You know, the one with all the lines and shading
Resource Links
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How to read a topographic map →
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Google launches indoor maps →
For airports, shopping, and such
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Children can do stats, probably →
Researchers trying to get kids to understand randomness
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James Bond of Data Science →
His name is Conway. Drew Conway. He takes his data open, not closed.
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Recline.js →
Javascript library by Open Knowledge Foundation for building data applications in the browser
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Creating Animations and Transitions With D3 →
Good primer
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DC power outage →
NASA satellite images of before and after the lights went out
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Sparse Matrices in R →
Making use of the Matrix and glmnet packages
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Toner V2 →
Stamen updated their custom black and white map tiles, looking even classier
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Intro to Statistics →
Free course on extracting meaning from data
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Huffington Post Pollster API →
Data for 215k responses from 13k polls
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Walking the tightrope of visualization criticism →
Avoiding the knee jerk scoff
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Visualizing contest for Olympics →
Prize for interactive, static, and people’s choice; deadline July 27 opening ceremonies
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Flickr maps →
Partnered with Nokia for more detailed georeferencing
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Will A Graphic Resume Get You The Job? →
In short: No.
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Paper Maps →
Praise for the things made of the stuff that comes from trees
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Jarvis →
Python coding companion, inspired by Bret Victor talk [via]
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Walmart Map →
JavaScript version of the the store’s growth [via]
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Jeff Heer Interview →
Worth listening to whenever he talks visualization
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Arrow Charts and Other Alternatives to Multiple Pie Charts →
Disregard Tufte love and pie chart hate