I'm always taking a photo of my screen. I need blur functionality, because I don't want people to read my code. I solve this now by shaking the phone, but since I did this 500+ times already, you might consider a feature.
Unfortunately, no. While my firm is generally okay with me providing non-specific comments like this anonymously online, or to provide legal advice pro bono or for compensation, I'm not allowed to provide client-specific tax advice separately from my employment without prior approval.
If Mr. Robbins hadn't blown his gasket, I would have suggested contacting him. Unfortunately, I've since reviewed his LinkedIn profile and I can't in good conscience recommend an advisor who has been practicing for less than a year, has no tax background (LL.M, prior accounting employment, or even just experience from time spent in practice), and has demonstrated poor judgment in an online board linked to his real-life profile. Bitcoin taxation isn't a settled issue; most of the concepts are extensions and analogizations from other areas of tax law which can't be fully understood in only a few months of professional practice.
My recommendation: if you're on the West Coast, reach out to Loyola Law School's LL.M program and ask them to recommend an alum; if you're on the East Coast, reach out to NYU or UMiami's LL.M programs. LL.M programs are usually very good at helping connect prospective clients to their alumni.
Sad. Years ago I found WinAmp and its programmable visualizer an indispensable tool when teaching Mathematics. Graphing sine waves is so much fun when combined with a good beat.
If your work is measured in lines of code or git commits, then you ARE a working class.
If you're scared about your future so much that you want to read every TC article, learn every new hip language and attend every meet-up, just to stay on top of things, while selling your LOC to some company, you ARE a working class.
You have it all wrong. They just need to APPEAR that they created value by hiding the fact that most of the work was already done, just enough for the next VC round.
I especially like Firebase tutorials and docs. After finishing tutorial on Firebase first launch I immediately knew where and how can I use Firebase in the future. When the time came we used it for real-time worker/web-app communication at http://dubjoy.com/ and it worked like a charm. I still don't know how to use web sockets and I hope I never will :) While working with Firebase we needed some ACL-like security features and Firebase delivered again. Amazing.