Map shows US slave population in 1790 and 1860. A truly dark chapter in US history. Source: https://t.co/R2H7pX6qPd pic.twitter.com/PG9PwnSBEt
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 10, 2021
Map shows US slave population in 1790 and 1860. A truly dark chapter in US history. Source: https://t.co/R2H7pX6qPd pic.twitter.com/PG9PwnSBEt
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 10, 2021
Motor vehicle death rates skyrocketed in 2020 - about 25-30% higher since March
— Teddy Petrou (@TedPetrou) June 9, 2021
Overall deaths inc substantially too. The death rate inc more than miles driven decreased
Death rates have not been this high since the mid 90s. Going back to normal saves 1000s of lives on the road pic.twitter.com/8LuAs01ngW
gghighlight 0.3.2 is on CRAN now!🎉 I wrote a quick blog post to explain two new features, including the one used in the this 📈. #rstats
— Hiroaki Yutani (@yutannihilat_en) June 7, 2021
Wannabe Rstats-fu: gghighlight 0.3.2https://t.co/tFpR55jH6M pic.twitter.com/qoQ4neENwp
A "steep learning curve" is the best kind of learning curve: it means you're learning fast.
— Tim Harford (@TimHarford) June 6, 2021
And when what you're learning to do is make things such as batteries, you get the kind of invention that quietly revolutionises the world.https://t.co/mWgm7FVQW2 pic.twitter.com/WD0HndAQzr
The quickest route along primary roadways to Washington D.C. from any point in the contiguous United States. #travel #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) May 31, 2021
Source: https://t.co/135uBbkwFu pic.twitter.com/T5yPHImNQl
Animated demographic pyramid of #Sweden from 1860-2020. #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) May 28, 2021
Source: https://t.co/ndxA55dzNI pic.twitter.com/I8an9Q05sg
People with certain jobs tend to marry others with some other job. Here are the jobs that tend to marry together the mostest. https://t.co/gjqHO3ytZ3 pic.twitter.com/FQ0xzdsL90
— Nathan Yau (@flowingdata) May 26, 2021
Gallup asks people around the world whether they have someone to count on for help in times of trouble.
— Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) May 25, 2021
– The map shows the share that answered 'No'.
– The plot below shows the share that answered 'No' in relation to the average income in the country. pic.twitter.com/qTYZBCvd3L
Average daily truck traffic across the US in 1998. 🚛🚛🚛🚛🚛 Source: https://t.co/bMp264WpT5 pic.twitter.com/kBiLi3hDH6
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) May 22, 2021
Check out Know Your Data, a tool built by the PAIR team at Google to help understand datasets, improve data quality and mitigate bias issues. Try it for yourself on 71 datasets in the @TensorFlow Datasets catalog. https://t.co/b2mnaSovzk pic.twitter.com/DnRPt0TBsL
— Google AI (@GoogleAI) May 21, 2021
I made a cookbook for taking absolute control over my @matplotlib ticks. Place them where you want, looking how you want, saying whatever you want. https://t.co/U9I3u0fqMv
— Brandon Rohrer (@_brohrer_) May 19, 2021
One year of sea surface temperature in the southwestern Indian Ocean. #dataviz
— Randy Olson (@randal_olson) May 17, 2021
Source: https://t.co/8wQjYqXc6J pic.twitter.com/ze4PHeVDrs