fisherman

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  • Square Enix reveals all of Final Fantasy XIV's races and clans

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    04.05.2010

    Square Enix has revealed detailed information about the five new "clans" found within the races of Eorzea, the realm in which upcoming MMO Final Fantasy XIV will take place. Clans offer up two slightly different character options within the five overall race choices -- for example, if you want to play as a burly Roegadyn, you can go with the paler and more subdued "Sea Wolf" fisherman clan, or heat things up with the rock-and-fire influenced "Hellsguard" clan. Information on all of the races and clans is now available on Square Enix's website. Unfortunately for Final Fantasy fans, we looked through the whole list of clans, and not a single one of the races lets you become a Sith Warrior. Sure, the Miqo'te Seekers of the Sun look cute and all, but is their one stated goal to kill Jedi? No? Pass, then, sorry. [via Massively] %Gallery-89790%

  • Free Realms to introduce new job, pets, player housing and more

    by 
    Shawn Schuster
    Shawn Schuster
    11.03.2009

    The world of Free Realms is about to get a bit bigger this holiday season as even more content is being added and improved for the game. According to Sony Online Entertainment's Creative Director for Free Realms, Laralyn McWilliams, the game is about to see a new job, new job structure, new pets, player housing and more added by mid-December. We caught up with Laralyn to get a few more details on the upcoming improvements before the first stage of these updates goes live this week. Follow along after the jump for the complete interview, and in our gallery below for some exclusive screenshots of the new content.%Gallery-12980%

  • Nokia 1600 survives week in fish's belly, still makes smelly calls

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    02.28.2009

    First off, it's rather amazing that someone in a developed nation is still using the Nokia 1600 as their primary handset. Secondly, it's even more astounding that said handset lasted a week in the belly of a cod and could still make calls after it was rescued. In a just-barely-believable story hosted up at The Sun, a businessman was both shocked and confused when his presumably sunk cellphone began ringing his lady friend around five days after he dropped it at sea. As the tale goes, a 25 pound cod managed to swallow the thing, and a pair of fishermen discovered it upon gutting their catch. The best part? The bloke who it was returned to is still using it, despite the fact that it literally reeks of rotten fish. Who knows -- maybe he suffers from ichthyomania.[Via Nokia Conversations]

  • Lowrance's HDS-5 / HDS-7 high-definition chartplotter systems make fish scared

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    11.29.2008

    If you reckoned high-def was confined to the living room and / or theater, you've got another thing comin', partner. Lowrance has just introduced two new GPS-Chartplotter and Fishfinder combination units, both of which are the first on the market to combine "high-definition chartplotter capabilities and Lowrance's Broadband Sounder functionality into a compact, easy-to-install system." Of course, you won't be able to really take advantage of the HD inclusions on the 480 x 480 (HDS-5) / 640 x 480 (HDS-7) displays, but maybe the definition of "high-definition" is different on the lake. Hmmph.

  • Vietnamese fishermen mistakenly swipe miles of fiber-optic wire

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    06.09.2007

    While this mishap may not look as if it would cost Vietnam nearly as much as the Alaskan vaporization, losing 27-miles of critical fiber-optic cabling connecting the underdeveloped nation to Thailand and Hong Kong is fairly serious (and pricey). As it turns out, hordes of Vietnamese fishermen were given permission to salvage war-era undersea copper lines to fetch whatever price they could on local markets, but things got out of hand when vital telecommunication pipelines began getting swiped instead of antiquated cabling. The country has since disallowed the removal of any underwater wire until things pan out, but it looks like Vietnam will be relying on a single cable to the outside world until it can pony up the $5.8 million in replacement costs.