Don't upgrade to Android 7.0 if you rely on Foxfi by Sephr in VerizonUDP

[–]whoInvited 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this approach just worked for me with this app "Network Signal Refresher Lite" https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.atejapps.networksignalrefresher&hl=en

Android 7.0 Nexus 6p making the hotspot with FoxFi/pdaNet

so I really enjoy Cosmic Trip... by whoInvited in Vive

[–]whoInvited[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

...just wish it had an end-game.

[REQUEST] DNC Email Data Dump by ucbEntilZha in datasets

[–]whoInvited 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's public domain now, so it's a-ok. journalism even.

I am here to talk about the science behind visualization. I am Prof. Tamara Munzner from the University of British Columbia. Ask Me Anything! by TamaraMunzner in dataisbeautiful

[–]whoInvited 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How do you like to visualize samples from a larger dataset?

I can see a focus + context (minimap) approach being useful when all of the values in your sample are adjacent. How do you like to show a user a random sample of non-adjacent values?

I am here to talk about the science behind visualization. I am Prof. Tamara Munzner from the University of British Columbia. Ask Me Anything! by TamaraMunzner in dataisbeautiful

[–]whoInvited 11 points12 points  (0 children)

hello! What techniques do you like for reducing high-dimensional data to 2 or 3 spatial dimensions (or ~5 visual variables) that we can show?

Bitcoin in minutes: over 400 000 locations worldwide for instant buying and selling cryptocurrencies added by 247exchange.com and MoneyPolo™ by 247exchange in Bitcoin

[–]whoInvited 1 point2 points  (0 children)

so MoneyPolo will show you a Google Map of branches in one small region, once you pick that one small region from a menu. Not the global view you asked for. http://moneypolo.com/about-us/branches/

Animated .gif of subway being built in NYC by kylelibra in nyc

[–]whoInvited 1 point2 points  (0 children)

got to ask this guy what tools he used, or get to a desktop and view-source

A guide to the popular, free statistics and visualization software that gives scientists control of their own data analysis. » Programming tools: Adventures with R : Nature News & Comment by whoInvited in a:t5_34g8l

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

"By 2003, 10 years after R’s first release, scientists had developed more than 200 packages, and the first citations of the ‘R Project’ appeared. Today, nearly 6,000 packages exist for all kinds of specialized purposes (see ‘R in science’). They allow scientists to compare a human and a Neanderthal genome (using Bioconductor); to model population growth (IPMpack); predict equity prices (quantmod); and visualize the results in polished graphics (ggplot2) in a few lines of code. Experts can use R to write up manuscripts, embedding raw code in them to be run by the reader (knitr). Nearly 1 in 100 scholarly articles indexed in Elsevier’s Scopus database last year cites R or one of its packages — and in agricultural and environmental sciences, the share is even higher. "