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దేవాదాయశాఖ ఉద్యోగిగా మెగాస్టార్ చిరు?

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి.. కొత్త సినిమాలో దేవాదాయ శాఖ ఉద్యోగిగా కనిపించనున్నాడట. హైదరాబాద్​లో నిర్మించిన సెట్​లో త్వరలో షూటింగ్ ప్రారంభం కానుందని సమాచారం.

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Published : Dec 27, 2019, 3:52 PM IST

Updated : Dec 27, 2019, 6:58 PM IST

దేవదాయశాఖ ఉద్యోగిగా మెగాస్టార్ చిరు?
మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి సినిమా అంటే ఎన్నో అంచనాలుంటాయి. కొన్నిసార్లు టైటిల్​ చెప్పగానే ఫలానా కథనం ఉంటుందంటూ అభిమానులు సంతోషపడుతుంటారు. కొరటాల శివ దర్శకత్వంలో వచ్చే చిత్రంపైనా ఇలాంటి వదంతులే వస్తున్నాయి. అయితే అందుకు సంబంధించిన ఓ వార్త ప్రస్తుతం ఆసక్తి కలిగిస్తోంది.

megastar chiranjeevi-koratala siva
మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి-కొరటాల శివ

ఈ సినిమాలో చిరంజీవి.. ప్రభుత్వ ఉద్యోగిగా కనిపించనున్నాడట. అయితే అదీ దేవాలయాల్లో కార్యనిర్వహక విధులు నిర్వర్తించే పాత్ర పోషించనున్నాడని సమాచారం. ఇప్పటికే ఓ సెట్​ను హైదరాబాద్​ పరిసర ప్రాంతాల్లో నిర్మించారు. అక్కడే త్వరలో షూటింగ్ మొదలు కానుంది. వీటన్నింటిపై పూర్తి సమాచారం తెలియాల్సి ఉంది.

ఇది చదవండి: చిరు 152వ సినిమా కోసం మసాజ్ 'ల్యాండ్​'లో మ్యూజిక్ సిట్టింగ్స్

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి సినిమా అంటే ఎన్నో అంచనాలుంటాయి. కొన్నిసార్లు టైటిల్​ చెప్పగానే ఫలానా కథనం ఉంటుందంటూ అభిమానులు సంతోషపడుతుంటారు. కొరటాల శివ దర్శకత్వంలో వచ్చే చిత్రంపైనా ఇలాంటి వదంతులే వస్తున్నాయి. అయితే అందుకు సంబంధించిన ఓ వార్త ప్రస్తుతం ఆసక్తి కలిగిస్తోంది.

megastar chiranjeevi-koratala siva
మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి-కొరటాల శివ

ఈ సినిమాలో చిరంజీవి.. ప్రభుత్వ ఉద్యోగిగా కనిపించనున్నాడట. అయితే అదీ దేవాలయాల్లో కార్యనిర్వహక విధులు నిర్వర్తించే పాత్ర పోషించనున్నాడని సమాచారం. ఇప్పటికే ఓ సెట్​ను హైదరాబాద్​ పరిసర ప్రాంతాల్లో నిర్మించారు. అక్కడే త్వరలో షూటింగ్ మొదలు కానుంది. వీటన్నింటిపై పూర్తి సమాచారం తెలియాల్సి ఉంది.

ఇది చదవండి: చిరు 152వ సినిమా కోసం మసాజ్ 'ల్యాండ్​'లో మ్యూజిక్ సిట్టింగ్స్

WORLD ROBOTS REVIEW 2019
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS/EPFL, TOMISLAV HORVAT, KAMILO MELO/JAPAN HEADLINES/IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON AERIAL ROBOTICS LABORATORY
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only/Japan Headlines: No Access Japan/No Archive Use
LENGTH: 8:57
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Las Vegas, US - 8 January 2019
1. Mid of Lovot sociable robot by Groove X
2. Tracking shot of Lovot robot moving around CES show floor
3. Various of CES visitor interacting with Lovot
4. Mid of Kiki pet robots by Zoetic AI
5. Close of Kiki pet robot
6. Pan right of CES visitor interacting with Kiki pet robot
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Mita Yun, Co-Founder and CEO of Zoetic AI:
"As time goes on, they develop unique personalities. So, every user can have their own journey with Kiki."
8. Mid of exhibitor speaking to Liku robot friend by Torooc, Liku waves
9. Close tilt up of Liku
10. Various of dancing robots
11. Various of Scribit drawing a picture of Marilyn Monroe
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Andrea Baldereschi, Chief Marketing Officer for Scribit
"We wanted to bring something new, something innovative to actually remind us that beauty sometimes takes time."
VNR - EPFL, TOMISLAV HORVAT, KAMILO MELO - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Lausanne, Switzerland - recent
13. Various of "Orobot," a robot that recreates the locomotion (movement) of extinct, prehistoric, animal Orobates
14. Digital simulation, showing locomotion of Orobates ++MUTE++
JAPAN HEADLINES - AP CLIENTS ONLY/NO ACCESS JAPAN/NO ARCHIVE USE
Ariake, Tokyo, Japan - 17 January 2019
15. Pull out of Speecys dancing robot
16. Close of moving robot
17. Tilt up of exhibitor using remote
18. Pull out of drone
19. Pull out of solar powered robot
20. Pull out of underwater drone
21. Wide of robot playing with traditional Japanese toy
22. Pull out of robot bowing
23. Close of robot's face
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
New York, US - 1 February 2019
24. Various of Robert Kwiatkowski, PhD student, Columbia University, demonstrating self-aware robotic arm, picks up red ball and drops it in cup
25. SOUNDBITE (English) Prof. Hod Lipson, Director of the Creative Machines Lab, Columbia University (right), and Robert Kwiatkowski, PhD student, Columbia University (left):
Lipson: "What we're trying to do here is have machines that can imagine themselves and by doing that, they can adapt to a new situation, they can be more resilient."
26. Close of self-aware robotic arm picking up red ball
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kyoto, Japan - 8 March 2019
27. Wide of Kannon Minder robot
28. Wide of Minder giving sermon
29. Tilt up of Minder
30. Close of Minder's face
31. Wide of Kodaiji Temple entrance
32. Mid of poster, showing Minder
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tokyo, Japan - 1 April 2019
33. Pull in of Toyota's basketball robot CUE3
34. Wide of CUE3 making three-point shot
35. Close of CUE3 being moved into position
36. Various of CUE missing three-point shot
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Oxford, UK – 27 June 2019
37. Various of Ai-Da robot artist drawing portrait
38. Wide of gallery interior, works by Ai-Da in display
39. Pan right to Alan Turing portrait, 2019
40. SOUNDBITE (English) Aiden Meller, Gallery Director:
"Damien Hirst, was the excesses of the 90s. Ai Weiwei about the political situation in China. Ai-Da reflecting the technological uses that we're using today."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Cobham, UK - 2 August 2019
41. Pan left of Mantas Burba, Branch Manager of The Tea Terrace, putting tea and cakes on "Theresa" robotic waitress at The Team Terrace restaurant
42. Tracking shot of "Theresa" delivering tea and cakes to table
43. Close of guest pouring tea
44. Close of guest drinking tea
45. Mid of "Theresa"
UPSOUND (English): "Breakfast means breakfast. Strong and stable breakfast."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London, UK - 8 August 2019
46. Various of Makr Shakr robotic bar system making cocktail at the Barbican Centre
47. Various of bartenders making negroni cocktails
48. SOUNDBITE (English) Felix Cohen, Software Engineer, Bartender and Owner of Every Cloud Bar:
"You don't go to a bar just for the cocktails, you go to a bar for a social experience and the machines are not social."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Beijing, China - 20 August 2019
49. Mid of robots in traditional Chinese and Tibetan clothes
50. Various of Universal Robots exhibition, technician manipulating robotic hand remotely to stack cups
51. Various of GREE corporation robotic band playing instruments
52. Wide of World Robot Exhibition sign
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Beijing, China - 22 August 2019
53. Various of robot sticking needle through eye of second needle
54. Various of Remebot brain surgery robot simulating surgery on model brain
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Berlin, Germany - 5 September 2019
55. Various of Shunsuke Aoki, Founder of Yukai Engineering, stroking robotic cat
56. SOUNDBITE (English) Shunsuke Aoki, Founder of Yukai Engineering:
"People live in tiny apartments, no access to animals. So, we designed this robot for substitution."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Berlin, Germany - 6 September 2019
57. Various of Samsung Assistant Chef Robot helping with cooking
58. Various of Cloi smart robot from LG
VNR - IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON AERIAL ROBOTICS LABORATORY
London, UK - date not available
59. Shows 'flying fish robot' taking off from pond in slow motion, captured with high speed camera
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London, UK - 17 September 2019
60. Various of PHD researcher Raphael Zufferey checking robot in bath of water in Aerial Robotics Laboratory
61. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Mirko Kovac, Director of the Aerial Robotics Laboratory, Imperial College London
"The approach is that flying vehicles can fly to (a) location, they can land, but typically they cannot move in water."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Rome, Italy – 19 October 2019
62. High shot of Robocup football field, visitors watching
63. Mid of soccer ball in middle of football field
64. Close of computer screen, showing programming code
65. Mid of four robots sitting under table, connected to power station ahead of match
66. Various of robots playing football
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Dubai, UAE - October 27, 2019
67. Various of competitors operating robots
68. Various of competitor from UAE team working on robot
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Dundee, Scotland, UK - 1 November 2019
69. Various of R2-D2 on display at V&A Dundee
70. SOUNDBITE (English) Jimmy Vee, R2-D2 Actor:
"The only way I can explain it is jump inside a wheelie bin, close the lid, and sit there for 15, 20 minutes – it's the only way you can explain it."
71. Tilt down of robot exhibition sign to robots
72. Mid of sign, reading (English): "Have you ever met a Robot?"
73. Close of robot
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Boston, Massachusetts, US – 11 November 2019
74. Wide of Gita (pronounced Jee-tah) robot following Jeffrey Schnapp, Co-Founder of Piaggio Fast Forward
75. Close of Schnapp turning on Gita
76. Tracking shot of Gita following Schnapp
77. SOUNDBITE (English) Jeffrey Schnapp, Co-Founder of Piaggio Fast Forward:
"It enables you to make pedestrian mobility choices, instead of reaching for the keys to the car."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Cambridge, UK - 21 November 2019
78. Pan left of audience in Cambridge Union chamber
79. Close of portrait painting
80. Close of audience member watching on
81. Close of IBM's Project Debater giving opening statement
UPSOUND (English): "AI will not be able to make a decision that is the morally correct one, because morality is unique to humans."
82. Pan left of Project Debater finishing statement, audience applauding
83. Wide of Professor Neil Lawrence, DeepMind Professor of Machine Learning, University of Cambridge, speaking
UPSOUND (English): Professor Neil Lawrence, DeepMind Professor of Machine Learning, University of Cambridge
"I'm going to try the name Cybertronia, the All Knowing."
LEADIN:
Shooting baskets, making cocktails and taking on humans at the world's oldest debating society - robots pushed the boundaries in 2019.
In Kyoto, a robotic "Minder" taught Buddhist philosophy and chants, meanwhile in the UK, works by a robotic artist fetched over $1 million USD at the android's debut show.
STORYLINE:
Robots might be widely used in industry, but they're yet to make the journey into many consumers' homes.
At Las Vegas gadget show CES in January, robot makers thought pulling on the heart strings might change things.
They showcased several pet-like, sociable robots to keep their owners' company.
"As time goes on, they develop unique personalities. So, every user can have their own journey with Kiki," explains Mita Yun, co-founder and CEO of Zoetic AI.
Tired of those boring white walls at home? Then you can try Scribit, the robot that draws on walls.
Users can put up to four markers in the bot and hang it on the wall with the help of two wires.
New York-based Scribit said a basic drawing takes about 15 minutes, but might take longer if you want a more complex picture with different colors.
"We wanted to bring something new, something innovative to actually remind us that beauty sometimes takes time," says chief marketing officer Andrea Baldereschi.
Step by step, Orobot makes its way across the floor.
In January, a Berlin-based researcher teamed up with robotics experts at the Biorobotics Laboratory in Lausanne, Switzerland, to develop a model of an early ancestor of many land animals.
Researchers built a life-size replica of Orobates Pabsti, then tested its motion in various ways.
With Japan facing a growing labour shortage, are robots the answer?
At January's annual Robodex robotics event in Tokyo, exhibitors showcased the latest robotic solutions.
In February, engineers in the United States claimed to have created a robot that could "imagine" its own body. It was claimed to be a first step towards self-aware machines.
"What we're trying to do here is have machines that can imagine themselves and by doing that, they can adapt to a new situation, they can be more resilient," explains Professor Hod Lipson.
In March, visitors to Kodaiji Temple in Kyoto were listening to the teachings of Buddha - delivered by a talking robot.
Using hand gestures and eye contact, "Minder" taught Buddhist philosophy and chants the Heart Sutra in Japanese.
Minder was born from a collaboration between Kodaiji Temple and Osaka University professor Hiroshi Ishiguro, a famed roboticist, and his team.
In April, Toyota's 207-centimetre (six-foot,10-inch) tall machine managed five out of eight three-point shots in a demonstration in a Tokyo suburb.
The robot, called CUE3, computes a three-dimensional image of where the basket is, using sensors on its torso, and adjusts motors inside its arms and knees to launch the shot at the correct angle.
In June, works by a robotic artist fetched over $1 million USD at the android's debut show, claimed its creator.
Robotic artist Ai-Da's inaugural exhibit at the University of Oxford questioned the ethics of artificial intelligence and what it meant to be human.
"Damien Hirst, was the excesses of the 90s. Ai Weiwei about the political situation in China. Ai-Da reflecting the technological uses that we're using today," says gallery director Aiden Meller.
In August, Ex-British Prime Minister Theresa May's premiership was living on, but perhaps not how you'd expect.
An English tearoom in the leafy county of Surrey named a robotic waitress after the former leader. It's called "Maybot".
Good news for mankind: Humans prevailed against a robotic challenger in August, in perhaps the unlikeliest setting yet - a cocktail bar.
London's Barbican Centre challenged seven of the city's top bartenders to take on an Italian-made robotic bar system, called Makr Shakr (pron: Maker Shaker).
The human cocktail makers came out clear winners in the end.
"You don't go to a bar just for the cocktails, you go to a bar for a social experience and the machines are not social," says bar owner Felix Cohen.
Superheroes, exoskeletons, and musical robots were on show in Beijing.
They were part of this year's World Robot Conference, which highlighted not only robots for play, but also for the workplace.
But US-China trade tensions and an uncertain economic landscape, both at home and abroad, saw industry profits dwindle.
This is not a cat... but rather a robot that reacts to your strokes by wagging its robotic tail.
In September, this 200-dollar cat-robot - which can also be used as a pillow - was on show at the Showstoppers event at IFA consumer tech fair in Berlin.
Qoobo - as the robot cat is called - reacts differently to different stokes and pats.
"People live in tiny apartments, no access to animals. So, we designed this robot for substitution," explains Shunsuke Aoki, founder of Yukai Engineering.
Could this be the future of cooking? A robot arm in the kitchen, ready to help with tasks, such as adding salt to a sauce or stirring a pot.
This voice-controlled robot was part of a future kitchen concept by South Korean electronics company Samsung on show at IFA.
Robots are fast becoming the solution sought by engineers and workers who operate in dangerous or inhospitable environments. But developing one that flies and can operate in underwater is tricky.
In September, scientists in the UK used the inspiration of a flying fish to create a robot that could do both.
"The approach is that flying vehicles can fly to (a) location, they can land, but typically they cannot move in water," explains Dr. Mirko Kovac, director of the Aerial Robotics Laboratory at Imperial College London.
Robots and innovative farming methods were all part of a global solution to future-proof humanity at an October technology event in Rome.
The innovative solutions also relied on artificial intelligence, which could be used to compose music or drive a game of high-tech football.
In October, young teams from 190 countries flocked to Dubai for a robotics event, called FIRST Global Challenge. But the robotics contest came with a twist. The goal? Helping the environment.
Where once robots were only ever seen in science fiction movies, now they're rapidly becoming part of everyday life: in our homes and workplaces.
In November, the "Hello, Robot" exhibition at Dundee's V&A museum showed off the latest robotic developments - as well as nostalgic pieces like Star Wars' R2-D2.
"The only way I can explain it is jump inside a wheelie bin, close the lid, and sit there for 15, 20 minutes – it's the only way you can explain it," says actor Jimmy Vee, who's played R2-D2 in recent Star Wars movies.
The first cargo-carrying robot marketed directly to consumers went on sale this holiday season.
But how many people are ready to ditch their second car to buy a two-wheeled rover that can follow them around like a dog?
"It enables you to make pedestrian mobility choices, instead of reaching for the keys to the car," says Jeffrey Schnapp, co-founder of Piaggio Fast Forward.
Cambridge University, home to the world's oldest debating society, was the setting for a demonstration of what the future might hold in late November.
IBM's Project Debater, already seasoned from debating with humans, was for the first time being pitted against itself, at least in the first round.
"AI will not be able to make a decision that is the morally correct one, because morality is unique to humans," it said.
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Last Updated : Dec 27, 2019, 6:58 PM IST
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