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Oh wie schön eine Seite doch sein kann :D
mach Dir einen eigenen Graphen - www.aharef.info/static/htmlgraph/
Since I'm limited to a 10-bit ADC, and I'm most interested in the 25ºC to 100ºC range (not going to be doing a lot of sous-vide outside that range, at least with water), this is about the best resolution I can manage with a typical thermistor.
Notice I didn't say anything about accuracy.
Design Name: Sacred Force + Twitter Graph
Purpose: To visually show the results from a user response experiment done with my on-going story, Sacred Force, & Twitter
Approx. Perfectionist Timespan: 3 hrs.
Software: Photoshop 7
Hardware. Dell Inspiron B130 Low-End model (a.k.a. Kana-Chan)
Inspiration: Self-inspired, Flash
New techniques done:
+ First time designing a chart in PShop
Epiphanies:
+ Ideas flowed seamlessly, though I had 0 intention of going this far with the design...
Foolhearty Sacrifices: My latter part of the afternoon (i.e. was a waste of time regardless of being good GUI practice)
Used in a lecture presented by JR James at the Department of Town and Regional Planning at The University of Sheffield.
July 1972
3d graph iconbelongs to Basic Icons for Vista. It's available at www.777icons.com/libs/basic-vista-icons.htm.
Icons come in all popular formats and sizes, so you'll certainly find the one suiting your needs. These adorable icons come in two versions: casting a shadow or without it. The icons are delivered in sizes 16x16 24x24, 32x32, 48x48, 128x128 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.
It's important to maintain a certain level of discretion with your ideas. Most fall under the "blog it" or "tweet it" categories. However, as idea awesomeness increased, the frequency of those ideas decreases. Because of this, it's important that you resist the urge to "blog it" or tell other about it before you have a chance to 1) think it through and 2) look for a way to make money from it. Be responsible with your intellectual capital.
Friends, today we all are going to learn the basic concept behind linear inequality in mathematics and the Graphing Equations concepts used in an inequality graph. Before proceeding further let’s talk about inequality. Inequality basically tells that two values or expressions are not equal. For example, to understand it betterment a ≠ b shows that a is not equal to b. Slope formula plays an important role in graphing linear inequalities. So we need to know what slope formula means. Slope of a line describes the steepness, incline, or grade of the straight line. The slope through the points (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) is given as slope formula.
29th MAY, LONDON - Jim Webber and the Neo4J user group meet for a talk exploring powerful analytic techniques for graph data. Discovering some of the innate properties of (social) graphs from fields like anthropology and sociology. As well as how graph matching can be used to extract online business intelligence (for powerful retail recommendations). See the SkillsCast (film, code, slides) at: skillsmatter.com/podcast/nosql/discuss-a-little-graph-the...
Malliliprints website as graph. I am pretty happy about the simplicity of the site in general. I tried to squeeze all the important information into as few pages as possible, without overwhelming.
Type of Graph: Polar
Equation: g (θ) = cos (24 θ) +3
Description: This is a polar graph model based on a picture of a flower in Tyler's yard. The model is decent, though not exact (models usually aren't). The “petals” below the X-axis are better traced by the model than those above the X-axis. The equation I used is pictured in the top left corner of the photo which includes the graph. In order to model this flower, I used 24 as the multiplier (because there are twenty four “petals”), and added three, because the flower stretches across three of the concentric circles on the polar grid. Thus, my lovely model was born.
Speed graph of 2009 Gujarat Shatabdi using GPS data recorded between BVI and BRC . The loco was WCAM-2P Balwant .
Avg speed was 87 kph .
This was made using a ruler and a ball point pen, on graph paper. I found it tucked away inside a folder of old artwork, as if it had some actual value.
I really can't figure what this graph is supposed to represent.
It's called "Number of articles, authors and references in my Library". That's 3 different things being represented, but there is only one line on the graph.
X-axis is time - 3 days; 7 Oct, 8 Oct, 9 Oct
Y-axis is unlabelled numeric range from 0 to 14
Data points are 7 Oct/0, 8 Oct/14, 9 Oct/14 showing a jump from 0 to 14 on 8 Oct. But 0 to 14 of what?
Mendeley is a site that supports academics managing references. Maybe they could tap some of those with a more mathematical bent to advise on representing data on graphs