Potter makes history in India

Harry Potter fans across the country enthusiastically snapped up copies of the final volume of the book, which broke all records to register a sale of over 1.7 lakh copies on the first day of its release.

''Never in the publishing history has India witnessed such a frenzied reaction to any book. We have already sold over 1.7 lakh copies today,'' said Himali Sodhi, Head of Marketing, Penguin, which is the distributor of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

Potter fans, both young and old, queued up outside book stores since midnight to lay hands on the book, the seventh and last one in the series, to know the fate of boy wizard Harry and his deadly foe Voldemort.

''I was here at 6 in the morning and quickly read the last few pages. We have been receiving pre-orders as early as March this year,'' said Nitin Chatterjee, Store Manager, Oxford bookstore.

British author JK Rowling's Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, published by Bloomsbury and brought to India by Penguin, is priced at Rs 975.

The customers, who have placed advance orders, get a discount varying from 5-25 per cent.

Internationally, the final Potter book has become on-line retailer Amazon's most pre-ordered product with almost 1.6 million copies bought globally ahead of the release.

The six books published thus far have sold 325 million copies worldwide and have been translated into 64 languages, while four films have grossed $3.5 billion worldwide.

Harry Potter fans living in Kabul were delighted to be able to get their hands on copies of the latest title Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the same day that the book hit shops elsewhere around the world.

Flights into Kabul are infrequent, but an international freight forwarding company, Paxton International, did Potter lovers a favour by shipping in dozens of copies from Dubai on an early morning flight.

source : NDTV INDIA

Labels: at 5:18 AM

LCD & Plasma rivals around the corner?

With the announcement this week that Mitsubishi are planning to show a laser projection TV at the 2008 consumer electronics show consumers are once again being tantalised with technology that promises superior pictures to Plasma and LCD.

Using a red, blue and green laser rather than white-light mercury lamps to generate images the advantages of laser technology are brighter and deeper images on larger, thinner, more lightweight screens.

At the beginning of the year Sony announced that they would be producing the first commercially available OLED (Organic Light-Emitting Diode) TVs by the end of 2007, and Toshiba has announced that they will be producing their own OLED TVs by 2009.

The exiting potential of OLED includes a huge increase in the number of available colours over traditional LCD and Plasma TVs, with contrast ratios of 1,000,000:1 producing a vastly superior picture. Perhaps the most appealing feature of OLED screens however is their thickness, ranging from an incredibly waif-like 5mm upwards, and surely the next must have consumer electrical fashion accessory

Although the technology is experiencing teething troubles, SED (surface-conduction electron-emitter display) will provide a better picture than LCD or plasma TV, say Toshiba and its partner, Canon. Toshiba also claims they have managed to cut the manufacturing costs so that the TVs won't cost much more than similar-sized LCDs or plasmas.

SED technology works along the same lines as CRT except instead of one large electron gun firing at all the screen phosphors that light up to create the on screen image, SED has thousands of tiny electron guns known as "emitters" for each phosphor sub-pixel which enable a vastly superior picture.

All of the new technologies can be described as being 'just around the corner' but expect Plasma & LCD to be with us for a good few years yet. Prices for these existing technologies are set to continue dropping through 2007, and any new flat panel innovations are likely to come with significant price premiums.

Labels: at 4:48 AM

Harry Potter's magical appeal

There's never been anything like Harry Potter.

"I think of Rowling as being almost the Second Coming," says Scott Rice, professor of literature at San Jose State University. "Her books have reminded people of the pleasure of reading, gotten millions of kids all around the world to know the reward of reading. People need to be reminded there are rewards and benefits in reading that you don't get anywhere else."

Young wizard Potter is about to cast another spell. Legions of his fans are eagerly waiting for July 21, the day when "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," the seventh and last book in J.K. Rowling's series, will be released.

What started in 1997 as a modest publication of a children's book in England has become a literary, financial and pop culture phenomenon.

It's a phenomenon fueled by fans such as Jonathan Weed of San Jose, who was 10 or 11 when he first read "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone."

"I liked it right away," says Weed, now 19 and a student at Princeton University. "My mom got it for me on a Friday. By Saturday night I had finished and was ready to start reading it again."

Then in 1998, Weed's father picked up a copy of the second book, "Chamber of Secrets," in England before it was available in the United States.

That same year, Weed was one of the lucky few who went to Hicklebee's Books in San Jose to meet Rowling. He shared memories of that book signing for a story in the Mercury News in June.

In an e-mail, Weed wrote about meeting Rowling: "Before I left, I asked her to sign a Post-it note for me to give to a British girl at school, the only other person I knew who had read the Harry Potter book. The Hicklebee's staff said that this wasn't allowed, but Jo did it anyway. I gave the note to the girl later, and though she probably didn't keep it, I'm sure by now she wishes she had. "

The magic of numbers

In the mid-'90s, Rowling had been given an advance of about $2,250 by her publisher and a grant of about $12,000 from the Scottish Arts Council that helped her finish the first book in a planned seven-book series.

The book's premise didn't seem that promising: a young British boy is surprised to learn he is a wizard and that he is a key part of a major war between good and evil.

But it struck a chord. Nine years later, thanks to the Potter series, Rowling is a billionaire.

Try to quantify the impact of the Potter series, and the numbers become mind-boggling:

There are 121.5 million copies of Harry Potter books in the United States alone. Worldwide, it's 325 million copies in 65 languages in more than 200 territories.

Twelve million copies of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" at this moment are being delivered in sealed cases to bookstores around the United States, where they will be distributed starting at 12:01 a.m. July 21. Millions of other books are also on their way in Great Britain, and millions more will be distributed around the planet.

That many copies of a single book have never been published in such a short period of time. By July 22, "Deathly Hallows" will break the previous record for most books sold in 24 hours, a record set by Book 6 in the series, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince." That book broke the previous record, set by Book 5, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," which broke the record set by Book 4, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire."

"Goblet of Fire" and the first three, "Sorcerer's Stone" (known as "Philosopher's Stone" in Britain), "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets," and "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" changed the way the New York Times formed its bestseller lists. (The Times created a children's books list and put the Potter books on it.)

The reach of Harry Potter

Beyond the sales numbers, one also can argue that no other book has gotten more families to read together, or been more discussed in print, on the Internet, in bookstores and libraries, and around office water coolers.

Valerie Lewis of Hicklebee's was working for CBS in New York when she became one of the first major media journalists to bring attention to Rowling and Harry Potter. She remembers being happily surprised, as a bookseller, by the reaction to "Sorcerer's Stone."

"That families suddenly discovered that reading together made sense was probably the biggest shock of all to us."

"There's nothing I can think of that compares to reading aloud to children and having them read aloud to you," Lewis says. "What happens is you get to know them at a whole different level. The literary stuff, the academic stuff, is not as important as sitting around finding out what they think."

And at a time when children are bombarded with images from television, movies and video games, Lewis values the way literature gives children the experience of creating images themselves.

"Reading aloud, the kids experience forming their own images," Lewis explains. "They hear a sophisticated vocabulary . . . and there is an undercurrent that this is cool - they are doing it together, and it's just right."

Harry Potter found another welcoming fan base on the Internet. A Google search for "Harry Potter" brings up more than 6 million results.

Hundreds, maybe thousands, of Web sites are home to communities of people who have spent years thinking about, discussing and arguing about the series that began when "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" was published in June 1997 in England.

"It's a very attractive world for children," Weed says of the Harry Potter books. "When I was in the sixth grade, a school fantasy is to be transplanted from where you are to a place where your job is to have fun and do magic all day - structured around the school year. It is sort of the alternate education fantasy."

The mystery of Book 7

Until July 21, the world waits and wonders how Rowling will wind up her seven-book story of "The Boy Who Lived."

Will Harry live or die? Will the evil dark wizard Voldemort be vanquished?

To San Jose State's Rice, the theme of good vs. evil in the Harry Potter story is a powerful, relevant one in today's world.

"There are Voldemorts out there in different sizes and shapes doing bad things to human beings," he says, "and we can look the other way or we can use our powers to intervene."

And, the book's other themes also are appealing, Rice says.

"Friendship is practically a sacrament. These people do things for their friends, including risk their lives in a very serious sense."

There's also Hogwarts - the school of wizardry in the books and among the finest facets of the books, Rice says.

"Hogwarts is a benevolent place. It's a school for wizards, but it's understood by the students that the teachers are trying to empower them and to give them more control over their lives," he says. "It's grinding work, some of the teachers are taskmasters, but it's understood that Hogwarts is a good place."

For fans, part of the fun has been the exciting anticipation of each new book in the series.

"Anandi," who posted on the Mercury News Harry Potter blog (http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei), speaks for many others: "Another Magical Person here, who came late to the Harry Potter party. I heard all the hype and thought the books couldn't possibly be that good. So I didn't read the first one until well after Book 4 was released. But it was great having several to read all at once, and it was painful waiting for the release of 5, 6 and now 7."

Labels: at 4:41 AM

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

The fifth Harry Potter fantasy adventure, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, is far and away the best so far.


Genre : Adventure
Run Time : 138 minutes
Rated : M
Country : United Kingdom
Director : David Yates
Actors : Daniel Radcliffe,
Rating : stars-4








Trailer: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix


The fifth Harry Potter fantasy adventure, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, is far and away the best so far.

In glorious contrast to the previous film, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire - the one mis-step in the series - Phoenix is a breathlessly paced, dramatically rich, plot-driven thrill ride of spectacle and pathos.

Directed by David Yates, Phoenix completes Harry's transformation from nervous schoolboy to rebel leader, and sets the effects-crammed cinematic stage for the apocalyptic duel between good and evil that is to come.

Phoenix finds Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) at a critical point in his odyssey. His noseless nemesis Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) is back on the scene, preparing to raise an army so he can literally raise hell. Having murdered Harry's parents, Voldemort is keen to finish the job in as public and violent a fashion as possible.

And Harry is ready for him. No longer the timid, round-faced boy wizard from The Philosopher's Stone (2001) and Chamber of Secrets (2002), the rebellious spirit we saw emerge in the outstanding Prisoner of Azkaban (2004) is now in full flourish.

Harry won't be pushed around any more, not even by Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton), his long-time enemy at the impressively located Hogwarts school of Witchcraft and Wizardry. In Phoenix, Harry stands up for himself, for others, repeatedly defies authority and talks back to teachers. He doesn't even seem to respect the school's dress code much any more.

This puts Harry in conflict with the story's other evil, Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton, in a scene-stealing turn), the new teacher at Hogwarts sent by the interfering bureaucrats at the Ministry of Magic. A lover of tea, pink dresses, meowing cats and firm discipline, her purpose is to usurp the authority of headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) by introducing ever stricter rules on the students.

Harry finds the road of the rebel tough going, though. His close encounters with Voldemort have made him susceptible to mind control, so as Harry trains his army, Severus Snape (Alan Rickman) trains Harry to deal with his inner demons, which he must learn to control lest his behaviour be driven by pure impulse, which can lead to the dark side of human nature.

If this sounds familiar, it should. The "battle of the self" has become the dramatic theme of choice for blockbuster franchises. We saw it in the early Superman films, it runs throughout the Lord of the Rings trilogy, it's the conceptual pivot of Star Wars (of course) and it even got a big spin in Spider-Man 3. Now, it seems, it's Harry's turn to get introspective. It's as though Harry Potter, Luke Skywalker, Frodo Baggins and Peter Parker are cousins. Or members of the same group therapy session.

Phoenix has a few light touches early on, but the humour that laced previous Potter films has been replaced with a darker, more brooding tone. Indeed, Phoenix is similar in feel to Star Wars Episode III: The Revenge of the Sith, which is appropriate as both are essentially about gear shifts of the soul.

One presumes that children who were about the same age as Radcliffe when the first film came out will be able to handle the effects-laden horror imagery served up in massive doses by Phoenix. That said, parents are advised to take the M rating seriously. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is definitely not a film for children or sensitive tweens. If you have doubts, please see it first or wait for the DVD. Some of the sequences are intense, even for grown-ups.

And - yes - somebody close to Harry does die, and Yates manages to stage the death in the middle of a swirling special effects set-piece with considerable dramatic force. Reminiscent of the killing of Michael Corleone's daughter at the end of Godfather III, it ranks as the most heart-stopping dramatic moment in the saga thus far.

Source : The Age


Open up to Science

Students shy away from pursuing Science courses as they are afraid of narrowing their career options. DT finds out more about this trend from students, teachers and counsellors

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RIGHT CHOICE - NOMORE: Science courses are not popular choices with the college goers any more (Agencies Photo)
Science courses are going abegging in many colleges, including the top ones who've resorted to a third and a fourth list to fill up the required number of seats.
Science courses are not popular choices with the college goers any more. The trend is partly due to the popular perception that a science degree will cut the students off from a career in business or commerce.
There are students who drop out after taking admission in these courses to pursue engineering after a year, when they make it to an engineering college. The strength is even lower for pure science courses.

However, what the students fail to realise is that while going for placements or pursuing an MBA programme, the course you have graduated in is of little relevance. Abhinav Dua, who has got through Chemistry (Hons) in Sri Venkateswara College is trying to change his options to include Mathematics in his graduation programme as he thinks it's a better option than Chemistry.
He says, "I aspire to do an MBA in finance. Having Maths as a subject would give me an edge as Maths, Commerce or Economics graduates are preferred for such courses. If I choose to study Chemistry, I think I'll be limiting my options and choices." And through his opinion, Abhinav is also voicing the concerns of hundreds like him who feel that taking up science limits their career prospects.

However, the truth is very different from these notions. Uttam Mukherjee got placed with a top consultancy after studying Chemistry (Hons) from St Stephen's. He plans to do an MBA later. He says, "I had to face a group discussion to qualify a round for my job at the consultancy. Once I cleared the group discussion I was treated like any other applicant and I fared well in the interview. I feel it's about proving oneself at the interview. Now, I shall have work experience and it'll be counted as a plus point when I want to do an MBA. Being a Science student doesn't limit your chances to be enrolled in an MBA program, there isn't any discrimination."
Teachers are aware of the current scene and are doing their best to counsel the students and tell them the facts about the scope of Science. They assert that doing a science course is certainly not the dead-end to a student's career.
Vibha Saxena, who works in the Chemistry Department of Venkateswara College says, "When parents and students come to meet teachers, they want to know about the scope of science courses. Along with the students, their parents also feel that options are limited, but that's not true. A person with Chemistry can enroll himself for an MBA or get a good job in another stream. It's the lack of information that makes the people feel this way."
Career counsellor Pervin Malhotra says, "Doing a pure science course doesn't limit options in a student's academic life. Whether it's law or management, everything is an open option for students. Nothing can stop them from taking up good jobs or a career in a different stream."

source : the times of india
Labels: at 8:29 AM

Potter star greets Japanese fans

Daniel Radcliffe
Radcliffe briefly spoke to the crowd in Japanese

Actor Daniel Radcliffe was met by hundreds of fans as he attended the world premiere of the fifth Harry Potter film in Tokyo.

Japanese competition winners were among the first to see The Order of the Phoenix movie.

Radcliffe, 17, greeted the crowd in Japanese, saying "Nihon no minasan, Konnichiwa" (hello, people of Japan).

The UK premiere of the film will be held in London on 3 July, and it opens in cinemas on 11 July.

Radcliffe, accompanied by the film's producer David Heyman, was the only one of the film's main stars to make the journey to Tokyo.

He was introduced on to the red carpet amid plumes of smoke and pyrotechnics.

"It's wonderful to come over here and to say hello," said Radcliffe.

"I hope people will be impressed by the new characters, the new performances, and the big battle."

Harry Potter fans
Potter fans gathered to show their appreciation

First kiss

In the movie, Harry experiences his first kiss, with schoolmate Cho Chang, played by actress Katie Leung. Radcliffe has admitted kissing on screen was nothing in comparison to stripping off on stage, as he did in the West End play Equus.

"Once you've been on stage naked in front of 1,000 people you really feel you can do almost anything without inhibition," he told the BBC News website.

"Kissing Katie was a very, very comfortable experience, especially when compared to being naked on stage and blinding horses."

The latest of the Potter film sequels is being released just weeks before the long-awaited seventh and final book is published, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

SOURCE : BBC NEWS

Labels: at 4:17 AM
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