Existing mortgages with lower rates than new ones
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
8h ago
For The Upshot, Emily Badger and Francesca Paris compare the rates of existing mortgages against current rates for new loans. A stacked area chart shows the large share of existing rates that are lower, which means a lot of people aren’t so eager to move, relative to the past 20 years. I’m in that dark maroon group. Higher mortgage rates, higher listing prices, and higher property taxes. Doesn’t seem fun. Tags: mortgage, Upshot ..read more
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✚ Chart Options When the Differences are Small But Worthwhile
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
1d ago
Small changes over time or small differences between categories can easily look insignificant, even if they’re worth noting in real life. Here are chart options for you. I’m Nathan Yau. This is The Process, the newsletter for FlowingData members that looks closer at how the charts get made. Become a member for access to this — plus tutorials, courses, and guides ..read more
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Sleep Hours and Feeling Rested
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
2d ago
As I peel myself out of bed in the morning after again not going to sleep at a civilized hour, blurry-eyed, I wonder what hours others sleep. Certainly, I must be in the majority. According to the National Health Interview Survey from 2022, I am not. Two-thirds of adults get at least 7 hours of sleep. Read More ..read more
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✚ How to Make a Cartogram with Packed Circles in R
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
2d ago
In making an ever-important comparison between McDonald’s locations and golf courses in the United States, I wanted to use Dorling cartograms to show counts and which was more common in a given location. But my data wasn’t shaped quite right, so I broke it down and used parts of previous projects and tutorials. Become a member for access to this — plus tutorials, courses, and guides ..read more
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What happened to Japantown in San Francisco when residents were forced out by executive order
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
2d ago
In 1942, Franklin Delano Roosevelt mandated that those of Japanese descent be sent to prison camps. Through the lens of recently released Census records, the San Francisco Chronicle examined the impact of forcing thousands of residents out of their homes. Over nearly a year, the Chronicle collected and analyzed this data, seeking to understand just how Executive Order 9066 reshaped Japantown. For the first time, we can count the number of Japanese American residents in the neighborhood in 1940 and 1950 — an unequivocal measure of the order’s disastrous effect on the community. Tags: census ..read more
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Scented products with potentially harmful ingredients
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
3d ago
For Bloomberg, Daniela Sirtori, Madeline Campbell, and Marie Patino do some product counting: Data collected by the California Department of Public Health showed 108 potentially harmful substances listed as fragrance ingredients in everyday products ranging from face wash to conditioner, a Bloomberg analysis of database entries as of Feb. 6 found. Some of the compounds are identified as potential carcinogens by authorities such as the World Health Organization. Scaled jars of cream are used to show ingredient categories. I like it. Tags: Bloomberg, ingredient, safety ..read more
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Teenage adversity that carries into adulthood
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
4d ago
The National Longitudinal Surveys from the Bureau of Labor Statistics are unique in that they run long-term to survey the lives of individuals for decades. For The Pudding, Alvin Chang visualized survey responses to show how adversity as a teenager carries into adulthood. Each person icon represents a respondent and the collective bar chart stacks track through the years. The icons run across the screen on each time segment and demographic shift. There’s a video version, shown below, and while I enjoy Alvin’s dulcet voice, I prefer the scrolling version. Tags: Alvin Chang, development, Puddi ..read more
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Visualize This, Second Edition: Updating a Visualization Guide for My Past Self
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
1w ago
A decade and a half ago, I wrote the first edition of Visualize This as a how-to guide to my past self. It was for someone who was familiar with visualization but was stuck on the part where it’s time to make and design charts with your own data. What tools should you use? How do you use them? How do you get from rough sketch to finished graphic? How do you get the visualization idea in your imagination on to a screen where others can see? It turns out that you can read and learn a lot about visualization — the chart types, the best visual encodings, design considerations, and purpose — withou ..read more
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✚ Histograms for Regular People
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
1w ago
The histogram is my favorite chart type to look at distributions, but it’s a tough sell as a communication method. People need a sense of how distributions work before they can make sense of a histogram. Here’s how I (try to) make these misunderstood charts easier to read. Become a member for access to this — plus tutorials, courses, and guides ..read more
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People movements during the eclipse
FlowingData
by Nathan Yau
1w ago
As you might expect, the path of totality brought increased activities as people tried to get in the right spots. For the New York Times, Charlie Smart mapped the movements based on activity data from Mapbox and traffic data from TomTom. Tags: eclipse, New York Times, people ..read more
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