• Membership
  • Newsletter
  • Projects
  • Learning
  • About
  • Member Login
  • Data on net worth, income, and savings

    October 24, 2023

    Topic

    Data Sources  /  Federal Reserve, income

    Data for the 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances, from the Federal Reserve Board, was made available recently. It comes out every three years, so you can see how income and savings have changed over time, broken down by demographics.

    For example, the above shows that net worth increased, across age groups, since the last release in 2019. The chart is from the SCF’s “chartbook,” which isn’t the most elegant thing in the world, but it works.

  • When Mike Breen announces “Bang!”

    October 24, 2023

    Topic

    Data Sources  /  bang, basketball, Mike Breen

    Mike Breen is a well-known NBA basketball announcer. When a player hits a big three-pointer, Breen often uses his catchphrase, “Bang!” Someone counted all the times he yelled the phrase for each player, because sure why not. Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson are a cut above the rest.

  • Analysis of romance novel covers

    October 23, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Alice Liang, book covers, Pudding, romance

    When I was a kid, I remember uncomfortably walking past the book section at a grocery store where I would see a bunch of books with a muscular man, probably Fabio, clutching to a woman as he looked deeply into her eyes. Times have changed. For The Pudding, Alice Liang analyzed the shifting style of the romance novel cover.

  • Google Maps and 3D experiments

    October 20, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  3D, Google Maps, Houdini, Robert Hodgin

    The Google Maps API lets you access high-resolution 3D map tiles now. Robert Hodgin has been experimenting with the new data source using Houdini, which is 3D graphics software that might as well be black magic.

  • Evolution of race categories in U.S. Census forms

    October 20, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  census, New York Times, race

    For The New York Times, K.K. Rebecca Lai and Jennifer Medina show the changing checkboxes over the past couple centuries:

    Over the centuries, the census has evolved from one that specified broad categories — primarily “free white” people and “slaves” — to one that attempts to encapsulate the country’s increasingly complex demographics. The latest adaptation proposed by the Biden administration in January seeks to allow even more race and ethnicity options for people to describe themselves than the 2020 census did.

    What we measure and how we measure is a reflection of what we’ve cared about.

  • Members Only

    Making Dents

    October 19, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  purpose

    Every now and then, the work can feel like too much, but that usually means I’ve lost sight of the point.

  • Gaza Strip size compared to U.S. cities

    October 19, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Gaza, scale, Washington Post

    One of the most straightforward ways to help others better understand the scale of an unfamiliar place is to compare it to familiar places. For The Washington Post, Dylan Moriarty and Bonnie Berkowitz show Gaza next to a handful of major U.S. cities.

  • More pets than children in Taiwan

    October 18, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  age, population, Taiwan Data Stories

    Julia Janicki, Daisy Chung, and Joyce Chou explore Taiwan’s aging population, where in 2021, pets outnumbered children. I like the experimental views in this piece. More of this please.

  • Data Underload  /  mortality

    Most Common Causes of Death, by Age

    This is how the most common causes have changed over time for people aged 0 to 85.

    Read More
  • Realistic rendering of Canada’s wildfires

    October 16, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Canada, Peter Atwood, wildfire

    Peter Atwood used NASA data to depict the wildfires in Canada this year. The realistic rendering of the fires as burning embers and smoke activity is something.

  • Dip in solar generation during the solar eclipse

    October 13, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  Bloomberg, eclipse, solar

    Solar power is clean and all, but what happens when the sun is blocked by the moon and there’s suddenly no sunlight for a fixed period of time? For Bloomberg, Naureen Malik, with graphics by Denise Lu, describes the preparations that power companies will take during this weekend’s solar eclipse.

  • Map of the 2023 solar eclipse

    October 12, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  eclipse, New York Times, solar

    The moon is going to get in the way of the sun this Saturday. For The New York Times, Jonathan Corum has the map of when and how much sun coverage we’ll see in the western hemisphere.

  • Members Only

    Scale of Things

    October 12, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  scale

    Whether a difference seems big or small, important or not, depends on the scale you choose.

  • Where the clouds are the highest

    October 12, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  cloud, height, Washington Post

    Cloud formation depends on temperature and moisture levels, so in places of high humidity like the East Coast and Pacific Northwest, the clouds form lower. In dryer places like the southwestern United States, the clouds don’t form until higher up. For The Washington Post, Kasha Patel and Dylan Moriarty have the maps that show the contrast over the seasons.

  • How to Make a Heatmap with Irregular Bins in R

    There are existing functions and packages to make heatmaps in R, but when the data is irregular, it’s worth going custom.

  • Real space location of Star Trek and other science fiction

    October 11, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  fiction, Overview Effect, space, Star Trek

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tso5pSzBRDo” /]

    Star Trek and related might be fictional, but they usually reference real stars, planets, and galaxies. Overview Effect mapped, charted, and spreadsheeted the possible real-life locations in space of the fictional places.

  • Nobel Prize for research in global labor markets, using historical data

    October 10, 2023

    Topic

    Statistics  /  Claudia Goldin, economics, gender, Nobel Prize, work

    Claudia Goldin, an economist at Harvard, has won the Nobel Prize in Economics. A big part of her studies are rooted in the collection and analysis of centuries-old data:

    Women are vastly underrepresented in the global labour market and, when they work, they earn less than men. Claudia Goldin has trawled the archives and collected over 200 years of data from the US, allowing her to demonstrate how and why gender differences in earnings and employment rates have changed over time.

    Goldin showed that female participation in the labour market did not have an upward trend over this entire period, but instead forms a U-shaped curve. The participation of married women decreased with the transition from an agrarian to an industrial society in the early nineteenth century, but then started to increase with the growth of the service sector in the early twentieth century. Goldin explained this pattern as the result of structural change and evolving social norms regarding women’s responsibilities for home and family.

    Amazing.

    The illustrations by Johan Jarnestad that accompany the announcement are also really useful.

  • Mapping Israel and Gaza attacks

    October 9, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Gaza, missile, New York Times

    The New York Times is mapping rocket strikes, attacks, and ongoing conflict in the region.

  • News organizations blocking OpenAI

    October 9, 2023

    Topic

    Data Sharing  /  news, OpenAI, scraping

    Ben Welsh has a running list of the news organizations blocking OpenAI crawlers:

    In total, 532 of 1,147 news publishers surveyed by the homepages.news archive have instructed OpenAI, Google AI or the non-profit Common Crawl to stop scanning their sites, which amounts to 46.4% of the sample.

    The three organizations systematically crawl web sites to gather the information that fuels generative chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard. Publishers can request that their content be excluded by opting out via the robots.txt convention.

    On the web, it used to be that you would write or make something and there would be a link to the thing. Other websites could link to the thing, and people would go to the place with the thing. With this recent AI wave, a lot of the thing ends up elsewhere and no one sees the original place.

    Fun times ahead.

  • Following the path of the 2024 solar eclipse

    October 6, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Andy Woodruff, eclipse

    There is going to be a solar eclipse on April 8, 2024. The moon will only partially block out the sun in most areas (if at all), but for a select few in the right path, it’ll go all dark for a few minutes. Andy Woodruff mapped the path of full eclipse-ness.

  • Page 35 of 392
  • <
  • 1
  • ...
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • ...
  • 392
  • >

Analyze, visualize, and communicate data usefully, beyond the defaults.

Become a member →

Recently for Members

May 8, 2025
When the data is not what it seems

May 1, 2025
Finding the Right Charts

April 24, 2025
Visualization Tools, Datasets, and Resources – April 2025 Roundup

April 17, 2025
Breaking Out of Chart Software Defaults

April 15, 2025
Line Chart with Decorative Neon Accents

Browse by Chart Type See All →

Strip Plot Box Plot Choropleth Map Baseline Chart Surface Plot Organogram Scatter Plot Bar Chart Race Moving Bubbles Pictogram

Browse By Topic

  • Visualization

    Seeing data

  • Maps

    Seeing geographic data

  • Infographics

    Explaining data

  • Networks

    Connecting data

  • Statistics

    Analyzing data

  • Software

    Working with data

  • Sources

    Getting data

  • Design

    Making data readable

Get the Book

Visualize This: The FlowingData Guide to Design, Visualization, and Statistics

Available now.

Order: Amazon / Bookshop

Made by FlowingData

  • The Process

  • Data Underload

  • Chart Everything

  • Guides

  • Books

  • Shop

  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • RSS
Copyright © 2007-Present FlowingData. All rights reserved.