I hereby claim:
- I am ultimape on github.
- I am ultimape (https://keybase.io/ultimape) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 2295 262A 1BEF 7B56 FD71 37B0 2606 75B5 0812 9B4F
To claim this, I am signing this object:
/* | |
* Pinterest Board Linkifier | |
* | |
* This tool makes it easier to open up all the links in pinterest board. | |
* Tested in Google Chrome October 10th, 2015. | |
* | |
* It automatically scrolls to the bottom of the page until no more pins are loaded. | |
* | |
* Then it replaces the page with a list of links to all the pins. | |
* |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
{ "weaves" : { | |
"term:singular" : "A Weave", | |
"meta:comment" : "Stories made of parts interweaved into a complex whole.", | |
"quilts" : [ "quilt" : [ "block" : { | |
"meta:comment" : "A block is a clipped segment from a larger story, like a peice of a quilt cut from your favorit old t-shirt. Basically, they are just abuses of meta-memes within a pre-existing larger narrative.", | |
"source" : { | |
"provider" : "youtube.com", | |
"last_updated" : "<INSERT ISODATE FORMAT HERE>", | |
"metadata" : { | |
"title" : "thinks like me", |
I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world. ('The Saturday Evening Post' 1929)
I have no doubt that our thinking goes on for the most part without the use of signs (words), and, furthermore, largely unconsciously. For how, otherwise, should it happen that sometimes we "wonder" quite spontaneously about some experience? This "wondering" appears to occur when experience comes into conflict with a world of concepts that is already sufficiently fixed within us. ('Autobiographical Notes' Schilpp, 1949, pp. 8-9)
/** | |
* We don't read and write programs because it's fun. | |
* | |
* We read and write programs | |
* because we are members of the human race, | |
* and the human race is filled with ideas. | |
* | |
* Code and ideas can change the world. | |
* | |
* And you may contribute a verse. |
/** | |
* We don't read and write programs because it's fun. | |
* | |
* We read and write programs | |
* because we are members of the human race, | |
* and the human race is filled with ideas. | |
* | |
* Code and ideas can change the world. | |
* | |
* And you may contribute a verse. |
(orginally on reddit)
First, a little bit of meta to give you some context:
A poem I wrote using "found quotations".
The poem is my attempt to express something that has been kicking around in my head, but I can only seem to express it using other people's words.
I heard you like meta, so I'll put some meta in this meta, so you can get some context on this context: >A poem begins with a lump in the throat; a home-sickness or a love-sickness. It is a reaching-out toward expression; an effort to find fulfillment. A complete poem is one where an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found the words.
[{ | |
name : "Butler", | |
gender : "M", | |
purpose : ["laptop name"], | |
source : ["Artemis Fowl"], | |
altNames : ["Domovoi", "Domovoi Butler"] | |
}, { | |
name : "Jarvis", | |
gender : "M", | |
purpose : ["local code storage/repo"], |
This is a collection of links I've gathered during my time learning about Eris Industries. I spent a couple months learning to be a marmot during the summer of 2015 and this is a small attempt to share what I learned.
This collection is themed after Eric Elliott's curated list of JavaScript resources. I highly recommend taking a look if you are at all intersted in JavsScript.
While my time as an intern didn't have the outcome I had hoped, I still found a lot of value in working with them. If you find yourself knee deep in marmotology (and the Tao of DAO), may this help you get a head start!