I hereby claim:
- I am cgrinker on github.
- I am clarkrinker (https://keybase.io/clarkrinker) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 32F3 307B 7D1E 73D4 6BA8 18BC B4DA 20E1 F1B2 D0BE
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
var HelloMessage = React.createClass({ | |
render: function() { | |
return <div>Hello {this.props.name}</div>; | |
} | |
}); |
{ | |
"Pokemon": [ | |
{ | |
"name": "1. Bulbasaur", | |
"img": { | |
"text": "", | |
"src": "http://static.giantbomb.com/uploads/scale_small/13/135472/1891758-001bulbasaur.png" | |
} | |
}, | |
{ |
The purpose of this note is to expand on my post regarding the potential 15% Corporate tax rate floated by the Trump administration. Before I begin though, three caveats:
I am not a tax professional. I also don't give good advice. Do not take this as tax advice
I voted for Clinton. I caucused for Sanders, not that the Washington Caucus has ever affected the outcome of the election.
These comments are in reference to the median household income of $51,939 and assumed to apply to Single Filing Individual and Married filing jointly. When discussing ammounts I'll use the notation
$(Single.Filer/Maried.Jointly)
{ | |
"data": { | |
"repository": { | |
"id": "MDEwOlJlcG9zaXRvcnk0MTQ1OTk4NA==", | |
"labels": { | |
"edges": [ | |
{ | |
"node": { | |
"id": "MDU6TGFiZWwyNTMxMjc0MjM=", | |
"color": "1a1a00", |
[When to Use Typename](https://stackoverflow.com/a/613132) |
(define foo "fishtacos") | |
(print (fmt "var foo is set to {foo}")) |
const fs = require('fs'); | |
module.exports = fs.readdirSync(__dirname ) | |
.filter((e)=>{return e !== 'index.js'}) | |
.map((e)=> { | |
return [e.split('.')[0], require(`./${e}`)] | |
}) | |
.reduce((acc, val)=> { | |
acc[val[0]] = val[1]; |
With all the talk about what constitutes a chair lately I thought folks might be interested in a primer on the limits of classical categorization (or taxonomy if you like) and how Prototype Theory can help you avoid spiraling into a nihilistic hellhole where words have no meaning. Don't believe the hype: You know what a chair is.
This post is based primarily on the textbook Women, Fire and Dangerous Things by George Lakoff, which was assigned reading at Evergreen, former home of everyone's second least favorite Weinstein, Brett.
It's important to remember that categories are just tools, and the imperfect taxonomies we see in classical categorization work just fine until they don't. As an analogy if you are measuring something in physics and the object is moving slower than 1/10th the speed of light you don't need Special Relativity; Classical Mechanics will work just fine. It's the point when things don't fit cleanly into our categories t