Type Here whatever you are looking for ?

Google Search

Live Currency Converter

Bittersweet Feeling Among Fans Awaiting Final ‘Harry Potter’ Film

“You have to stay awake somehow,” said Tracie Masek, 29, her flask of whiskey tucked safely away as the crowd of caped wand-wielders began to swell outside the Regal Union Square movie theater around 9 p.m. for the opening of the final addition to the Harry Potter film canon, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows: Part 2.” “I’m too old for this sitting-on-the-ground business.”
The film had its premiere on Thursday night before anxious crowds around the country, and throughout the city fans turned out in droves. At the AMC Loews Lincoln Square cinema, the lines encircled a city block hours before the movie started playing.
Among the moviegoers in Manhattan’s theaters on Thursday night, first-generation readers, in particular — those who were in their teens or younger when J. K. Rowling’s prose first crossed the Atlantic — had difficulty processing the news.
For fans like Ms. Masek, who plans to attend a “mourning brunch” with friends in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Friday, the film’s release marks the end of a 13-year saga. (The first book was released in the United States in September 1998.)
“I was 11 when it came out, just like Harry,” said Mily Mena, 23, who planned to attend a midnight screening in Yonkers. “And now it’s over. It’s the real world. I feel like I have to, like, a find a job.”
She means it. Ms. Mena, who graduated this spring from Baruch College, said the self-imposed deadline to begin her employment search has been in place since she discovered the date of the premiere: July 15, 2011.
“They’re moving on,” she said. “I have to move on, too.”
Perched at the front of the line at the AMC theater in Times Square since noon, Charlie Belin, 31, a McGehee, Ark., native who flew to New York on Thursday morning for the movie opening, attempted to suppress such introspection. The movie itself, she said, should be the focus of the evening.
“It will be perfect,” she said, stone-faced, clutching her Harry Potter shirt. “It could be the best movie of our lifetime.”
Since Potter remains, at heart, a children’s franchise, some city theaters did host the occasional family attendees. Elaine Perez, 38, brought her two daughters to a special 6:30 p.m. screening at Kips Bay. By 9 p.m., lines there for later screenings stretched more than two blocks along Second Avenue. Waiting for admission with two friends, Chuck Rall, 42, said he left his three children at home in New Jersey, proudly assuming the title of elder statesmen of the Harry Potter stakeout line.
“We crash parties all the time,” he said of his group. “This is nothing new.”
The most visible revelers, though, came from the first class of young Potter readers — who have begun to show, like the actors themselves, conspicuous signs of aging.
Adult beverages, concealed in paper bags, circulated along the slithering lines. Ticket holders puffed on cigarettes, brandished tattoos and, in some cases, carped that a dollar just doesn’t fetch what it used to when they were young.
“These glasses were $8,” Ms. Mena marveled Thursday afternoon, cradling a pair of commemorative spectacles from Harry Potter: The Exhibition in Times Square.
Sitting cross-legged on the sidewalk in Kips Bay, flipping through the seventh book, Tim Herzog, 29, bemoaned his aching body. He was not meant to wait like this without a chair, he said.
The scene did have one silver lining for Mr. Herzog.
“At least there’s no kids,” he said. “They’re horrible in theaters.”
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: July 14, 2011
An earlier version of this article misidentified one of the theaters at which Harry Potter fans formed a line. It is the AMC Loews Lincoln Square cinema, not Lincoln Plaza.

Oracle Seeks ‘Harassing’ Deposition of Page, Google Says

July 14 (Bloomberg) -- Google Inc. is fighting what it calls a “harassing demand” by Oracle Corp. to take a deposition of Chief Executive Officer Larry Page as part of Oracle’s multibillion lawsuit alleging the Android operating system infringes its Java patents, according to a court filing.
Page “participated in negotiations that took place” between Sun Microsystems and Google regarding a Java license for Android and his testimony is relevant to “the value of the infringement to Google,” Oracle said in a letter jointly filed by the companies today with U.S. Magistrate Judge Donna Ryu in San Francisco.
Google’s opposition to Page’s deposition is “manifestly inconsistent” with its own notice to depose Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, Oracle said in the letter.
Taking a sworn statement from Page would be ‘superfluous” and “duplicative” given testimony already available from other witnesses, Google said in the joint letter to the judge.
Google has offered to withdraw its notice to depose Ellison if Oracle doesn’t intend to call him as a witness at trial, and Oracle rejected that proposal, the search engine company said in the filing. A similar agreement was reached as to Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, according to the letter.
Oracle is seeking as much as $6.1 billion in damages in a patent- and copyright-infringement lawsuit against Google that claims the search-engine company’s Android software uses technology related to the Java programming language, according to court papers.
Sun Microsystems
Oracle, based in Redwood City, California, got Java when it bought Sun Microsystems in January 2010. The company sued Google the following August, seeking a court ruling that would ban further use of its intellectual property and force the destruction of all products that violate Java-related copyrights on the code, documentation and specifications.
Google, based in Mountain View, California, said in court filings that the patents are invalid and not infringed and that users of the Android platform have a license to any patents in the case. It said Oracle made general copyright-infringement claims with nothing to back them up.
Deborah Hellinger, an Oracle spokeswoman, didn’t immediately return a voice-mail message after regular business hours. An e-mail to Google’s press office after regular business hours wasn’t immediately returned.
The case is Oracle America Inc. v. Google Inc., 10-03561, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).

Google+ Boosts Google Ahead of Q2 Earnings

Google+ is proving to be a big public relations boon and stock stepping stone for the search engine, which reports second quarter earnings after the bell July 14.

The Google+ social network has generated a tremendous amount of buzz as Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) gets ready to bid adieu to the second quarter with its earnings report July 14 after the bell.
Investors polled by Thomson Reuters expect the search engine to report net revenue, of $6.54 billion, which is up 28 percent from the prior year. 
The period marks the first period in which Google CEO Larry Page took the reigns from Eric Schmidt.
More interesting will be the tenor of the earnings call with financial analysts, which are bound to pepper Google's management with questions about how Google will make money from Google + and how the investigation by the Federal Trade Commission of Google's search ad practices is impacting the company.
Until late last month, the big news would have been concerns the FTC antitrust inquiry, but then came June 28 and the launch to limited beta of Google+, the company's bid to challenge Facebook's social networking crown. Since that storied launch, thecompany's shares have increased some 9 percent, closing Monday at $527.28.
Google+ isn't contributing anything to the company's bottom line yet, but Google+ is off to solid start. Ancestry.com Founder Paul Allen  said the number is about 10 million users, and could hit 20 million this weekend.
Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdry said Google's Circles social graph builder, which lets users categorize contacts in several buckets, the Sparks topics feed and Hangouts video chat service "significantly improve the usability, monetizability and user control in Google+." 
"Converged view is – on a scale of 10…private beta of Google is probably 8, while Facebook is probably 6.5..." said Chowdry. "Facebook has 'got too cluttered over time' was a common complaint we heard."
Chowdry also noted that in response to the Facebook clutter, developers have created several applications to help users move their Facebook content to Google+. Move2Picasa, for example, lets users migrate their Facebook photos to Google+, which is linked to Picasa.
On the strength of Google+, Chowdry said he is ratcheting up his fiscal year 2012 estimates, boosting revenues excluding traffic acquisition costs from $31 billion to $34 billion and raising earnings per share from $37 to $42. He is maintaining his current fiscal year 2011 estimates of $27.38 billion and EPS of $33.52.
Not every equity analyst is so sanguine about Google+, particularly when it isn't impacting Google's bottom line for Q2.
Gleacher & Co.'s Yun Kim said Google+ service, the company's Android and Chrome businesses and the company's push into local advertising (with Google Places, Boost) may require a higher level of investment that could weigh heavily on Google's cost structure.
"With GOOG's recent realignment of business segments to refocus its efforts on strategic areas, we believe the company continues to carry a high level of risk associated with both the timing and the amount of investment needed to fuel its growth strategy going forward," Kim wrote in a research note July 12.
Google's biggest risk long term is the uncertainty regarding the increasing regulatory scrutiny, but with regards to its acquisition plans and its search ad business.  The FTC's scrutiny could take a year to bear fruit, if there is any fruit to bear at all.
Also unclear is what will become of Android regarding Google's suit versus Oracle, which is suing the search engine for infringing on Java technology used in the open source operating system.
In the meantime, most pundits and analysts will watch Google+' impact on Facebook's user engagement in earnest. 

Android 3.2 rolling out on Xoom, Motorola says


Motorola is beginning to roll out Android Honeycomb 3.2 for its Xoom tablet. The Google update includes a couple of key enhancements that will also roll out to other Android tablets in the near future.
"Google has started rolling out Android 3.2, in phases, to Motorola Xoom users," a Motorola representative confirmed for CNET today.
The update will introduce a new viewing mode, referred to as "zoom to fill," and fully enable SD card slots. Motorola will be the first tablet vendor to get this update, according to Richard Shim, an analyst at DisplaySearch.
"Imagine viewing your app at the size of a phone screen then zooming in about 200 percent," says the Android Developers blog. Stretch-to-fill is the standard layout resizing, while zoom-to-fill screen is the new screen compatibility mode, according to the blog.
Other improvements include optimizations for 7-inch designs, such as Huawei's 7-inch MediaPad, and support for Qualcomm chips--not just those from Nvidia, which have been the standard so far for tablets like the Xoom, Acer's Iconia Tab 500, Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1, and Toshiba's Thrive. Huawei's tablet, for instance, uses a dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon processor.
A bunch of other tweaks and improvements are also expected, which may include performance optimizations, according to reports.