The Beastie Boys In Chart Form

Posted by Jill Harness in Art, Art & Design, Entertainment, Music on February 3, 2012 at 9:42 pm

Who knew Sabotage was so perfectly written to become a venn diagram? Really though, sabotage should go into another bubble. After all, it’s sabotage.

Link Via Laughing Squid

 
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The Harley Quinn Paradox

Posted by Jill Harness in Art & Design, Comics & Cartoons on December 30, 2011 at 12:30 am

At the end of the year, the Comic Alliance likes to rundown the changes in comics over the last year via charts. I’m particularly fond of this great graph showing fan interest in Harley Quinn versus the amount of bare skin she has showing.

Link Via The Mary Sue

 
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Enormous Chart Shows How Magic Works in Dozens of Different Fantasy Series

Posted by John Farrier in Book & Literature, Entertainment, Film on December 8, 2011 at 6:14 pm

Charlie Jane Anders and the staff of io9 assembled a staggeringly huge chart showing the rules and principles of magic in about fifty different fantasy series, both in print and on screen. You can see the entire assembly at the link. Be prepared to lose a couple hours of your day.

Link -via The Mary Sue

 
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Florence Nightingale’s Statistical Diagrams

Posted by Miss Cellania in Health, History on September 16, 2011 at 7:24 am

We know Florence Nightingale as the founder of nursing as a profession, but she was also an accomplished statistician and graph maker. More importantly, she used statistical graphs to push for social change, particularly for the use of hygiene to improve health. After the Crimean War, she published a series of graphs in different forms to show that more soldiers died of disease than from battle, and more soldiers than civilians died of disease in peacetime. The graph forms are referred to as “bat’s wing”, “Lines,” and “coxcomb” or “wedge.”

However, it is the last graphic – the successor to the “bat’s wing” which I will call the “wedges” – that Nightingale is most famous for.  Strangely enough, the name that many people give it is wrong.  This graphic is not what Nightingale referred to as the “coxcomb”!

In this diagram, Nightingale resolved the problem of the “bat’s wing” by using areas to represent the variation in the death rate, instead of the length of radial lines.  The blue wedges, representing death by sickness, are far bigger than those representing wounds.  The message of this graphic is twofold: first, most of the fatalities during the war were from sickness and second, improvements in hygiene dramatically reduced the death rate.

Link -via Metafilter

See the full-size 1858 graph at Wikipedia.

 
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Ben Willers’ Life In Data

Posted by The Nag in Design on July 25, 2011 at 7:48 am


Ben Willers visualizes minute details of his day to day life. He has created information graphics of everything from his nutritional intake to his bank account activity. The chart above is a record of Willers’ television watching over a four week period using a visual style based on an oscilloscope and includes the programs he watched as well as his attention level while watching them. Willers uses his imagination to produce visually pleasing documents of his activities.

Link – Via Notcot

 
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4th of July for Math Nerds

Posted by Miss Cellania in Holiday, Video Clips on July 4, 2011 at 1:16 pm


(YouTube link)

Josh Sundquist shares some charts and graphs about fireworks, pie, and other Independence Day traditions. -via Buzzfeed

 
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Ben Greenman’s Museum of Silly Charts

Posted by Miss Cellania in Comics & Cartoons on May 13, 2011 at 7:04 am

Ben Greenman started making charts as an exercise to help him write a novel about a guy who makes charts. But it became a hobby. You’ll find quite a few more to make you laugh at I Love Charts. Link -via Metafilter

 
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How Animals Are Spending Their Tax Refunds

Posted by Miss Cellania in Animals & Pets on April 15, 2011 at 9:42 am

Ever wondered what bears consider worth their hard-earned money? You probably could have guessed this one, but Pleated Jeans has also charted how bats, cats, kangaroos, snails, rabbits, bluejays, anteaters, and more animals are spending their tax refunds. Link to part one. Link to part two.

 
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A Century of Meat Consumption

Posted by John Farrier in Food & Drink, Living on March 17, 2011 at 8:01 pm

The New York Times has created a chart that illustrates changing meat eating habits among Americans over the past century. Chicken, as you can see, is steadily on the rise, whereas lamb (black) eating has dropped to almost nothing. I’ve clipped it from 1955 to the present, so click on the link if you’d like to see the whole thing.

Since crawfish season is upon us, I’m going to do my best to bump up the shellfish line (blue). We all have to do our part.

Link via Ace of Spades HQ

 
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How Animals Spend A Typical Day

Posted by Miss Cellania in Everything Else on May 7, 2010 at 10:56 am

Jeff Wysaski made pie charts to explain how much time wild animals devote to their daily activities. Besides the jellyfish, you can explore the charts of a lion, elephant, spider, and panda. Link -Thanks, Amanda!

 
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Are You A Nerd, Dork, Geek or Dweeb?

Posted by Jill Harness in Everything Else on September 16, 2009 at 11:58 pm

Recognizing the subtle differences between these similar titles can be confusing sometimes. Fortunately, this chart is here to help you understand which group you fit into.

Link Via Laughing Squid

 
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The Trilogy Meter

Posted by Queuebot in Film on February 17, 2009 at 5:31 pm

Dan Meth ranked some popular trilogy based movies based on enjoyment.  His rankings seem fairly accurate.  Do you agree?

I know other movie geeks are going to have disagreements and that’s fine. And yes, I know some of these movies went more than 3 sequels, but none were ever meant to.

These are rated purely on my enjoyment level on each film and nothing else. Frankly I’m surprised by how many sequels were better than the original. And I’m not surprised that the 3rd movie is never the best.

Link – via larryfire

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by larryfire.

 
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A Graphic Representation of Immigration to the United States, 1820-1970

Posted by John Farrier in Everything Else on December 12, 2008 at 9:53 pm

No, this is not a political post. It’s just a cool video graphically showing streams of immigration from different parts of the world to the U.S. Nice swirly colors.

(Video Link)

Via Glenn Reynolds

 
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Prince Flow Chart

Posted by Jill Harness in Blogs & Internet, Everything Else, Music on November 22, 2008 at 11:35 pm

How do I make a dove cry? Hmmm…thank goodness for this helpful flow chart. Of course, maybe you have other burning questions, like “what percentage of boys were brought to the yard by respective milkshakes?” Finally, your pop music questions can be answered in easy visual charts and graphs.

Link Via GiggleSugar

 
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