owid-grapher
website

owid-grapher | website | |
---|---|---|
205 | 41 | |
1,463 | 32 | |
0.9% | - | |
10.0 | 9.3 | |
4 days ago | 9 days ago | |
TypeScript | TeX | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
owid-grapher
-
Group of investors represented by YouTuber Perifractic buys Commodore
Globally, since the advent of widespread computer use, human life has improved by orders of magnitude along every metric we have: poverty, hunger, disease, literacy, child mortality, life expectancy, homicide rates, etc., etc., etc.: https://ourworldindata.org
Respectfully, you are the one making an extraordinary claim in need of evidentiary support.
-
Please Commit More Blatant Academic Fraud
That's actually the part about people constantly negging on social sciences [1] that I often find confusing.
There's huge amounts of data available (geography, lots and lots of maps; history, huge amount of historical documentation; economics, vast amounts of public datasets produced every month by most governments; political science, censuses, voting records, driver registrations, political contest results all over the Earth - often for decades if not centuries).
Most is relatively well verified, and often tells you how it was verified [2]. Often it's obtainable in publicly available datasets that numerous other researchers can verify was obtained from a legitimate source. [3]
There's lots of data available. Much is also verifiable in a very personal way simply by walking somewhere and looking. In many ways, social sciences should be one of the most rigorous disciplines in most of academia.
[1] Using Wikipedia's grouping on "social sciences" (anthropology, archaeology, economics, geography, history, linguistics, management, communication studies, psychology, culturology and political science): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_science
[2] Census 2020, Data Quality: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census/dec...
[3] Economic Indicators by Country: https://tradingeconomics.com/indicators
[4] Our World in Data (with Demographics, Health, Poverty, Education, Innovation, Community Wellbeing, Democracy): https://ourworldindata.org/
-
3D Data World Explorer
Population data by country over time was scraped from ourworldindata.org
-
Dead Internet
> filled our heads with candied dreams of endlessly-spanning information super-highways
* https://www.wikipedia.org
* https://www.openstreetmap.org
* https://github.com
* https://data.gov
* https://fred.stlouisfed.org
* https://ourworldindata.org
* ...
Plus the countless documentation websites that we technical writers lovingly toil away at day-in and day-out.
-
A New Package for Making Charts in Emacs: Eplot
Neat!
This is one of my favorite spaces, so I'll add some generic advice which may or may not be helpful.
I once had the privilege of working for Max Roser and Hannah Ritchie at Our World in Data, as one of the engineers on their Grapher library (https://github.com/owid/owid-grapher), and learned a ton from them (and others on the team) about making great charts.
My one piece of advice from looking at your examples would be: don't neglect title, subtitle, and caption! They would be so easy to do well because you've already created your "simple headers thingies". A few words go along way. Check out "Storytelling with Data" by Cole Nussbaumer Knaflic for a great read on the subject. Owid's Grapher does those the best, IMO (followed closely by DataWrapper.de -- but that's not open source).
At some point, if you keep up with this, you'll also want to add a dataflow library and DSL. Hadley Wickham's dplyr in R was the GOAT, and I copied that in my Ohayo tool and in OWID Grapher's CoreTable library (https://github.com/owid/owid-grapher/tree/master/packages/%4...). Jeffrey Heer's newish Arquero (https://idl.uw.edu/arquero/) library is also along those lines.
Lately I've delving into Mike Bostock's new thing Plot (https://observablehq.com/plot/). So far, excited by it, but only spent a day or two with it at this point.
I don't use emacs anymore, but hopefully something helpful in the comments above.
- HN: There do not seem to be many infographics based sites
-
What are your favourite websites that display a lot of data / tables?
https://ourworldindata.org/
I reach for it several times per week. Never struggle finding what I want, nor getting it into the shape I want it.
-
IT Healthcare: Its Importance, Challenges And How To Find Good Healthcare Data
Let’s begin with a data visualization-friendly resource.
-
Why Are Older Americans Drinking So Much?
Here's a dashboard: https://ourworldindata.org/
Pick almost anything to see a positive trend.
-
Observable 2.0, a static site generator for data apps
I think the idea of Framework is really good, but static data limits the applications, excluding monitoring and other cases in which the data is constantly changing, but the dashboard can stay as it is. For example, I'd love to see a revamped Framework version of the LHC beam monitor and related pages (see https://op-webtools.web.cern.ch/vistar/, but check again in 2 months or so, when the accelerator will be running).
In high-energy physics, ROOT is /the/ toolkit for data analysis, and I guess jsROOT (https://root.cern.ch/js/) could also be used to load data to be shown in Framework dashboards. I thought the idea of Framework as a blogging engine with powerful data visualization built-in could be very interesting. Think, for example, about physicists pulling open data (https://opendata.cern.ch) and writing about their analysis or someone pulling data from https://ourworldindata.org/ in their own visualizations to support their case while writing about a particular subject, etc.
website
- What is Nuclear? – Nuclear expertise for everyone
-
Visiting the most expensive nuclear station
I think your down votes are because people are tired of rebutting the same old anti-nuclear arguments.
"Civilizationally" The evidence is nuclear has remained safer than alternatives well over half a century even when we have failed organizationally to do the right things (e.g. Chernobyl, Fukushima). IMO let us move on and use technologies that might prevent civilizational collapse rather than avoid them and make such a thing more likely. (Although it's unlikely under any scenario.)
"Proliferation" as a product of civilian nuclear power has been studied and discussed for its entire history and has been disproven. There's no link. In general having civilian nuclear power allows more oversight by international bodies about what you're doing, whereas regimes pursuing nuclear weapons tend to pursue them in secret and using infrastructure fit for the purpose of producing weapons materials.
"Fuel efficiency" simply isn't important when the fuel is so abundant and so cheap. We can afford to worry about that in future if we ever wind up building enough nuclear power it becomes a problem. If anything this is a good reason to stop freaking out about "nuclear waste" i.e. mildly used and 95% reusable fuel and leave that where it's been sitting perfectly safe for decades, above ground.
If someone had the time they could mine every nuclear thread on Hacker News and pull out all the common tropes and rebut them someplace in a similar vein to Skeptical Science's list for Climate Change (https://skepticalscience.com/argument.php). @acidburnNSA's https://whatisnuclear.com/ might be the closest thing. But then nobody would read it, and the problem would continue.
- Lahendused - Tuumainfo
-
The Small Website Discoverability Crisis
I went snooping in your HN profile to find the link, and that is a really well done site. Clean design, relevant pictures, and interesting material. It's probably going to cost me an hour or two of productivity today.
Link for people lazier than me: https://whatisnuclear.com/
-
Need help for presentation
In general, https://whatisnuclear.com/ has a lot of useful information abut nuclear energy, along with sources for further reading.
-
What's the best Nuclear energy and engineering resources?
Introductory, I’m quite fond of: https://whatisnuclear.com/
Lots of great takeoff points from here too.
-
Nuclear
If you want to read more on nuclear from a guy with a PhD on the subject, I highly recommend checking out https://whatisnuclear.com. The upsides and challenges are all clearly laid out without any agenda as some people in this thread have accused the pro-nuclear folks of falling for.
-
[OC] End of Nuclear power in Germany this week. Energy production from 2000 until today.
whatisnuclear.com run by a couple of nuclear engineers is definitely a more objective and trustworthy source than the Scientific American / the University of Maryland.
- L'energia nucleare in Italia
-
How long would a reactor be safe if scrammed?
The site WhatIsNuclear.com is also an excellent resource, including this subpage.
What are some alternatives?
vsketch - Generative plotter art environment for Python
catwiki_p3 - CatWiki (using Python 3)
nexe - 🎉 create a single executable out of your node.js apps
awesome-nuclear - A curated list of open source projects used in nuclear science and engineering
prettymaps - Draw pretty maps from OpenStreetMap data! Built with osmnx +matplotlib + shapely
Logisim-Dark - A fork of Logisim with a Darcula-like look and feel
