Sabtu, 27 Desember 2008

Eudemons Online Cheat

Eudemons Online

Mage: Defeating strong enemies:
-------------------------------
Submitted by: RM

Summon two Eudemons who have spells that shoot. Then use sneak or
invisibility. Hover your pointer over the monster and press the
function keys for whatever spell you have them assigned.
For example, if you have Thunder assigned to F3, continuously press F3.
The game will freeze for a few seconds then about twenty Thunders will
come down on your enemy.


Easy Kills:
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Submitted by: andrew

Warrior: for a warrior use the skills Chain Chop or Flying chop on the enemies
while you have alot of pot atleast 200+ mage: use invisablity on urself then use
thunder with ur euds so u wont be seen when ur magic is low use soul seeker to
heal it.


Hint:
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Submitted by: moamed

There is good cheat enable u to make the screen smaller u can type>>/scale 70<<
then see what happen.


Hint:
-----
Submitted by: DoesntMatter

Type this in normal chat then click enter /armor 133088 or /setrweapon 410244


Cheat:
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Submitted by: dana

duel swords = first u need to have the box with the char. name ur talking to empty.
then u just type in /setlweapon 420244.


Cheat:
------
Submitted by: red.flame

U can get woriar armor and swords armor 132088 and /setrweapon 410144 /setrweapon 410234
/setrweapon 410244 /setrweapon 420244
HAVE FUN in eudemons online


Cheats:
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Update by: daniel
Submitted by: ArdIa

-----Codes-----
/addeffect weapon01
/addeffect weapon02
Write /armor 1144558 to be invisible :P
/armor 001190520
/armor 001190160
/setlweapon 410240
/setlweapon 420230
/setlweapon 410230
/setlweapon 420240
/setlweapon 440230
/setlweapon 440240
/setrweapon 410144
/setrweapon 410234
/setrweapon 410244
/addeffect weapon01
/addeffect weapon02
/armor 1133094
/setlweapon 410344
/armor 1190160
/armor 1190060
/armor 1190560
/armor 2190580 female
/setrweapon 420234
/setrweapon 440244
/armor 1133068
/armor 1133077
/armor 1133089
/armor 1134029
/armor 1133097
/armor 1134048
/armor 1134054
/armor 1134062
/armor 1131100
/armor 1131110
/armor 1190400
/armor 1190380
/armor 1190240
ObsidianMail - /armor 1190400
Santa Suit Female - /armor 2190260
Santa Suit Male - /armor 1190240
Silver Wings - /armor 1190380
Golden Wings - /armor 2190360
PinkRomance Female - /armor 2190540
PinkRomance Male - /armor 1190520
RoseLoveBird Male - /armor 1190120
RoseLoveBird Female - /armor 2190140
MiracleLight Male - /armor 1190160
MiracleLight Female - /armor 2190200
Manderine Male - /armor 1190320
Manderine Female - /armor 2190340
JasperTunic - /armor 2190420
VioletDiamond - /armor 2190460
SummerHunter Female - /armor 2190500
SummerHunter Male - /armor 1190480
ShadowMoon - /armor 1190440


Hint:
-----
Submitted by: jordan tiu

Up level fast when u re 30lvl, make a team lv90 above player call they 2 dragon
mountain, went your XP is full use it,u can up many level as you one faster then
self training.


How to level up:
----------------
Well first of all go and fight madbulls until lvl 5. Then dont kill green giants
instead kill bullywugs till lvl 8. Now this may sound wierd but when lvl 8 go to
the dragonkins and kill them until lvl 15 so you can get gods blessing!!!. Now
you have 3 ways to choose from Either 1: go through portal at the bottom of the
map and kill eyeballs until lvl 20. 2: use gods blessing offline training (press
red button when logging off). or 3: jst kill dragonkins until lvl 20 (you can get
good stuff by killing dragonkins like eudemon eggs so if u get eud eggs hatch them
and lvl them up to lvl 20 then sell them for good money). This is the end of my
short guide.

Minggu, 31 Agustus 2008

Cease-Fire by Pakistan in Attacks on Militants

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — The Pakistani military, which has been criticized by the Bush administration as not pushing hard enough against Taliban militants in the country’s tribal areas, has used jet fighters and helicopter gunships in the past three weeks to strike at insurgents pouring over the border to attack American forces in Afghanistan.

The air assaults have resulted in more than 400 Taliban casualties in Bajaur, an area of the tribal region where Al Qaeda and the Taliban have forged close ties, and have forced the militants to retreat from villages that they controlled, a military official involved in the operations said.

But on Saturday night, the Pakistani government declared a cease-fire in the area for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins here on Wednesday. The deal was arranged after the electorally important Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, a religious party, and legislators from the tribal areas said they would support Asif Ali Zardari for president in return for an end to the airstrikes.

Mr. Zardari, the widower of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and head of the Pakistan Peoples Party, is the leading candidate for president in the electoral college vote scheduled for Saturday.

The cease-fire prompted concerns that whatever gains had been made against militants in the region would be squandered. Khalid Aziz, a former chief secretary of the North-West Frontier Province, said the Taliban would use the opportunity to regroup.

“Some communities have risen up against the militants, and the government has to capitalize on this, has to prop them up,” he said. “They haven’t done it.”

It was unclear whether the cease-fire would extend beyond Ramadan, politicians from the tribal areas said.

The last three weeks of airstrikes, in addition to a monthlong air and ground offensive in nearby Swat, a scenic area in the North-West Frontier Province, was the most sustained campaign by the Pakistani military after months of intense pressure by the Bush administration to do more against the insurgents.

Whether or not the military’s Bajaur operation was intended specifically to assist the United States, the airstrikes dovetailed with Washington’s interests. The Bush administration has said that the ability of Al Qaeda and Taliban to operate there and in other areas of the tribal belt gives them license to plot attacks against the United States.

The militants, operating with impunity from havens like Bajaur, a 250-square-mile pocket of mountains and narrow valleys on the northern edge of the tribal areas, have struck American and NATO forces in Afghanistan with mounting ferocity.

In that context, the Pakistani army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, was invited to a secret meeting with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, on an aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea last week.

It was their fifth encounter since General Kayani took over as army chief from Pervez Musharraf in November. The session at sea appears to have been more congenial than a confrontation in Islamabad in July, when Admiral Mullen told the Pakistanis that Washington had evidence of the involvement of their powerful spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, in the bombing of the Indian Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.

As a result of the air campaign, more than 200,000 civilians have fled their homes, according to the World Health Organization and Unicef, which are providing assistance in the area. Many of the refugees, who are now squatting in makeshift camps or bunking with extended family, are angry at the deaths of relatives and the destruction of property. More than 40,000 people from Bajaur are now refugees in Afghanistan, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

Most of the women in the camps arrived clad in burqas and remained inside small tents with up to 11 children squeezed together on the ground without mattresses and with very little water.

The Pakistani military has met fierce resistance from the militants in Bajaur. Col. Shahbaz Rasul of the Frontier Corps, the paramilitary force that is leading the army operations there, said more than 400 Taliban had been killed by airstrikes, though an official with access to Inter-Services Intelligence data said an estimated 200 Taliban had been killed. It was difficult to verify the number of casualties independently.

Colonel Rasul said that the Taliban fighters were better paid than his soldiers and that they were well motivated. He said the Taliban force numbered 2,300 men under four commanders. The largest group, with about 1,200 men, fought under Faqir Mohammad, the second in command of the umbrella group Tehrik-e-Taliban, he said.

There were reports that Mr. Faqir, reputed to run the most disciplined Taliban force in Bajaur, had been killed during the early days of the airstrikes. But Mr. Faqir later gave a radio interview saying he had survived by jumping out of his van before a bomb hit it, killing 11 of his fighters.

The Frontier Corps has remained inside its fort at Khar, the capital of Bajaur, since the airstrikes began, Colonel Rasul said. That is largely because the corps was bloodied during three days of heavy fighting in early August, when soldiers tried to take back a post at Loe Sam from the Taliban. The village is at a strategic junction leading north to Kunar Province in Afghanistan, and about 10 miles from Damadola, where an American airstrike in January 2006 failed to kill Ayman al-Zawahri, the Qaeda deputy.

In the fighting to recapture Loe Sam, 29 soldiers were killed, Colonel Rasul said. After three attempts using 400 men to take the post, the Frontier Corps had to retreat along the 16-mile road from Loe Sam to Khar.

“The miscreants came in full force in numbers of men and sophistication of equipment,” he said of the surprising strength of the Taliban around Loe Sam. The Pakistani Army uses “miscreants” to describe the Taliban.

Maulvi Omar, the spokesman of the Tehrik-e-Taliban, said in a telephone interview on Friday that the Taliban had lost only six people in the fight over Loe Sam. He minimized the losses elsewhere. Mr. Omar often answers reporters’ calls on a cellphone, an indication that he is in an area with phone coverage, raising questions about why the military has not been able to capture him.

In the interview, Mr. Omar criticized Mr. Zardari for doing what he called America’s bidding. “If the Zardari government has promised to kill us for the sake of American aid, then he should better hand the country over to India,” he said.

Meanwhile, many Pakistanis in the North-West Frontier Province and the tribal belt said that they were pleased that the government was taking firm action against the Taliban, who are now threatening the capital of the province, Peshawar, and have taken over some of the towns around it.

But the airstrikes were criticized for being indiscriminate. The assault had not killed any known leaders of the Taliban in Bajaur, said Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao, a former interior minister, whose constituency is close to Bajaur. The displaced civilians blamed the government for the hardships in the camps and for the destruction of their homes.

Another legislator, Muneer Orekzai, said: “It’s not justice to kill 5 Taliban and 95 civilians. Everyone knows who the militants are in every village. We want a targeted operation with the army going on search and destroy operations.” In Salarzai, a cluster of villages in the northern part of Bajaur, local people had organized themselves against the Taliban, Jalal Uddin, a tribal leader, said in a telephone interview.

“People are fed up with the Taliban,” Mr. Uddin said.

“People are seeing the government fighting the Taliban, so they are encouraged,” he said, adding that it was disappointing that none of the Taliban leaders had been killed.

As news of the government cease-fire spread over the weekend, there were indications that many of the displaced in the camps would return home. But some said they were worried about the absence of government ground forces.

“If we go back now, no one is in charge, neither the militants nor the government,” said Maroof Shah, a shopkeeper from Loe Sam who brought an extended family of 23 on the trek out of Bajaur to escape the bombing.

A Cabana Culture Eases Into the Sunset


FOR as many girlhood summers as she can remember, Anne Scordo whiled away weekends at the Malibu Beach Club on the south shore of Long Island, enjoying aimless afternoons painting seashells with her cousins and stringing them on necklaces to sell to neighbors. “My cousins and I are best friends to this day,” Ms. Scordo said, “because we grew up here as a family.”

Today family on most Sundays means Ms. Scordo; her great aunt, Gertrude Rossetti, 88; and a grandmother, Anne Marie Bowler, 85.

Sure, she could drive to the Hamptons. “But things are just different here, it’s not pretentious, it’s home,” said Ms. Scordo, 33, a partner in a law firm in Manhattan. “My auntie and grandma, I know they will always be here.”

Always, she hopes, will be a long time. But she is also acutely aware that when Mrs. Bower dies, her own summer idylls will also vanish. Like other cabana communities along Lido Beach, a 3.1-mile strip of sand sandwiched between the towns of Long Beach and Point Lookout in Nassau County, the Malibu club is on the cusp of change.

One in a string of glitz-free beach clubs along the south shore of Long Island, around an hour’s drive from Manhattan, it is a day-tripper’s Eden. Members pay about $3,500 a year to rent one of 600 brightly painted cinderblock lean-tos, most of them no bigger than a garden shed, their only built-in amenities a shower, a toilet, walls and a roof.

Just yards from the ocean, the Malibu’s simple aqua huts are nevertheless home to a richly textured community that has thrived since the late ’50s.

The members, mostly Irish-, Jewish- and Italian-American families, trade recipes and shards of gossip, play Scrabble or canasta, and gather for improvised dinners of grilled corn and clams.

Most view their enclave as an affordable and welcoming alternative to Martha’s Vineyard or the Hamptons, and one that — as the days grow cooler — they are reluctant to leave.

But this weekend, some will be folding up beach chairs for the last time. Fully 55 percent of the cabanas have been rented by the same families since 1982, but the number diminishes each year because of a rule passed that year by the Town of Hempstead, which owns the Malibu, requiring families to move out once the original member dies.

The cabana then passes to a new tenant, selected from a waiting list of Hempstead residents that goes back as long as 15 years. The newcomer may stay for three seasons.

The rise of turnover renters, as they are known at the Malibu, means that short-timers are starting to outnumber members with generations-deep roots in the community, inexorably changing a way of life.

“This for me is a home away from home,” said Jim Heins, a son of longtime members, who runs an insurance agency in New York City. “But when our parents die, leaving here will be an emotional thing. You can never go back.”

For now, older members and their clans pass the weekends as they always have. On a strip of sand that serves as a community commons, girls twirl Hula Hoops and boys in Crayola-colored swim trunks play Nok Hockey, pushing wooden pucks across a board borrowed from a nearby recreation center.

At the far edge of the commons, where a party was in progress one recent Sunday, boys and girls danced the limbo and families lined up on the sand to toss water balloons, their fingers sticky with cotton candy. In keeping with the tropical-theme festivities, some revelers wore leis and decorated their cabanas with rubber palms and plastic orchids and bougainvillea.

Mr. Heins, 47, likes to brings friends. “I call them the East Village Fresh Air Fund,” he said, describing his posse of “aging rockers with tattoos and belly rings,” a little at sea in a setting where plenty of women still wear one-piece swimsuits with cancan ruffles.

“For my New York friends, this is a time warp from the ’60s,” he said. “It’s a little bit of a shock.” Still, they adjust, joining the commotion in the large pool or barbecuing burgers on Mr. Heins’s sidewalk porch.

Mary Rita and Bill O’Brien, renters for 40 years, prefer quieter weekends, pulling up lawn chairs in front of their cabana, its doors decorated with hand-painted topiary.

DENNIS CONROY, a sinewy-looking retired rigging engineer, likes taking lone dips in the ocean, a weekly rite he continues past Labor Day. “In September there are hurricanes and the water is rough,” he said. “That’s the best time.”

But he is part of a maverick minority. As Mr. Heins observed: “Come here, and you’ve got to be ready for people. You’re not to going to sit in solitude.”

Newcomers — the three-year people in the parlance of long-timers — are quick to adopt the etiquette of their adopted community, passing platters of home-baked chocolate chip cookies down the cabana rows, hoping to ingratiate themselves with neighbors.

Inside the cabanas, the newcomers can be more self-conscious about raising their voices than residents whose family business has been hung out like laundry for decades.

“You have to get along with your neighbors. You are basically living with them,” said Audrey Schenendorf, a retired elementary school teacher who moved to Malibu from the neighboring Sands club. With a furtive glance over her shoulder, she rasped, “Sometimes you can hear them fighting.”

Judy Veneroso, who sat on the beach playing Scrabble with her sister Bonnie Clavin and her mother, Olga Veneroso, 94, recalled: “We used to have more people. We would down and watch everybody’s kids grow up. If we didn’t see them, we worried.”

Joan Donovan, whose parents began renting at the Malibu in the ’60s, remembers her childhood summers as “a way of life.”

“We didn’t see each other all winter long,” she said, “but we would just pick up where we left off.”

Today, longtime neighbors up and down the rows congratulate one another on weddings and births. Or they commiserate over family scandals and illnesses. “But that is just with the people we’ve known forever,” Ms. Donovan said. “With the newer people, we don’t get that nosy.”

For some of these members, the prospect of change prompts rueful laughter. “I always tell my dad if he gets sick, we’re going to have to freeze him,” Mr. Heins said. “Then we can rent for one more year.”

Another year? “Well, you never know who will be next door,” Ms. Schenendorf said. As Labor Day approached, she was telling old friends, “I’ll see you next summer — if you’re here.”

“Lately,” she said, “that’s the way all my sentences go.”

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