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Word clouds are great for displaying relative value or popularity of words in a given topic, find out how to make them here, www.swindon-website-design.co.uk/2011/10/19/word-cloud-ge...

to all friends and users:

have a nice Pentecost-weekend!

Not really a photo but, until I can release the final text (i.e. until the public defense), you can have a glimpse of what my PhD thesis is about with this tag cloud (based on word frequencies) of my text.

 

Generated with Wordle (with language: French). Tagcrowd version here.

 

For the Flickr Group "I wordled my thesis", my English title is: "Effects of sleep and lack of sleep on hippocampal proteome after spatial learning in rat" (the thesis is in French). No public link to the Wodle page. My thesis can be found here.

 

Note that an improved version is here.

WORD CLOUD: Message to Congressional Republicans from '08 Obama Voters Who Voted GOP in 2010 - the words above represent the views of participants from latest "Droppers & Switchers" poll when asked to describe Congressional Republicans. See our new poll & memo here: www.thirdway.org/publications/438 In this we zero in on two sets of voters who will determine the outcome of the 2012 elections. We call them the “droppers” and the “switchers.” These are Obama voters from 2008 who either stayed home (“droppers”) or voted Republican (“switchers”) in the 2010 midterms. For the President and congressional Democrats to succeed, droppers must show up and a large number of switchers must return to the fold in 2012. And in order to woo the switchers back, Democrats must close the ideological gap those crucial voters perceive between themselves and the party—primarily by positioning themselves as growth Democrats, not tax and spend Democrats.

 

www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/a-cloudy-forecast-for-201...

A cloudy forecast for 2012

By Ruth Marcus

The word clouds tell the story — and illustrate the challenges ahead for both sides.

“TRYING,” says the cloud illustrating swing voters’ assessment of President Obama. And then, ominously: “liberal” and “ineffective.”

“STUBBORN,” says the cloud illustrating these voters’ view of congressional Republicans. Followed by “conservative,” “selfish,” “greedy” and — the one unabashedly positive phrase among the top 10 — “trying.”

The images are generated from a fascinating new poll by the centrist Democratic group Third Way. The clouds depict the assessment of what the poll terms “persuadable switchers” — voters in a dozen battleground states who backed Obama in 2008, voted for Republicans in 2010 and describe themselves as up for grabs in 2012.

The Third Way poll, conducted by Stefan Hankin of Lincoln Park Strategies, examined two groups: the “switchers” and the “droppers,” who voted for Obama in 2008 and stayed home in 2010. The “droppers,” it found, are not the president’s problem. Nearly three-fourths say they will definitely or probably vote to reelect Obama.

The switchers represent a bigger headache. Less than a third said they would definitely or probably vote again for the president. A full quarter said they are irretrievably gone.

In all, six in 10 switchers are persuadable, prompting the question: What would it take to do the trick?

It won’t be easy. As the word cloud depicts, these voters continue to like Obama. They think he’s smart and sincere. They give him credit for trying. But the next two words encapsulate their twin doubts: that he is too liberal for their tastes and not effective enough for the country’s needs.

The first word may be easier to knock down than the second. These persuadable switchers describe themselves as significantly more conservative than Obama and his party. Strangely, they see Obama as slightly more liberal than his congressional counterparts. Even stranger, given that they voted for Obama, they see themselves as closer on the ideological spectrum to congressional Republicans than to the president.

The key for Obama may be to convince these voters that he is serious about deficit reduction. They care about the issue — more, as they perceive it, than do the president or congressional Republicans. Yet their preferred approach dovetails nicely with Obama’s. More than two-thirds would be willing to accept tax increases as part of a deficit-reduction plan.

The harder task for Obama will be to dispel the aura of ineffectiveness. This presents a twofold challenge: first, to show he can get something done in the face of a Republican-controlled House that isn’t inclined to hand him any such victory; and second, to demonstrate his effectiveness in the relatively short time remaining. If the ultimate measure is the economy — and more than half the persuadable switchers put it at the top of their list — that will be extraordinarily difficult. Even if Congress were to magically pass Obama’s plan swiftly and in full, the jobs turnaround is apt to be slow and far from assured.

Of course, Republicans aren’t about to be so compliant, but their word cloud helps explain the GOP’s new tone of seeming conciliation. When swing voters who backed you in 2010 come up with words such as “selfish,” “greedy” and “irresponsible” less than a year later, you’ve got a serious problem with the brand.

The political trick for Republicans is to puff up Obama’s “ineffective liberal” portrait while diminishing their image as the intransigent party. Their smartest move would be to quickly co-opt a piece of Obama’s jobs plan — tax cuts and a slice of trade deals, anyone? This jujitsu would dissipate the stubbornness rap without letting the president crow that Republicans acceded to his demand to “pass this bill.” Let Obama look like Mr. All-or-Nothing.

Yet much as he might prefer to, Obama won’t be running against congressional Republicans. This is why Mitt Romney’s approach to Obama — casting him as a nice guy in over his head — could be so potent. Where Texas Gov. Rick Perry can be cutting about Obama, Romney takes more of the “poor schnook” stance. He’s not telling swing voters they were wrong to give Obama a shot — just that the president tried and failed.

“If you think the country needs a turnaround, that’s what I do,” Romney said at the Tea Party debate.

Romney still has some explaining to do about why his private-sector turnarounds so often involved cutting jobs, not creating them. But he is emerging as a formidable candidate against an incumbent for whom trying, however hard, may not be enough.

 

Word cloud concept illustration of innovation creative glowing light effect

A wordcloud featuring "Smartphone". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

A wordcloud featuring "Blockchain". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

This image was created using a wordcloud generated at www.wordle.net/gallery?username=TomRaven using all my poetry of the last couple of years. The background is from a wonderful sunset cloudscape I captured a couple of evenings ago.I used a number of Photoshop tricks to create this effect...

 

Many thanks to Katie-Rose for turning me on to Wordle... I'm having loads of fun :-)))

 

TomRaven Wordcloud Series #1 - View Large On White

 

• Available high res and unframed at tomraven.com

• Prints, Cards and Posters available at RavenRedBubble

Created by C-Aida and myself (by hand!) as a group banner for the Flickrology group.

 

Credit:

Original idea and design: C-Aida

Design and technical work: mag3737

 

A wordcloud featuring "Climate Change". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Not really a photo but, until I can release the final text (i.e. until the public defense), you can have a glimpse of what my PhD thesis is about with this tag cloud (based on word frequencies) of my text.

 

Generated with tagCrowd (with language: French). Wordle version here.

 

My thesis can be found here.

My Son Aaron is 11 today 4/16/16

 

A wordcloud featuring "Finance". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Feel free to use this illustration on your website, so long as you indicates "Monito" as the source and link back to our website www.monito.com

A wordcloud featuring "Cybersecurity". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

A word cloud featuring "Data". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Submitted by Marla Erwin

 

The 100 words used most frequently by Speaker Nancy Pelosi in an interview with MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, aired 2/25/09

 

Link

Interview transcript

A wordcloud featuring "Health". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image By www.scootergenius.com

A wordcloud featuring "Cryptocurrency". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

My Layout using waw_wordclouds_vol1

title: 2011-09-18 random kolten waw_wordclouds_vol1

credits: waw_wordclouds_vol1, store.gingerscraps.net/Word-Art-World/, waw_atimeforfun, store.gingerscraps.net/A-Time-For-Fun-Page-Kit.html

keywords: word art world, kolten, grandson, fun, random, red, cream, green, brown

font: na

program: GIMP

   

Like much of our work, we have put all these images in the public domain. Feel free to use them but please credit out site as the source if you do: TaxRebate.org.uk

A wordcloud featuring "Bitcoin". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Word cloud tags concept illustration of social media

A word cloud featuring "Brexit". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

My Latest Status Cloud, processing done by wordle.net

Feel free to use this illustration on your website, so long as you indicates "Monito" as the source and link back to our website www.monito.com

The top 25 terms generated by Wordle.net from the transcript of #EdChatIE on 23 May 2011. As you might guess, the text chat concerned Continuing Professional Development for teachers.

Feel free to use this illustration on your website, so long as you indicates "Monito" as the source and link back to our website www.monito.com

@dailyshoot #ds424: "Illustrate one of the various meanings of the word tag today in a photograph"

 

The term "tag" is for me associated with media, social media like twitter, delicious or also with the term "keyword", Buchzeichen, bookmark. So I made a wordcloud with the Tag Cloud Generator www.tag-cloud.de/ out of the archive of Dailyshoot www.dailyshoot.com/assignments/archive and took a shot with the camera (without a tool) from the screen. I know - not a very nice photograph.

   

National Poetry Month 2017

ssll and josh? just hanging out in the pet area.

 

i remember trying to jump to slap these stickers on and i banged my toe hard!

at a road trip pit stop somewhere in PA/NY boarder

A wordcloud featuring "Unemployment". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

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