Mo-o-ola.
Xuebing Du
Misplaced Lens Cap

izzy's playlists!
noise dept.
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

blake kathryn
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Product Placement
Show & Tell
No title available
Three Goblin Art
🪼
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Claire Keane

tannertan36

JVL
Today's Document
styofa doing anything
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
dirt enthusiast

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from South Korea

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from Paraguay

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia
@factsaresacred
Mo-o-ola.
Is Your State's Highest-Paid Employee A Coach? (Probably)
You may have heard that the highest-paid employee in each state is usually the football coach at the largest state school. This is actually a gross mischaracterization: Sometimes it is the basketball coach.
more
Every recorded meteorite strike on Earth since 2,300 BCE mapped
The meteorite that struck central Russia last week, which injured around 1,000 people as it broke apart over a section of the Ural Mountains and sent shockwaves across the ground below, was but one of thousands that have impacted our planet over the past four millennia.
:-/
«For the first time, a massive data set of 10,000 porn stars has been extracted from the world’s largest database of adult films and performers. I’ve spent the last six months analyzing it to discover the truth about what the average performer looks like, what they do on film, and how their role has evolved over the last forty years»
Red and green are the colours most affected by colour-vision deficiency. Almost no one has a blue deficiency. Accordingly, nearly everyone can see blue, or, more accurately, almost everyone can distinguish blue as a colour different from others. It was pure good luck that the default colour of hyperlinks is blue with underlining.
Joe Clark, Building Accessible Websites
From Simon Rogers, data editor/news editor at The Guardian newspaper.
Todos los trenes comerciales de Renfe de un día, en menos de un minuto. Se muestran en color naranja los trenes de Media distancia, en color morado los trenes de Larga distancia y Ave, en color azul los trenes de Feve y en color rojo los trenes de Cercanías operados por Renfe.
alpoma:
Se trata de un mapa de puntos en el que cada uno de ellos equivale a una persona de entre las 341.817.095 que aparecen en el censo de los Estados Unidos del año 2013 y en el de 2011 correspondiente a Canadá. Un punto por persona, sí, pero como los datos públicos del censo no permiten saber dónde vive cada una de ellas (faltaría más) el mapa lo que representa es una distribución espacial aleatoria de las personas que aparecen en el censo en cada unidad geográfica concreta del censo (block-level).
Interview to Paul Bradshaw
Periodismo de datos, en latín, conseguir una beca para producir lo que la audiencia no va a consumir
Pablo Mancini
¿Se imaginan vivir en una ciudad proyectada para 30.000 almas donde solo hay poco más de 1.700? ¿No tiene coche propio pero le gusta caminar? ¿Sueña con tener un pipican gigante para su perro? Bienvenidos a Valdeluz.
Who wins the Nobel Prize?
Two things can be said about Nobel prize winners with almost complete certainty: they’re old and are at top-tier universities. So I thought, but my knowledge of Nobel prizes are heavily weighted to economics and the physical sciences. An infographic by Giorgia Lupi, Federica Fragapane, and Francesco Majino helped me realized I was wrong.
Recipients in physics were comparatively young at the prize’s inception. While most recipients in the sciences, medicine, and economics came from Ph.D. granting universities—mostly from a select few colleges—Peace and Literature prizes were awarded to non-academics.
It’s infograph is far from perfect, however. The infographic comes with instructions on how to read the it—a bad omen for data visualizations. But the infographic can still be understood, and with some patience, highly appreciable.
Redada #17: Ley de Transparencia y Acceso a la Información
Esta sesión está dedicada a debatir sobre la Ley de Transparencia, el acceso a la información pública, los derechos civiles y la privacidad con Victoria Anderica (Access Info), Mar Cabra (Fundación Civio), Maria Rosa Rotondo (APRI), José Luis Piñar Mañas (CEU-San Pablo) y Javier de la Cueva (abogado experto en propiedad intelectual y derechos civiles). Coordina: Antonio Delgado.
Nicolás Mavrakis:
La posibilidad de un drone articulando eventos e información de manera instantánea resuelve en primera instancia la pregunta acerca de la relevancia estética y cultural de la figura clásica del «cronista». Un mundo en el que la ejecución de la guerra ha reemplazado a soldados por drones, no puede ser un mundo en el que persista aún el idiotismo ontológico de desear ser «cronista de guerra» (¿pero no es el deseo de ser aquello que ya no es la síntesis del periodismo actual?). Resuelta esa cuestión, la pregunta planteada por el drone convoca a analizar otra vez la idea de «subjetividad», «publicación» y «experiencia».
Visualización de ataques terroristas (1970-hoy)
terrorism, 1970-present. redux. circles sized by number of fatalities. top is new colors, bottom is original colors. in both, lat/longs are rounded. check out the high resolution versions for more detail: new colors high res, original colors high res
Entrevista a Mar Cabra y Lidia Medland
Charla con Mar Cabra, periodista de investigación y directora de Civio.es, y Lidia Medland, responsable de campaña de Access Info Europe.