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Created with the graphing tool at www.chartle.net. You can choose your graph type, enter your data, and even get an embed code to put onto your own blog or website.

So I have 20,000+ buddy icons sitting in a folder on my computer and I noticed that some of them are absurdly large. The record holder at the moment is over 1 megabyte for a 48x48 buddy icon.

 

Out of curiosity, I decided to graph the distribution of buddy icon sizes. The X axis is the number of bytes.

Connection Diagram generated by the Touch Graph application.

r =a polar graph

David Lee Wells (b: May 20, 1963), nicknamed "Boomer", is a former MLB pitcher. Wells was considered to be one of the game's better left-handed pitchers, especially during his years with the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays. He pitched the fifteenth perfect game in baseball history.

 

Wells debuted for the Toronto Blue Jays in 1987 as a reliever and did not secure a job as a full-time starter until he was 30 years old. During his 6 seasons with the Blue Jays, Wells compiled a 47-46 record and a 3.88 ERA all together. Wells was part of the 1992 World Series winning team, the first time Wells got a championship ring. He was released by the Blue Jays during spring training in 1993.

 

In 1997, Wells signed as a free agent with the New York Yankees, his favorite team because of a lifelong interest in baseball legend Babe Ruth. On June 28, 1997, Wells took the mound wearing an authentic 1934 Babe Ruth hat, which Wells bought for $35,000. Manager Joe Torre made Wells take it off after the first inning because it didn't conform to uniform standards. Wells then blew a 3–0 lead as the Cleveland Indians won 12–8.

 

Wells returned to the Blue Jays as part of a trade for Roger Clemens, along with Homer Bush and Graeme Lloyd. He continued to win north of the border, with records of 17–10 and 20–8 over the next two years.

 

Career statistics:

Win–loss record 239–157

ERA - 4.13

Strikeouts - 2,201

4-needle coptic bound, A3 size book focused on religion.

 

www.andymangold.com

Percent of Americans willing to vote for different groups. Data courtesy of this page on Swivel.

This graph shows that catch rates for largemouth bass (LMB) are at an high for Lake Istokpoga, and catch rates for black crappie (BLCR) are very good.

visualized by nexus nexus.ludios.net/ - very interesting...

May 18th, 2009 - Social Graph Symposium at Sun Microsystems

2015 Maryland Hunt Cup

 

tailgate

Đây là special slot cho Na Chu '3' Mình thấy cái stock Sica ngồi trên ghế trong đống stock cũ mèm, nhưng nó thực sự ĐẸP.

Putt's Bar graph from his survey

An upward trend graph depicting business growth.

Charts from Emily Harburg and Nathan Matias's exploration of Wiki Love and Thanks at CrowdCamp 2014

Computer generated graphity. High colorosity.

Papers connected by keywords

Made from a scan of the reverse side of two sheets of graph paper on which many hundreds of felt-tip pen marks were made, and then gently wetted in places. These were then digitally multiplied four times and colour inverted.

Data point clouds, smoothed plots, and most importantly -- SOC estimation!

 

Sensors were recalibrated and the wheel wobble was very painfully removed by de-centering the wheel sprocket. Go figure. 1.58 AH expended on this drive.

 

This telemetry was transmitted wirelessly from my E300 Razor Scooter and recorded by a laptop in my backpack. The end goal? To create a tiny little velcro box to attach to the handlebars to provide a 'gas gauge'. Because when you have to kick-scoot back home, its no fun!

 

All I need are more MSP430 chips which are in the mail.

 

Red dots and Blue Lines are battery current

Red lines and Blue dots are battery voltage

Pale thick blue line is amp-hour consumption. At 15 Amps average rate, the pack offers ~5AH of capacity.

 

More info at wiki.nebarnix.com/wiki/Scooter

How to combine two graphs on Cacti

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

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.

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