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  • Data Underload  /  marriage, pregnancy

    After Marriage, How Long People Wait to Have Kids

    First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes baby in the baby carriage. Sometimes.

    Read More
  • See every member’s path to the House of Representatives

    January 28, 2019

    Topic

    Network Visualization  /  Congress, New York Times, Path

    For The New York Times, Sahil Chinoy and Jessia Ma visualized the path to Congress for every member. See it all at once like above or search for specific members. The vertical scale represents previous categories of work and education and looks like it’s sorted by how common the categories were among Republicans and Democrats. The horizontal scale represents time, which starts at undergraduate and finishes at the House. Nice.

  • xkcd: technical analysis

    January 25, 2019

    Topic

    Infographics  /  humor, xkcd

    Seems about right.

  • Data Underload  /  age, birth, pregnancy

    Baby-Making Age

    We looked at prime dating age and when people usually marry. Now it’s time for the next step in the circle of life.

    Read More
  • Members Only

    Where to Find Data to Drive Your Visualization

    January 24, 2019

    Topic

    The Process  /  datasets

    Unfortunately, you can’t just conjure data out of thin air. Well, I guess you can, but it’d probably be sort of unreliable. Kind of. Maybe. So where do you find data? Here’s where I’m at in 2019.

  • Rail delay scarf goes for $8,500 on eBay

    January 24, 2019

    Topic

    Data Art  /  commute, scarf

    Sarah Weber posted a picture of a scarf that her mom knit to represent rail delays. Weber’s mom knitted two rows per day and used color to indicate the delay. Grey was under 5 minutes, pink was 5 to 30 minutes, and red was over 30 minutes.

    After getting some attention on the Twitters, the mom opted to put it up on eBay to benefit charity Bahnofs Mission. It went for $7,550 euros. Nice.

  • Scale of tens

    January 23, 2019

    Topic

    Infographics  /  scale

    I’m always up for some scaled perspective. From David Packer:

    Anyone need a video demonstrating 1000s, 100s, 10s and 1s? You're in luck pic.twitter.com/sMGKlXKVy7

    — Dave (@sheepfilms) January 21, 2019

  • DataKind receives $20M grant to expand on data for social good

    January 22, 2019

    Topic

    News  /  DataKind

    DataKind, the organization known for helping others use data for social good, received a $20 million grant from The Rockefeller Foundation and the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth:

    The grant will allow DataKind to transition from a project to a platform-based model, thereby, supporting more organizations on a set of high impact areas, such as community health and inclusive growth. We’re humbled and honored that these two groups are supporting our mission with $20M over five years to help us grow to support the needs of the sector.

    Awesome.

  • Looking for common misspellings

    January 22, 2019

    Topic

    Data Sources  /  Reddit, spelling

    Some words are harder to spell than others, and on the internet, sometimes people indicate the difficulty by following their uncertainty with “(sp?)”. Colin Morris collected all the words in reddit threads with this uncertainty. Download the data on GitHub.

  • Real-time speed of light from Earth to Mars

    January 21, 2019

    Topic

    Infographics  /  light, NASA, scale, speed

    Hurry up, light. We’re gonna be late:

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSqFBbNtt9c” /]

    By James O’Donoghue, the animation shows the speed of light in real-time. The distance between Earth, the moon, and Mars is to scale, but the locations are scaled up so that you can see them.

    See also the animations for Earth to the moon and of light orbiting Earth.

  • Personality quiz with traits on a spectrum

    January 18, 2019

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  FiveThirtyEight, personality, quiz

    Ah, the online personality quiz, oh how I missed you. Oh wait, this one is slightly different. For FiveThirtyEight, Maggie Koerth-Baker and Julia Wolfe provide a quiz used by psychologists to gauge personality traits:

    First, the Big Five doesn’t put people into neat personality “types,” because that’s not how personalities really work. Instead, the quiz gives you a score on five different traits: extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, negative emotionality and openness to experience. For each of those traits, you’re graded on a scale from 0 to 100, depending on how strongly you associate with that trait. So, for example, this quiz won’t tell you whether you’re an extravert or an introvert — instead, it tells you your propensity toward extraversion. Every trait is graded on a spectrum, with a few people far out on the extremes and a lot of people in the middle.

    Dang it. I really wanted to know what Harry Potter character I am.

  • Members Only

    Datawrapper Review: A Focused Charting Tool That Requires No Code

    January 17, 2019

    Topic

    The Process  /  Datawrapper, review

    Datawrapper is an online tool that helps you make nice-looking charts for the web. No code is required. Instead, a focused interface lets you load data, pick your chart type, refine, and publish.

  • Inside out map of the Grand Canyon

    January 17, 2019

    Topic

    Maps  /  Grand Canyon, John Nelson

    John Nelson turned the Grand Canyon inside out to understand the magnitude better:

    Some of my earliest memories of the place had to do with the trippy feeling of my eyes and mind trying to make sense of the scale. I had seen many mountain ranges and vistas, including some on the way, but the vast negative space played havoc with my perception of magnitude. I’ve felt it a few times since, but never like that first Grand Canyon overlook.

    Instructions included on how to do this in ArcGIS Pro.

  • Build a parasite to block your digital assistant

    January 16, 2019

    Topic

    Data Art  /  hardware, privacy, smart home

    Digital assistants offer convenience, but they also offer continuous surveillance, and it’s not always clear when the tech is listening. Alias by Bjørn Karmann is a device you put on top of the assistant the block any unwanted listening:

    Alias acts as a middle-man device that is designed to appropriate any voice activated device. Equipped with speakers and a microphone, Alias is able to communicate and manipulate the home assistant when placed on top of it. The speakers of Alias are used to interrupt the assistance with a constant low noise/sound that feeds directly into the microphone of the assistant. First when Alias recognises the user created wake-word, it stops the noise and quietly activates the assistant with a sound recording of the original wake-word. From here the assistant can be used as normally.

    Armed with a Raspberry Pi and a 3-D printer, follow the build guide to make your own.

  • Amanda Cox promoted to New York Times data editor

    January 15, 2019

    Topic

    News  /  Amanda Cox, New York Times

    Amanda Cox is the new data editor for The New York Times:

    As data editor, Amanda will continue to provide direction for The Upshot, and she’ll add the expertise from Computer-Assisted Reporting journalists in New York and software developers here and in the Washington bureau. She’ll serve as the top adviser to the executive editor and managing editor on statistical questions like polling methodologies and election forecasting, and she’ll participate in conversations with desks as they discuss data-oriented reporting that may aid our economics, technology and investigative coverage.

    In her time here, Amanda has helped bring together some of our best explanatory and statistical reporting efforts with our smartest visualization experts, and now she’ll do that on a bigger stage.

    Great news for both Amanda and NYT.

  • Data Underload  /  basketball

    Goodbye, Mid-Range Shot

    There’s a space on the basketball court called “mid-range.” It’s actually not off-limits. In fact, people used to shoot these so-called “mid-range” shots.

    Read More
  • How to Make Animated (GIF) Heatmaps in R

    Using color as the visual encoding, show changes over time in two dimensions.

  • When geolocation makes everyone think you stole their phone

    January 14, 2019

    Topic

    Mistaken Data  /  cartography, location

    People show up unannounced at John and his mother Ann’s home in South Africa, looking for stolen property, but John and Ann didn’t steal anything. For Gizmodo, Kashmir Hill investigates another case of IP address and geolocation mistaken for exactness:

    John and Ann’s problems weren’t necessarily caused by one bad actor, but by the interaction of a bunch of careless decisions that cascaded through a series of databases. The NGA provides a free database with no regulations on its use. MaxMind takes some coordinates from that database and slaps IP addresses on them. Then IP mapping sites, as well as phone carriers offering “find my phone” services, display those coordinates on maps as distinct and exact locations, ignoring the “accuracy radius” that is supposed to accompany them.

    The victims of theft, police officers, private investigators, the Hawks (South Africa’s FBI), and even foreign government investigators showed up mistakenly at John and Ann’s door, and none of them ever tried to figure out why.

    Remember when we thought Kansas had unusually high porn views per capita?

  • One-year time-lapse of the weather

    January 14, 2019

    Topic

    Maps  /  time-lapse, weather

    Along the same lines as last week’s one-year wind time-lapse, Weather Decoded provides this one-year time-lapse of the weather over the United States:

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPuDPxK88g0″ /]

    Fun. [via kottke]

  • Voronoi diagram from smooshing paint between glass

    January 11, 2019

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  paint, voronoi

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDMtGT0b_kg” /]

    It feels like magic. I think there’s a magic trick percolating in there somewhere.

    I’m not sure where this is from. It looks like it’s a recording from a camera pointed at a television screen, so if anyone knows where the original is, please let me know.

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