Vintage map from 1939 shows the hunting grounds of the USSR. Wonderful piece. Source: https://t.co/GXWIaqPtjj pic.twitter.com/8vyECPjiFL
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 30, 2020
Vintage map from 1939 shows the hunting grounds of the USSR. Wonderful piece. Source: https://t.co/GXWIaqPtjj pic.twitter.com/8vyECPjiFL
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 30, 2020
I like the video explaining the choices made in this visualization.
— Data Science Renee (@BecomingDataSci) March 29, 2020
h/t @yoniceedee https://t.co/jWSNSJJxqE
A quick chart for those who keep asking for per-capita adjustment:
— John Burn-Murdoch (@jburnmurdoch) March 29, 2020
Here’s population vs total death toll one week after 10th death.
No relationship.
As I’ve been saying, population does not affect pace of spread. All per-capita figures do is make smaller countries look worse. pic.twitter.com/yWsa4YNNxI
In global megacities residents have slowed down their movement patterns since the #coronavirus outbreak. Source: https://t.co/OAp50RcWaq pic.twitter.com/dZjem4hMvL
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 28, 2020
NYC subway usage
— Todd Schneider (@todd_schneider) March 28, 2020
Code: https://t.co/C2WML3RNW5 pic.twitter.com/HNMAPuGeSy
This is the chart I've wanted to see: growth in COVID cases in a metro by prevalence, not time. If you'll indulge me, let me explain whyhttps://t.co/DQmHlB9NFq pic.twitter.com/mNflOrYhrV
— Nate Cohn (@Nate_Cohn) March 27, 2020
Where the money goes in the $2T #coronavirus stimulus bill. #COVID19 #dataviz https://t.co/UsW6d3uWvV pic.twitter.com/22LPBfMzgO
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) March 27, 2020
Some graphics showing what the companies getting bailouts were up to the last decade -- https://t.co/Xdc6lbyMee
— Tim Wu (@superwuster) March 27, 2020
The banner headline for tomorrow's @nytimes
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) March 27, 2020
about the plethora of unprecedented, exponential curves pic.twitter.com/AFI3W3ud51
A few days in self-isolation and people tackle the big questions. Source: https://t.co/MU6rq2vBjc pic.twitter.com/5VpC6tdwbF
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 26, 2020
Visualizing RSS https://t.co/eZ2bbpDzwV pic.twitter.com/l8ZV7zBo7J
— Chris Albon (@chrisalbon) March 26, 2020
This site has line charts of cumulative confirmed #COVID19 cases, deaths, etc. by Country and by US state. The charts at the bottom are normalized by population size. You can switch between log and linear scale.https://t.co/F6sGVo4Ol7
— Data Science Renee (@BecomingDataSci) March 25, 2020