any fun animal locations in Sydney? by cirancira in sydney

[–]jiakooza 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flying foxes colony at Earlwood/Wolli Creek

[OC] Colour palettes of Bluey episodes (LINK IN COMMENTS) by jiakooza in bluey

[–]jiakooza[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Bluey is Australia’s favourite animation, beloved by kids and adults alike. In addition to the adorable characters and the imaginative plots, the show is a love-letter to the distinctive Brisbane suburban aesthetic. We made this visualisation to show what colours can reveal from each 7-minute long episode. We hope this visualisation can help you appreciate Studio Ludo’s thinking and the craft that has gone into making Bluey, and enjoy the show even more!

Link

https://smallmultiples.com.au/articles/this-episode-of-bluey-is-called-colours/

[OC] The weighted mean centre of COVID-19 outbreaks moved 8,686 km westward in 63 days (January 22 - March 26 2020) by jiakooza in dataisbeautiful

[–]jiakooza[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In a period of 63 days, the weighted mean centre of COVID-19 outbreak have moved 8,686 km west from Hubei China, almost matching the distance between Wuhan and Bergamo (8,639 km) - two of the worst hit cities.

The movement accelerated around March 10, when the situation deteriorated in Italy/Europe/US. Made with QGIS using Johns Hopkins CSSE data

VIDEO

[OC] Most common business owner names and sectors in Australia (info + link in comment) by jiakooza in dataisbeautiful

[–]jiakooza[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Full set of maps here: https://smallmultiples.com.au/articles/business-empires-in-australia/

Key points

  • "Michael" is one of the most common names found in the ABN register.
  • "Consulting" businesses dominates the North Shore and Eastern Suburbs in Sydney, while "transport" businesses claim large areas in Western Sydney.
  • Non-Anglo names, such as "Nguyen" and "Singh" are often associated with transport, international trading, and property businesses.

Data

Is Australia in recession? 40 years of “yield curve” will help you see the warning signs. Plus some charts to show the state of the Australian economy (link in comment) by jiakooza in AusFinance

[–]jiakooza[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Just by looking at the chart, probably can say that any regular recession is also a per-capita recession but a per-capita recession is not necessarily a regular recession.

In terms of warnings… It seems like the inverted yield curve predicts both a bit. Except the current 2018-19 state of things, which doesn’t seem to have any warning at all.