View allAll Photos Tagged Microsoft_Excel
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
Data Source:
phl.upr.edu/projects/visual-paleo-earth/vpe_globes
How to Read the Graph
This charts planetary conditions of the Earth over time, with the bottom axis in Millions of Years Ago (MA). So "right now" is on the far-right, and "really long ago" is on the far-left.
The yellow line is the temperature of the Earth (in °C) using the yellow-orange axis at the left.
The area graph shows the composition of the Earth's surface, as a percentage using the black axis at the left. All of the ice+desert+vegetarian can be considered to indicate the net amount of land as compared to ocean. Worth noting that I'm not sure how much of the ice is considered to be free-floating versus on what would otherwise be land.
The purple and red lines both plot the atmospheric composition. The purple line is the percentage of Oxygen (O2) in the atmosphere, using the black axis on the left. The red line is the percentage of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, which at a much smaller scale uses the red axis on the right.
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Milestone Events
- 4550 MA - Formation of the Earth
- 4000 MA - End of Heavy Bombardment; First Life
- 3500 MA - Start of Photosynthesis
- 2300 MA - Atmosphere becomes oxygen-rich
- 2300-635 MA - Periods of Snowball Earth
- 660-680 MA - Massive rise of land above ocean.
- 540-500 MA - The birth of land plants (530: The Cambrian Explosion)
- 380-370 MA - First vertebrate land animals.
- 340-260 MA - Middle ice age, following plummeting CO2, rise of O2, & ~5° drop in temperature)
- 230-065 MA - Dinosaurs!
- 020-000 MA - Most recent ice age.
- 002-000 MA - Hominids
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This was produced in Microsoft Excel. The tertiary axis was added by simply making an additional graph, turning its backgrounds transparent, and overlaying the graph on top of the main graph.
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This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
Microsoft Excel sekarang ada 3D bar chart. Nnt boleh guna utk buat census :)
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Solo outing tepi teluk danga :)
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Make: Rollei Rolleicord III Type 2
Lens: Schneider Kreuznach Schneider Xenar 75mm f3.5
Film: Kodak Ektachrome EPP 100
Light meter: Lunix 4 Selenium Light Meter
Develop: Fujifilm C-41 developer
Greg's edit of one of the sailor dress pics. I have been teaching myself how to work with layers and textures. Decided to put together an old style pin-up picture for practice.
This was done in Paint.net, not PhotoShop. We do not have PS. Any constructive criticism or pointers is greatly appreciated, you will not hurt my feelings. Trying to improve my skills.
Thanks!
-Greg
I posted an edited version here: www.flickr.com/photos/ashtonsterlingphotography/4818470423/
Sorry for the circular reference. If this was Microsoft Excel, it would crash.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
Detail of my commuting from the very first day I moved to DC and began commuting to Greenbelt. This shows transit in cooler colors and car travel in warmer colors.
I tried transit, but the early onset of the 2010 winter put an end to that...
- Marching for 10 minutes across a stretch of gusty parking lot just wasn't my idea of fun. Not to mention I still had an additional 10 minutes beyond that on each end (10 min on the home side; a total of 20 min on the office side). All-in-all I quite enjoyed that latter 10 minutes; it was the 10 minutes through a parking lot that felt like forever.
- It happened to coincide with the start of bridge work on New York Ave which improved traffic flow despite there being a work zone.
- That was right about the time when the work environment had changed at that office, causing me to prefer just getting home as soon as possible.
- Walking across Cherry Hill Road in Greenbelt as well as Rhode Island Avenue in DC (especially the latter at night) weren't a very good definition of safety, neither in the sense of traffic safety nor from a crime standpoint... though I wasn't particularly concerned of the latter.
So ultimately: I could cut my commute in half and remain warm if I just drove, despite my love of transit.
Here's my chart for my subsequent office location in Merrifield, VA, tracking from the first day at that office until my last day there: www.flickr.com/photos/thisisbossi/7086352643/
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
Editorial for Times Education about the new Government proposals for IT education in schools. The emphasis will be more towards kids learning programming language through software such as Kodu and Scratch as opposed to doing spread sheets in Microsoft Excel.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
the screens I stare at 8 hours out of the day, five days a week. In addition to these programs, I use Google Chrome for web browsing and personal email.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
T. Christian Miller of ProPublica presents on how he refines the raw materials of reporting into an investigative story at the Investigative Reporters and Editors 2009 conference in Baltimore.
Miller offered a number of recommendations for organization, including the use of a tablet computer and Microsoft One Note when taking notes at press conferences. He also advocated using Microsoft Excel to create a timeline of events before drafting a story so that the writer can search for narrative threads and better understand the chain of events.
As an example, Miller referred to past stories on injured military contractors.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
Gephi:
In their words.
"Gephi is an interactive visualization and exploration platform for
all kinds of networks and complex systems, dynamic and hierarchical
graphs. Runs on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. Gephi is open-source and
free."
NodeXL:
In their words:
"NodeXL is a free, open-source template for Microsoft® Excel® 2007 and
2010 that makes it easy to explore network graphs. With NodeXL, you
can enter a network edge list in a worksheet, click a button and see
your graph, all in the familiar environment of the Excel window."
I really have NO business saying anything at all about data or network
visualization tools. I like them, a LOT, but I don't use them enough
to be able to say anything intelligent about them. So why am I doing
this?
Network visualization was not a competency I was exposed to in grad
school. I wish I had been, but the idea hadn't quite reached critical
mass at the time I was in grad school. Oh, sure, folk had drawn
graphs, by hand, but the first proper software for doing this wasn't
released to the public until almost a decade after I left grad school,
at least according to the best history I've found on the subject.
Freeman, Linton C. Visualizing Social Networks. Journal of Social
Structure 2000 1(1).
www.cmu.edu/joss/content/articles/volume1/Freeman.html
While I'm very awkward with network visualization tools myself, I know
folk who are really good with them, and have even coauthored articles
with them. You see, I do generate data that is analysed with these
tools, and wish I could do the analysis myself. Thus, why this post.
Data visualization and network visualization are rapidly becoming core
competencies for professionals in many fields, including mine. Or
should I say "especially mine"? Anyway, I've stumbled around in
various workshops and MOOCs and seminars trying to familiarize myself
with all this. I've learned a bit about terminology (nodes, edges,
clusters, weight, centrality, betweenness, etc). I've heard about the
Fruchertman-Reingold layout often enough that I ought to be able to
spell it without looking it up (I'm getting closer!). I've learned
that visualizations of any sort have a certain art to the process in
addition to the science, and that designing effective visualizations
takes a variety of skills that are often not co-located in the same
individual. I think I have many of the skills. But I'm still
struggling with the tools.
NodeXL and Gephi are the two tools that every one doing this talks
about. The two tools that you can't discuss this without mentioning.
NodeXL is a huge favorite, easier to learn, fewer barriers to entry,
more accessible. Unfortunately, it is not platform independent, and
requires Microsoft Office. There are people who don't like either of
those. Gephi runs on most platforms (yay!!), and better yet, works
without requiring commercial software packages. Both have advantages,
both have disadvantages. I don't know either of them well enough to
have a bias, or to make a recommendation. But I can safely say that if
you don't know about these, you should.
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © James Lawson Photography - james@james-lawson.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk
This photo was taken at Minecon 2015 at the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre UK
Photo © David Portass Photography - dave@davidportass.co.uk