorola Labs, its software, emerging early-stage businesses and the company’s intellectual property portfolio.

With her well-timed move to Cisco, Padmasree is living up to her description on the Motorola web site as wickedly intelligent.

Padmasree parachuted into Cisco just days after Motorola’s board announced on Friday plans to bring in a new CEO Greg Brown to replace Ed Zander. Motorola’s handset division is gasping for breath with an operating loss of $138 million in Q3 on revenues that fell 36% to $4.5 billion.

We think Padmasree – who was named CTO of Motorola in 2003 – is much overrated. But, hey we don’t call the shots in the corporate world.

In typical gushing corporate-speak, Cisco CEO John Chambers Continue reading »

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If you really, really care about your life, you’d better read this piece.

No kidding. This is scary stuff.

Although we’d registered Dr.Atul Gawande’s name on the periphery of our consciousness a while back, his new piece in the December 10, 2007 issue of the New Yorker was the first time we took a dekko at his writing.

And we are impressed. Make that mighty impressed by his new essay on how extraordinarily complex and dangerous (for patients) the practice of intensive care medicine a.k.a critical care medicine has become these days.

As our life spans and prosperity increase, it’s more than likely that most of us will end up in an intensive care unit at some time or the other.

While some of us will survive the ICU experience, many will not. Of those who do not, perhaps their lives could have been saved if only doctors followed checklists before embarking upon extremely complex procedures. Well, since the future is still not upon us, maybe there’s some hope for those whose lives will hang in the balance during their ICU stay.

Gawande’s thesis is simple – when doctors use checklists in intensive care, infection rates are dramatically reduced and lives are saved. 

To hold our interest, Gawande, an Assistant Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School, draws a compelling analogy of the increasing complexity of intensive care medicine with the complexity of piloting a Boeing B-17 bomber in the early days of the aircraft’s launch.


Dr.Atul Gawande
(Pic: Brigham & Women’s Hospital)

As Atul Gawande writes in the latest issue of the New Yorker:

Medicine today has entered its B-17 phase. Substantial parts of what hospitals do—most notably, intensive care—are now too complex for clinicians to carry them out reliably from memory alone. I.C.U. life support has become too much medicine for one person to fly.

Yet it’s far from obvious that something as simple as a checklist could be of much help in medical care. Sick people are phenomenally more various than airplanes. A study of forty-one thousand trauma patients—just trauma patients—found that they had 1,224 different injury-related diagnoses in 32,261 unique combinations for teams to attend to. That’s like having 32,261 kinds of airplane to land. Mapping out the proper steps for each is not possible, and physicians have been skeptical that a piece of paper with a bunch of little boxes would improve matters much.

After describing research studies conducted at Johns Hopkins in 2001 and later by Dr.Peter Pronovost on the use of checklists to tackle line infections and improve care for patients on mechanical ventrilation, Gawande has no doubts as to the conclusion of the study:

Checklists established a higher standard of baseline performance.

And how do checklists help in improving medical care for very sick patients?

Checklists help by improving memory recall – particularly with mundane matters that may get overlooked in the hectic frenzy of events in the ICU – and in explicitly outlining the minimum expected steps in complex procedures. Then, there’s the cost savings that could easily run into hundreds of millions of dollars if not more.

But Gawande cautions us that checklists are not a grand panacea for all Continue reading »

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Your free lunch days are over, Microsoft is telling software pirates and their cheapo customers.

Make no mistake, Microsoft is aggressively going after pirates of its software these days.

And to prove that it means business now where piracy of its software is concerned, the software company’s been throwing around some impressive numbers.

Just the other day, Microsoft was gloating that it’s cut the piracy rate for its Windows Vista operating system by more than half compared to its earlier generation Windows XP operating system.

Microsoft officials say pirates are currently resorting to two common types of exploits to generate counterfeit versions of Windows Vista and that the company will target both exploits with the upcoming release of Windows Vista Service Pack 1.

The first is known as the OEM Bios exploit, which Continue reading »

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Over its 25-year history, Sun Microsystems has seen many talented executives come and go.

Among them founder Vinod Khosla and long time CEO Scott McNealy (now Chairman).

But one executive seems to have been at Sun forever even as the company’s prospects soared during the dot com days, faded subsequently and then painfully stabilized.

And that is Anil Gadre, Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Sun.

We remember meeting this Indian-American at a Sun function in New York City about 12 years ago.

Although we can’t remember Anil’s exact title, he was most likely a middle management guy at Sun those days.

Java was still very new – and very hot too – and Anil spoke enthusiastically about Java as well as Sun’s product portfolio of Sparc workstations, the strengths of its Solaris operating system and the power of the underlying RISC architecture.

We remember coming back from our meeting with Anil at the Sheraton Towers in Mid-Town Manhattan on a cold New York evening pretty impressed with the fella.

We were sure Anil would go places. And he has.

Not only has Anil survived Sun’s dark days of retrenchments, exodus of senior executives, steep losses and serious doubts about Sun’s very survival, but has grown in the organization.

Today as Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Sun, Anil Gadre has responsibility for all of Sun’s marketing, which includes branding, market analysis, perception improvement, introductions and demand creation. 

According to Anil’s profile on Sun’s web site, he is also responsible for coordinating the product-definition and Continue reading »

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Madhuri Dixit’s comeback movie Aaja Nachle has failed to resonate at the U.S. box office in its opening November 30-December 1 weekend dealing a severe blow to its producer Yash Raj Films.

U.S. box office numbers show that Aaja Nachle brought in an embarrassingly low $257,500 and debuted at No-22 in its opening weekend.

Aaja Nachle’s unimpressive performance at the U.S. box office is hardly surprising considering it’s a mediocre movie that’s been almost universally panned by critics.

Aaja Nachle’s opening is real lousy when you consider that even a miserable dud like Laaga Chunari Mein Daag did $320,987 in its opening weekend recently although it debuted at No-32.

In its opening weekend, Om Shanti Om came in at a respectable No-11 and had a gross collection of $1.76 million while Saawariya’s first weekend gross was $542,192.

Aaja Nachle was released in 66 theaters in the U.S.

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India’s military has carried out its first launch of a single stage interceptor missile against an electronic ballistic missile as target.

The interceptor missile launch took place from Wheeler Island, an island off the coast of the east Indian state of Orissa.

Indian defense personnel claim that the Endo-atmospheric interceptor intercepted the missile at 15 kilometers altitude exactly as designed for high supersonic speed.

Apparently, all the elements of ballistic missile defence (BMD) required for control and monitoring performed in a copybook fashion validating the design of the “Endo-atmospheric” layer of BMD system.

Defense officials said high-tech instrumentation provided precise and accurate data regarding the performance of the interceptor missile.

It seems the success of this operation has given confidence to India’s military to proceed with the next test of intercepting adversary ballistic missile by Endo-atmospheric interceptor missile.

The next test is scheduled to take place soon.

Meanwhile, India’s first domestic-built nuclear-powered submarine is said to be getting ready for trials by 2009. The submarines will be able to launch nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles.

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If you love movies as much as we do, you’ll love the book Eyewitness Companions – Film.

For movie buffs, the 501-page book provides a nice introduction to the films business and whets the appetite for more indepth reading.

Besides giving us an overview of the Story of Cinema from 1895 to the present, this book also briefly touches upon the process of making a movie, describes the various movie genres, profiles the 200 top movie directors (dead and alive) from Hollywood to Bollywood, discusses cinema in various countries including India and ends with a guide to the Top 100 movies.

So, if you are too embarrassed to ask anyone about Avant-Garde movies or clueless about Film-Noir, pick up this book.

In the section on India, the author Ronald Bergan writes:

Indian films mean different things to different people. For the majority they mean Bollywood,  and for others they mean exquisite art movies as exemplified by the work of Satyajit Ray. The films of “Bollywood,” a conflation of Bombay, the old name for Mumbai, and Hollywood, are generally rigidly formulaic Hindi-language musicals, comedies, or melodramas.

Besides Satyajit Ray, the section on Indian Continue reading »

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