O hai .gif party!
O hai .gif party!
I have the same love/hate relationship with my GNEX. I felt like it was the cutting edge when I got it though.
A Disney owned property being done in a Disney style? Yeah they're definitely out of their minds for doing that...
All kidding aside, your point stands. However, I might add that it's his post and he can frame his opinions how he sees it. Actually, it kind of backs up his point about using data to push an agenda. Woah...totally meta.
Well, if the lying shoe fits...
There must always be more math...
I may be off work today, but I must still TEACHMATHATTACK!!!!!
Even if it's bad, I mean come on, Wormwood: Gentleman Corpse on TV? It will at least be weird as hell, which means I'm already a huge fan.
In this case, yes, that would be a good solution. But there are some cases when a y-truncation is perfectly acceptable, but I think that really depends on what type of graph you're using.
I think the main reason this visualization works better than the "gun deaths" graph is because it is using a histogram instead of a line. When a person sees a histogram (or bar graph), the data makes sense no matter how the axes are oriented - More Bar, More Occurrences of [blank]. But a line graph is a different…
Yes, but unfortunately you can't explain that with a graphic that will only be seen for 5 seconds of screen time. When you simplify or frame data, you are adjusting it to a particular point of view.
I think the point of this article is really trying to say that, no matter what your view may be on the issue, you can adjust the Data Visualization to suit your point of view. For example, if I wanted to make the tax increase seem trivial (or if that is my point of view), I would use the non-truncated scale from…
Her?
Que?
Hey now, that's my home team you're talking about!
I totally want that little stuffed Tauntaun.
What a beautiful quote. Thanks for sharing it.
These...these are the .gifs I needed.