Well congratulations you have yeast!
Assuming that is a quart jar it looks like you have ~100 - 200 ml of slurry at the bottom.
I know you are trying to dial in an optimized pitch by using the calculators and that's cool, we measure just about everything else and use that info to hopefully improve our beer's taste and consistency. However, of all the things we measure at the homebrew level, yeast count/viability/pitch rate has to have the highest WAG factor, IMHO of course
The calculators are useful tools and make good starting points, but they are certainly not the final word and cannot substitute for experience and good notes.
IIRC, you are doing a 1.050ish 2.5 gal batch, I think you have plenty for that.
Once it's done, leave a little beer behind in the fermenter, swirl it up, and save it in sanitized mason jars. Depending on how much you get you can pitch that directly into a new batch if you brew again within a few weeks, make a new starter with it or both. I've read this yeast really starts to hit it's stride around gen 3...
P.S. Make sure you unscrew that band a little every once in awhile to relieve any residual pressure the yeast may develop. I like the white plastic lids and just leave them a little loose during the first week or so.