How #coronavirus slowed down New York City in three Metro charts. Source: https://t.co/AuKT7bTlUi pic.twitter.com/U2wBRL0Od0
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 22, 2020
How #coronavirus slowed down New York City in three Metro charts. Source: https://t.co/AuKT7bTlUi pic.twitter.com/U2wBRL0Od0
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 22, 2020
NEW: Saturday 21 March update of our coronavirus mortality trajectories tracker
— John Burn-Murdoch (@jburnmurdoch) March 21, 2020
• Today we add annotations showing when each country locked down
• UK & US already have more deaths than when China, Spain, France & others locked down
Live version here: https://t.co/VcSZISFxzF pic.twitter.com/Nie5jBSX24
We can take some small comfort in knowing that some countries are already over the curve. #coronavirus #COVID19 #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) March 21, 2020
Orange = active cases, green = recovered cases.
Source: https://t.co/Z7OXSWsll1 pic.twitter.com/ymgYxmpk1o
Our latest work asks: How many tests for COVID-19 are being performed around the world?https://t.co/KOUtEVwBMv
— Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) March 21, 2020
The chart compares the total number of tests performed per million people in a number of countries.
Data for *many* more countries you find at the link above. pic.twitter.com/JnYUwc0Fk4
Two more @rapidsai @kaggle kernels that showcase the incredible speedups for tSNE and UMAP dimensionality reduction algorithms on GPUs.
— Bojan Tunguz (@tunguz) March 20, 2020
Kannada MNIST: https://t.co/9jbNv1KzD7
Fashion MNIST:https://t.co/IId2Tw6uVV
It takes Rapids seconds what often takes hours on CPU. pic.twitter.com/hZnZ51wuIk
Did you know you could create infographics with python in @ProjectJupyter ? Neither did I until @PratapVardhan created this amazing chart using Jinja and Pandas DataFrames. Really creative. See his work at https://t.co/ZUS5E5U3yW@WillingCarol @betatim @jeremyphoward pic.twitter.com/AYkTDYEJU6
— Hamel Husain (@HamelHusain) March 20, 2020
Note also that S Korea did *not* need a lockdown. If other countries could replicate their success, it could mean trillions of dollars, and many lives, saved. But so far testing in the US has been massively under-done. pic.twitter.com/cHkC6IYYb5
— Jeremy Howard (@jeremyphoward) March 18, 2020
Chart compares the coronavirus crash to date with other stock market crashes. Source: https://t.co/xImrndzSbu pic.twitter.com/XrsAZGYpMg
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 18, 2020
How far behind Italy is the US?
— Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) March 18, 2020
How far behind Spain is Germany?
This tool that allows you to compare confirmed deaths and cases from COVID-19 across countries.https://t.co/oUObaHvUUt
[it’s open source and relies on open data from the WHO (via us).] pic.twitter.com/FA4pIqlKPR
This is an interesting way to communicate the relative mortality risk presented by #covid19, based on current mortality estimates. #coronavirus #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) March 17, 2020
Inspired by a similar xkcd comic about radiation: https://t.co/Ka1pJcSEWk
Source: https://t.co/9RmVybmxV4 pic.twitter.com/oJp4pLhS50
Some context on the current S&P 500 crash. 2007 is the infamous 2008 crash. #stockmarketcrash #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) March 17, 2020
Source: https://t.co/iz5ewTwWME pic.twitter.com/JFBIi6bxlJ
Comparison of #coronavirus cases and deaths in Italy and the US. The US lags 11 days behind Italy. Therefore Italy can kind of be used as a window into the future for the US. Source: https://t.co/eewnl505Ih pic.twitter.com/yN8moWhI2d
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 16, 2020