MIT Engineers
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- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
I just download off youtube
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- BigRedMan
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Re: MIT Engineers
Firefox and Download helper ( I think it is called) will allow you to capture anything.
Kickass.to is easy to find one song stuff also. Pirate Bay works well also.
Kickass.to is easy to find one song stuff also. Pirate Bay works well also.
Sure, I've been called a xenophobe, but the truth is, I'm not. I honestly just feel that America is the best country and the other countries aren't as good. That used to be called patriotism.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
youtubemp3podcaster add in for firefox works even better - download anything on Youtube in .mp3 (audio) or .mp4 (video) format. Also movies,etc from sits like putlocker.BigRedMan wrote:Firefox and Download helper ( I think it is called) will allow you to capture anything.
Kickass.to is easy to find one song stuff also. Pirate Bay works well also.
occasionally you have to update it because Youtube keeps changing it up to try to stop them.
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- Bklyn
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Re: MIT Engineers
http://www.gq.com/story/how-to-have-bab ... -ed-houben
How One Man Fathered 106 Babies (and Counting)
A little while back, a woman—an ovulating professor from Germany—arrived in Maastricht, the Netherlands, to a neighborhood just beyond the city center, on the other side of the Maas River. She parked her car at a distance from her destination so as not to be recognized (she knows quite a few professors in Maastricht), and was briskly moving down the sidewalk toward the apartment of Ed Houben, when she got caught behind a father walking his little boy at dusk. The father and son drifted past the square, but when they came upon Ed's apartment, the father pointed a finger in the dark, and the boy looked up to the third floor, where a star-shaped lantern was lit in a window.
“That is where the Babymaker lives,” she heard the father say.
Later, when he heard the story from the ovulating professor, the Babymaker himself was delighted, for not everyone accepts what he does, and so he spends a lot of time explaining the wherefores and what-hows of his avocation, often with a startling dose of Dutch honesty.
But this boy and his father—what a small victory for Ed: a world in which the Babymaker lives just down the block and no one bats an eye or blushes, no one utters a condemning word, knowing he's there, ever ready.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first time Ed Houben slept with another man's wife was in Amsterdam. It was 13 years ago, Ed was 32, feeling unattractive, convinced no woman would ever consider having sex with him again. He wasn't a virgin, but the rapports sexuels that had come his way were, frankly, as rare as dogs in space. In fact, it had been ten years since his last encounter, though he claimed not to miss it, the sex that is, busy as he was with his job, volunteering for the national guard, and war re-enactments that a man of his ilk and interests can get sucked into.
However, he'd made a huge decision. Convinced that having a family might not be in the cards for him, Ed Houben (pronounced who-been) decided to become a sperm donor. He would show up twice a month at the clinic, “producing” in “the production room” to fill a cup for cash. The first time he went, they didn't even take his name. It couldn't have been more cold and impersonal.
“I was sort of expecting this gift of life to be received with sirens and fanfare,” says Ed. “I remember saying ‘Hello?’ and somebody from another room answered ‘Yes?’ ‘I have a cup here.’ ‘Oh, yes. Leave it on the table.’ ”
The more he donated, the more he desired some intimacy from the process. He began to advertise his willingness to do house calls on various websites. Produce a sample in the downstairs bathroom, deliver it upstairs—knock, knock—and retreat again, letting the clients take it from there. And on this occasion, here in Amsterdam, he anticipated it would be no different.
The woman had met him at the train station on her bike, and together they walked to her house, where they met her husband. She made some dinner, and they talked—wife, husband, Ed—until about 11 P.M. She smoked a joint and went upstairs, nervously. Ed had worked a full day in Maastricht and then took the train two and a half hours north. He'd now missed the last train back. It was possible, he thought, that he was too service-minded. The man kept chatting with him until, at midnight, Ed said, “Look, I really have to cut this short, because tomorrow I'm on the first train…” Blah, blah.
He knew how badly the couple wanted a baby, how badly he wanted to help. Sperm donation, as crazy as it sounds, was what now gave meaning to his life. As for the couple, he understood that theirs was what they call in the Netherlands “a traffic-light relationship,” one minute green and one minute red. The light was green now, but the man was sterile, having been snipped.
“I have to ask you a question,” said Ed to the man, “because maybe you notice she's nervous all the time.…”
“Yes, I've noticed,” said the man, and then he explained. “She's an artist,” he said, “and she feels very connected to nature. Basically she can't imagine a happy child will be created from a 12-cent syringe. She asked me to ask you—because she's too shy—if you would consider creating this child the natural way.”
At this, Ed found himself flustered. “I really didn't know what to say. I felt caught in a situation which many men would find highly stimulating. Okay, here's a guy asking you to have sex with his wife without worrying about consequences, and my romantic reaction was, ‘Did you have an STD test?’ ”
He was perched, of course, on the dividing line between two lives—between being an artificial inseminator of women and a natural one—and he thought it over for 15 minutes, which is a long time to leave a woman and her husband in limbo. He was thinking: Is there any ethical reason not to do this? Who do I hurt? After all, this was the way 7 billion people on earth have been created. At last Ed decided he would “go with the flow.”
They climbed the stairs and entered the room, and the woman was very relieved when she saw him there. When Ed turned to say “I'll take it from here,” her husband already had his pants off:
“We were three persons in the bed, and I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. I had this combat inside—my head full of non-stimulating thoughts—but he never even accidentally touched me. He wanted to be present when his child was created.”
After that, Ed had no problem if husbands wanted to be on hand while he slept with their wives. Not that he would limit himself to married heterosexual couples—there were hundreds of single, gay, and otherwise ambiguously attached women who required his services, too. But there was something edifying about this married couple in particular, something that made sense that hadn't before: In allowing him to have sex with their wives, the men, too, were on a journey, one as private as their wives'. And in this strange, dichotomous act of largesse and cuckolding, Ed himself might save them from self-recrimination and ego free fall. By sharing his seed with their wives just so, in the ovulation go-zone, he might provide them with the greatest gift of all—a no-strings-attached baby—and in so doing complete their family with the final puzzle piece. What he least expected in return was gratitude, but that's just what he got.
Ed Houben is now, at the age of 46, one of the preeminent makers of babies on the planet, father to 106 children of whom two-thirds were made the natural way (i.e., by sexual intercourse) and a third made via artificial insemination. In addition, there are 30 or so he estimates from his years at the clinic. Put another way: Ed Houben, who once had sex once every decade, has fathered roughly ten kids every year for the past 15 years. And he's still at it, thumping his way into history. So prodigious is his legacy that the BBC dubbed him “Europe's most virile man,” while he regularly gets billed by media as “the Sperminator.”
The prerequisite for his calling, he believes, is full transparency. So visit his website—with the tagline “It is nice you found my website!”—and you will discover that Ed has tested negative for gonorrhea and chlamydia. You can see that he's tested negative for syphilis and HIV, too. You can gaze upon pictures of him, one in which he kneels beside one of his small children, from some years ago when he was a bit more youthful.
Nevertheless, he's quick to describe himself as a “truly ugly fat guy with glasses.” An endomorphic bachelor with a somewhat block-shaped head and lower grill of uneven teeth, he lives in a five-room apartment, grad-school humble but relatively roomy by Dutch standards, from which his mother comes and goes, often cooking and cleaning for him. He doesn't own a car; rather, he bikes everywhere, no matter what the weather.
In short, Ed Houben might be the world's least likely natural inseminator (known in the donor world as an N.I., as opposed to an A.I., or artificial inseminator)—and maybe the best, if there is such a thing. Regardless, he's a very normal-seeming person living a spectacularly abnormal life. He drinks coffee and goes to work (work he won't specify for his employer's sake, but it involves sharing his love for Maastricht and its history at an annual salary of 18,000 euros). He strolls the Old City, greeting those he knows with a cheery smile and slightly stiff formality.
(Go to link to finish)
How One Man Fathered 106 Babies (and Counting)
A little while back, a woman—an ovulating professor from Germany—arrived in Maastricht, the Netherlands, to a neighborhood just beyond the city center, on the other side of the Maas River. She parked her car at a distance from her destination so as not to be recognized (she knows quite a few professors in Maastricht), and was briskly moving down the sidewalk toward the apartment of Ed Houben, when she got caught behind a father walking his little boy at dusk. The father and son drifted past the square, but when they came upon Ed's apartment, the father pointed a finger in the dark, and the boy looked up to the third floor, where a star-shaped lantern was lit in a window.
“That is where the Babymaker lives,” she heard the father say.
Later, when he heard the story from the ovulating professor, the Babymaker himself was delighted, for not everyone accepts what he does, and so he spends a lot of time explaining the wherefores and what-hows of his avocation, often with a startling dose of Dutch honesty.
But this boy and his father—what a small victory for Ed: a world in which the Babymaker lives just down the block and no one bats an eye or blushes, no one utters a condemning word, knowing he's there, ever ready.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first time Ed Houben slept with another man's wife was in Amsterdam. It was 13 years ago, Ed was 32, feeling unattractive, convinced no woman would ever consider having sex with him again. He wasn't a virgin, but the rapports sexuels that had come his way were, frankly, as rare as dogs in space. In fact, it had been ten years since his last encounter, though he claimed not to miss it, the sex that is, busy as he was with his job, volunteering for the national guard, and war re-enactments that a man of his ilk and interests can get sucked into.
However, he'd made a huge decision. Convinced that having a family might not be in the cards for him, Ed Houben (pronounced who-been) decided to become a sperm donor. He would show up twice a month at the clinic, “producing” in “the production room” to fill a cup for cash. The first time he went, they didn't even take his name. It couldn't have been more cold and impersonal.
“I was sort of expecting this gift of life to be received with sirens and fanfare,” says Ed. “I remember saying ‘Hello?’ and somebody from another room answered ‘Yes?’ ‘I have a cup here.’ ‘Oh, yes. Leave it on the table.’ ”
The more he donated, the more he desired some intimacy from the process. He began to advertise his willingness to do house calls on various websites. Produce a sample in the downstairs bathroom, deliver it upstairs—knock, knock—and retreat again, letting the clients take it from there. And on this occasion, here in Amsterdam, he anticipated it would be no different.
The woman had met him at the train station on her bike, and together they walked to her house, where they met her husband. She made some dinner, and they talked—wife, husband, Ed—until about 11 P.M. She smoked a joint and went upstairs, nervously. Ed had worked a full day in Maastricht and then took the train two and a half hours north. He'd now missed the last train back. It was possible, he thought, that he was too service-minded. The man kept chatting with him until, at midnight, Ed said, “Look, I really have to cut this short, because tomorrow I'm on the first train…” Blah, blah.
He knew how badly the couple wanted a baby, how badly he wanted to help. Sperm donation, as crazy as it sounds, was what now gave meaning to his life. As for the couple, he understood that theirs was what they call in the Netherlands “a traffic-light relationship,” one minute green and one minute red. The light was green now, but the man was sterile, having been snipped.
“I have to ask you a question,” said Ed to the man, “because maybe you notice she's nervous all the time.…”
“Yes, I've noticed,” said the man, and then he explained. “She's an artist,” he said, “and she feels very connected to nature. Basically she can't imagine a happy child will be created from a 12-cent syringe. She asked me to ask you—because she's too shy—if you would consider creating this child the natural way.”
At this, Ed found himself flustered. “I really didn't know what to say. I felt caught in a situation which many men would find highly stimulating. Okay, here's a guy asking you to have sex with his wife without worrying about consequences, and my romantic reaction was, ‘Did you have an STD test?’ ”
He was perched, of course, on the dividing line between two lives—between being an artificial inseminator of women and a natural one—and he thought it over for 15 minutes, which is a long time to leave a woman and her husband in limbo. He was thinking: Is there any ethical reason not to do this? Who do I hurt? After all, this was the way 7 billion people on earth have been created. At last Ed decided he would “go with the flow.”
They climbed the stairs and entered the room, and the woman was very relieved when she saw him there. When Ed turned to say “I'll take it from here,” her husband already had his pants off:
“We were three persons in the bed, and I was so surprised that I didn't know what to say. I had this combat inside—my head full of non-stimulating thoughts—but he never even accidentally touched me. He wanted to be present when his child was created.”
After that, Ed had no problem if husbands wanted to be on hand while he slept with their wives. Not that he would limit himself to married heterosexual couples—there were hundreds of single, gay, and otherwise ambiguously attached women who required his services, too. But there was something edifying about this married couple in particular, something that made sense that hadn't before: In allowing him to have sex with their wives, the men, too, were on a journey, one as private as their wives'. And in this strange, dichotomous act of largesse and cuckolding, Ed himself might save them from self-recrimination and ego free fall. By sharing his seed with their wives just so, in the ovulation go-zone, he might provide them with the greatest gift of all—a no-strings-attached baby—and in so doing complete their family with the final puzzle piece. What he least expected in return was gratitude, but that's just what he got.
Ed Houben is now, at the age of 46, one of the preeminent makers of babies on the planet, father to 106 children of whom two-thirds were made the natural way (i.e., by sexual intercourse) and a third made via artificial insemination. In addition, there are 30 or so he estimates from his years at the clinic. Put another way: Ed Houben, who once had sex once every decade, has fathered roughly ten kids every year for the past 15 years. And he's still at it, thumping his way into history. So prodigious is his legacy that the BBC dubbed him “Europe's most virile man,” while he regularly gets billed by media as “the Sperminator.”
The prerequisite for his calling, he believes, is full transparency. So visit his website—with the tagline “It is nice you found my website!”—and you will discover that Ed has tested negative for gonorrhea and chlamydia. You can see that he's tested negative for syphilis and HIV, too. You can gaze upon pictures of him, one in which he kneels beside one of his small children, from some years ago when he was a bit more youthful.
Nevertheless, he's quick to describe himself as a “truly ugly fat guy with glasses.” An endomorphic bachelor with a somewhat block-shaped head and lower grill of uneven teeth, he lives in a five-room apartment, grad-school humble but relatively roomy by Dutch standards, from which his mother comes and goes, often cooking and cleaning for him. He doesn't own a car; rather, he bikes everywhere, no matter what the weather.
In short, Ed Houben might be the world's least likely natural inseminator (known in the donor world as an N.I., as opposed to an A.I., or artificial inseminator)—and maybe the best, if there is such a thing. Regardless, he's a very normal-seeming person living a spectacularly abnormal life. He drinks coffee and goes to work (work he won't specify for his employer's sake, but it involves sharing his love for Maastricht and its history at an annual salary of 18,000 euros). He strolls the Old City, greeting those he knows with a cheery smile and slightly stiff formality.
(Go to link to finish)
The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.
- aTm
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Re: MIT Engineers
At some point we will all be either a genetic predecessor to all surviving humans, or to none of them. This guys genes might make it.
Sure, I could have stayed in the past. I could have even been king. But in my own way, I am king.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
he's got a good gig
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- hedge
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Re: MIT Engineers
"greeting those he knows with a cheery smile and slightly stiff formality."
I want someone's ass blistered in the middle of Thanksgiving Square.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
I'm going to deliver a presentation at 2:30 today on a process I'm developing that is going to change how we deliver a service to our customers.
My boss has already signed off on it and has told me I can hire some people to get it done. The group I am delivering it to could see their headcount cut in half by the time I'm done with it in 2 years. I'm not sure if they will realize it during my presentation but I'm not about to tell them.
Its an awkward situation to say the least.
My boss has already signed off on it and has told me I can hire some people to get it done. The group I am delivering it to could see their headcount cut in half by the time I'm done with it in 2 years. I'm not sure if they will realize it during my presentation but I'm not about to tell them.
Its an awkward situation to say the least.
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- crashcourse
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- Jungle Rat
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Re: MIT Engineers
Fuck em e. Cover your ass.
- BigRedMan
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Re: MIT Engineers
eCat wrote:I'm going to deliver a presentation at 2:30 today on a process I'm developing that is going to change how we deliver a service to our customers.
My boss has already signed off on it and has told me I can hire some people to get it done. The group I am delivering it to could see their headcount cut in half by the time I'm done with it in 2 years. I'm not sure if they will realize it during my presentation but I'm not about to tell them.
Its an awkward situation to say the least.
if you are looking for a lackey that can work remotely and has no problem firing the hell out people, let me know.
Sure, I've been called a xenophobe, but the truth is, I'm not. I honestly just feel that America is the best country and the other countries aren't as good. That used to be called patriotism.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
it didn't go bad - only one guy gave me shit so time to press on.
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- sardis
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Re: MIT Engineers
It's not your fault, they rendered themselves obsolete.
- AlabamAlum
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Re: MIT Engineers
Well, actually, eCat rendered them obsolete, but it's all good.
"The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is hard to verify their authenticity."
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__________________________________________
Yes, I still miss Coach Bryant.
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Yes, I still miss Coach Bryant.
- sardis
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Re: MIT Engineers
I hope they don't have families...
- AlabamAlum
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Re: MIT Engineers
Well, at least eCat made his managers money. And that's all that really matters.
"The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is hard to verify their authenticity."
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__________________________________________
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- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
one day soon I will be sitting in a meeting and some smug son of bitch will be telling me how he has the great new idea.......
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
crashcourse wrote:http://r.search.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0LEVzw_ ... Eztk2JgLA-
I hope its not like that
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- eCat
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Re: MIT Engineers
so some of you know from facebook, for those that didn't - earlier in the week, someone broke into my sons car, broke the rear driver window and stole his GPS and a few items from the trunk. The car was in my driveway - although it was at the end and close to the road.
So I ordered an 8 channel /4 camera surveillance system for $150 from Amazon - comes with a 500gb hard drive. Basically you just setup your cameras which is the hard part - crawling around in the attic on my stomach across ceiling joists running cable, then climbing up a ladder with a drill to mount the cameras - after that you just plug the cables into the box and connect it to the internet.
Then you can download an app and watch cameras on your phone from wherever you are. The box also has HDMI and VGA out so you can hook it up to a $70 computer monitor. There are more options about motion detection, email alerts ,etc.
At any rate, I have the 4 cameras mounted, but I've decided to buy 4 more and use all 8 channels. With 8 cameras a 500gb hard drive will record about 7 days worth of stuff. A 1tb drive which is about $50 will record about 2 weeks depending on how you set it up.
Read last week where a guy put a board with nails sticking out in buried in his yard to stop kids from driving thru it. His neighbors reported him to the police. They came out and told him to pull them up before he hurt someone
so I'd like to think I've "matured' in that regard.
So I ordered an 8 channel /4 camera surveillance system for $150 from Amazon - comes with a 500gb hard drive. Basically you just setup your cameras which is the hard part - crawling around in the attic on my stomach across ceiling joists running cable, then climbing up a ladder with a drill to mount the cameras - after that you just plug the cables into the box and connect it to the internet.
Then you can download an app and watch cameras on your phone from wherever you are. The box also has HDMI and VGA out so you can hook it up to a $70 computer monitor. There are more options about motion detection, email alerts ,etc.
At any rate, I have the 4 cameras mounted, but I've decided to buy 4 more and use all 8 channels. With 8 cameras a 500gb hard drive will record about 7 days worth of stuff. A 1tb drive which is about $50 will record about 2 weeks depending on how you set it up.
Read last week where a guy put a board with nails sticking out in buried in his yard to stop kids from driving thru it. His neighbors reported him to the police. They came out and told him to pull them up before he hurt someone
so I'd like to think I've "matured' in that regard.
I like the stinky pinky but only up to the first knuckle, I do not want a GD thumb up there--I've told her multiple times and I always catch her when she tries to pull a fast one---it's my butthole for Chrissakes I'm gonna know--so cut out the BS.
- Jungle Rat
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Re: MIT Engineers
So they got past the Jew moat and the bear traps?
I've been thinking about getting cameras too but I'm not climbing up in the attic. There's dead things up there. One hopefully hedge.
I've been thinking about getting cameras too but I'm not climbing up in the attic. There's dead things up there. One hopefully hedge.