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This graph is based on an approximation of the Kinect raw-to-distance function provided by Stephane Magnetat.
Number of google hits of the type "I am X% certain". Loglog scale.
There are many more people 99% certain of things than 90%, a clear sign of human overconfidence. Not to mention how many are falsely 100% certain of something.
Annual US murder counts compared to changes in federal gun laws.
This chart has been updated. See instead:
A pattern made from graph paper, using the 6 colors of the rainbow in a continuous sequence to form a design.
How to Graph Inequalities In mathematics, a linear inequality is an inequality which involves a linear function. When two functions are defined using symbols like “greater then” or “less then” or “greater then equal to” and “less then equal to” then we get inequality expression. Linear inequalities are some how similar to linear equations. Let’s take an example of linear inequality which is involving a real number.f(x) < b or f(x) ≤ bHere, f(x) is a linear function in real number and ‘b’ is a constant real number.
graph Icon is icluded into Artistic Toolbar Icons. You can view all business icons here:
777icons.com/libs/artistic-toolbar-icons.htm
These icons are delivered in sizes 16x16, 24x24, 32x32, 48x48 and also 256x256 used for Windows Vista. The icons come in two color variants: 256 colors and True Color with semi-transparency. They also have several file formats, such as ICO, PNG, GIF and BMP.
Download link: www.777icons.com/downloads/artistic-toolbar-icons.zip
Blogged in The Woodwork: Why I YUI
First draft of the YUI library dependencies
Red/Orange: Core/CSS
Blue: Util
Green: Controls/Widgets
Magenta: Developer
Note that the total size of all the packages on the top half of the page is 23K (version 2.4.1, I'll check 2.5.0 later).
Note that I messed up the Container/Container Core part of the graphics library. Because of that it looks like there is a circular dependency with Menu and Button. Also that area is disorganized.
I also considered the CSS tools as one library for this diagram and marked it part of the core.
I made a simple circuit (one wire, one resistor, one Light-dependent resistor) and attached it to my arduino then used the arduino to read values corresponding with how bright it was.
To verify it was working, I had it just send the values back to the computer. The arduino IDE has a serial monitor so you can see what it's writing. Unfortunately, I don't know what one can do with data from the serial monitor. So I wrote a C# application to listen in on the virtual serial port the arduino uses and show the data. But that's nto very interesting, so I grabbed NPlot and figured out how to use it, and made it graph the "light values" over time. :-) It graphs in realtime :-)
Part of the Chicago area transport study. A figure used in a lecture from JR James at the Department of Town and Regional Planning at The University of Sheffield between 1967 and 1978.
Alistair will give an overview of the techniques and technologies for visualising graph data, and explain where these work well for different types of problem. Graph databases help you to express the connections in your data. Simply by visualising those connections, you have a simple analysis tool, and a compelling user interface.
See the skillscast (film/code/slides) at skillsmatter.com/skillscasts/5095-seeing-patterns-in-your...
You can see also genewolf's graph, and Eva's graph
What do the colors mean?
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags