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  • Republicans’ health care plan compared against Obamacare

    March 8, 2017

    Topic

    Maps  /  health care, Upshot

    Based on estimates from the Kaiser Family Foundation, Kevin Quealy and Margot Sanger-Katz for The Upshot compare the tax credits for individuals under the Republicans’ proposed health care plan against Obamacare.

    The biggest losers under the change would be older Americans with low incomes who live in high-cost areas. Those are the people who benefited most from Obamacare.

    For some people, the new tax credit system will be more generous. The winners are likely to be younger, earn higher incomes and live in areas where the cost of health insurance is low.

    Hm.

  • Infographic tools before the computer

    March 8, 2017

    Topic

    Design  /  hand-drawn, tools

    There was a time when charts and infographics were drawn by hand, because computers weren’t affordable or commonplace. John Grimwade provides a run down of the tools he used back in the day. The thing above was used to draw different sized circles. On paper. With a pen.

    The tools remind me a lot of my dad’s that he used to have laying around. He’s a civil engineer and used to pull out all these blueprints with measurements and codes. Now they just have giant, high-resolution computer screens.

    I wonder what my kids will think of the tools I use when they’re older. “You mean you have to use your hands to visualize your data? That’s like a baby’s toy.”

  • Legal Drinking Age Around the World

    March 7, 2017

    Topic

    Sketchbook  /  animation, drinking

    As you probably know, different countries have different legal age limits for drinking alcoholic beverages. In the United States, the age is 21. In some places in the world, there is no set age. In most places, the legal age is 18 to drink a non-spirit beverage such as beer in a public place without a guardian.

    The map above, based on data from Wikipedia, shows where in the world you’re legally allowed to drink a beer in a public place. It’s slightly generalized and doesn’t take into account that in some places you have to be older to purchase the beverage, but it gives you a good idea of the age limits globally.

    This by the way is part of new category I’m calling my sketchbook. I need a place where I can mess around with different formats without worrying about what is the “right” way to do it.

    Relevant tutorials: Choropleth Maps and Shapefiles in R / How to Make an Animated Growth Map in R

  • Data visualization GIFs

    March 6, 2017

    Topic

    Infographics  /  animation, GIF

    The nice thing about animated GIFs for visualization is that they can get a message across pretty quickly, which lends itself to potential shares. You’d think there would be a Twitter bot by now tweeting GIFs non-stop. In any case, Lena Groeger put together a nice collection of them.

  • Making annotation easier with d3.js

    March 6, 2017

    Topic

    Coding  /  annotation, d3js

    There are two main reasons annotation is often a challenge. The first is that writing copy that is succinct with the right amount of detail is tricky. The second is that implementation can be a pain, because you always have to muck around with placement in an ad hoc fashion. To help out with the second reason, Susie Lu developed d3-annotation. It takes away much of the main of adding labels and context to your charts with d3.js.

    The whole writing part is still up to you, but at least you don’t have to think so much about implementation.

  • Prophet for forecasting with a lot of data

    March 3, 2017

    Topic

    Software  /  facebook, forecasting, time series

    Facebook released Prophet, which is a procedure to quickly forecast with time series data.

    Prophet is a procedure for forecasting time series data. It is based on an additive model where non-linear trends are fit with yearly and weekly seasonality, plus holidays. It works best with daily periodicity data with at least one year of historical data. Prophet is robust to missing data, shifts in the trend, and large outliers.

    Plus it’s available in both Python and R. What. Should be worth a look.

  • Visa restrictions and possible impact on innovation

    March 3, 2017

    Topic

    Infographics  /  immigration, Washington Post

    The Washington Post talked to three experts on the American workforce and innovation and how immigration restrictions to the US might impact future progress. Aside from the important topic the ratio of words to charts is interesting. I’ve gotten used to seeing pieces that are chart-heavy or word-heavy, but this is more one-to-one. I like it.

  • Bomb threats to Jewish Community Centers

    March 2, 2017

    Topic

    Maps  /  Jewish, ProPublica, threats

    Ken Schwencke and Al Shaw from ProPublica with a set of straightforward maps that show bomb threats to Jewish community centers and organizations:

    Since Jan. 1, at least 89 locations of Jewish organizations in the United States — including schools, Jewish Community Centers, and offices of the Anti-Defamation League — have received a total of 114 bomb threats. The majority have come in five of what the JCC Association of North America calls “waves” — groups of robocalls coming on a single day. So far, none of the threats have been carried out.

    Gross.

  • Participate in the Data Visualization Community Survey

    March 1, 2017

    Topic

    News  /  survey

    Elijah Meeks is running a detailed survey about data visualization people to gain a better understanding of who we are as a community. The work we do these days spans a wide range of applications, across a wide spectrum of art to analysis, and it should be useful to see the results. Once the survey is done, anonymized survey results will be available to download.

    But first, make sure you put in your voice so we get a complete picture.

  • The range of Meryl Streep

    March 1, 2017

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Meryl Streep, Oscars, Washington Post

    Here’s a fun piece from Stephanie Merry and Shelly Tan for The Washington Post that covers the acting range of Meryl Streep, from accents to personality traits.

    See also: the Meryl Streep scatterplot.

  • Apple vs. Google company structure, as seen through patents

    February 28, 2017

    Topic

    Network Visualization  /  Apple, Google, patents, Periscopic

    For Co.Design, Periscopic compared patent ownership between Apple and Google, which ends up providing a good idea of company structure.
    Read More

  • Bill Paxton tribute through storm spotters’ GPS coordinates

    February 27, 2017

    Topic

    Maps  /  Bill Paxton, GPS

    Bill Paxton, who played a storm chaser in Twister, died on Sunday. To honor him, storm spotters gathered at various coordinates to form Paxton’s initials.

    I don’t know much about storm chasing or the man, but this seems special. It’s like a hello sent to the skies.

  • Easily download large-ish survey datasets

    February 24, 2017

    Topic

    Data Sources  /  government, R, surveys

    Many government organizations release microdata for surveys every year. It comes as anonymized responses from each survey participant for each question in said survey. However, those who want to use this data often run into the challenge of downloading and parsing. It’s rarely straightforward.

    So, Anthony Damico provides a big helping of R scripts to easily download data from a bunch of surveys. He calls the site Analyze Survey Data for Free.

    Governments spend billions of dollars each year surveying their populations. If you have a computer and some energy, you should be able to unlock it for free, with transparent, open-source software, using reproducible techniques. We’re in a golden era of public government data, but almost nobody knows how to mine it with technology designed for this millennium. I can change that, so I’m gonna. Help. Use it.

    The site has been around for a few years but I just discovered it. I’m not sure we’re in a “golden era of public government data” right now (although I’d be happy if you prove me wrong).

    I recently used a modified script to download data from the CDC, and it saved me a bunch of time.

    Bookmarked.

  • Data Underload  /  average, distributions, milestones, relationships, sex

    Relationships: The First Time…

    When Americans had sex, moved in with someone, and so on. Often not average. Far from normal.

    Read More
  • Oil and gas wells in the United States

    February 23, 2017

    Topic

    Maps  /  energy, Washington Post

    Tim Meko and Laris Karklis for The Washington Post take a dive into oil and gas wells in the United States.

    Since 2010, the United States has been in an oil-and-gas boom. In 2015, domestic production was at near-record levels, and we now produce more petroleum products than any other country in the world. President Trump said he plans to double down on the oil and gas industry, lifting regulations and drilling on federal land. Here is the state of the petroleum extraction industry that the new administration will inherit.

  • xkcd: Projecting country borders by time zone

    February 22, 2017

    Topic

    Maps  /  time zones, xkcd

    Time zones are odd sometimes.

  • States most similar to the US overall

    February 22, 2017

    Topic

    Statistics  /  demographics, FiveThirtyEight, normal

    “Normal America.” I’m not sure what that means anymore, but at some point it had a lot to do with demographics. Naturally, the “normal” that you look at or want bleeds into policy-making and the like. Jed Kolko for FiveThirtyEight looks into the states most similar to the country overall — the one from 1950 and from today.

    But the places that look today most like 1950 America are not large metros but rather smaller metros and rural areas. Looking across all of America, including the rural areas, the regions that today look most demographically similar to 1950 America are the portion of eastern Ohio around the towns of Cambridge and Coshocton and the Cumberland Valley district in southeastern Kentucky.

    The states most similar demographically to today’s America: Illinois, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Virginia.

  • Evolution of The New York Times front page

    February 21, 2017

    Topic

    Data Art  /  animation, New York Times, news

    From Josh Begley, this quickfire flip book shows every New York Times front page since 1852. Watch the shift from all words, to a handful of small pictures, to larger pictures, to color, and then more color pictures.

    [arve url=”https://vimeo.com/204951759″/]

    It reminds me of the flip book for the Hawaiian Star and the comparison of pages for popular science magazines, which show a similar evolution.

  • Forest of Numbers

    February 20, 2017

    Topic

    Data Art  /  installation

    To celebrate the ten-year anniversary of the National Art Center in Tokyo, Emmanuelle Moureaux made the Forest of Numbers.

    The installation “Forest of Numbers” visualized the decade of the future from 2017 to 2026, created a sense of stillness across the large exhibition space. More than 60,000 pieces of suspended numeral figures from 0 to 9 were regularly aligned in three dimensional grids. A section was removed, created a path that cut through the installation, invited visitors to wonder inside the colorful forest filled with numbers.

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