#tufte — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tufte, aggregated by home.social.
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"If you don't embrace A.I. you'll get left behind."
My site: getting left behind with less than 50KB assets, yet still elegant
📣 Just releasing the exampleSite
https://foxihd.github.io/hugo-foxx/en/
This demo has only 18KB total assets (gzipped) -
"If you don't embrace A.I. you'll get left behind."
My site: getting left behind with less than 50KB assets, yet still elegant
📣 Just releasing the exampleSite
https://foxihd.github.io/hugo-foxx/en/
This demo has only 18KB total assets (gzipped) -
"If you don't embrace A.I. you'll get left behind."
My site: getting left behind with less than 50KB assets, yet still elegant
📣 Just releasing the exampleSite
https://foxihd.github.io/hugo-foxx/en/
This demo has only 18KB total assets (gzipped) -
"If you don't embrace A.I. you'll get left behind."
My site: getting left behind with less than 50KB assets, yet still elegant
📣 Just releasing the exampleSite
https://foxihd.github.io/hugo-foxx/en/
This demo has only 18KB total assets (gzipped) -
"If you don't embrace A.I. you'll get left behind."
My site: getting left behind with less than 50KB assets, yet still elegant
📣 Just releasing the exampleSite
https://foxihd.github.io/hugo-foxx/en/
This demo has only 18KB total assets (gzipped) -
Comment designer des tableaux clairs et efficaces ?
Quelle forme de présentation de données choisir entre tableaux et graphiques, des bonnes pratiques de représentation de l'information en tableau et leur traduction en développement web.
https://www.teotimepacreau.fr/blog/designer-des-tableaux-clairs-et-efficaces/
#WebDev #UX #UI #MatthewButterick #CharlieMunger #Tufte #EdwardTufte -
Comment designer des tableaux clairs et efficaces ?
Quelle forme de présentation de données choisir entre tableaux et graphiques, des bonnes pratiques de représentation de l'information en tableau et leur traduction en développement web.
https://www.teotimepacreau.fr/blog/designer-des-tableaux-clairs-et-efficaces/
#WebDev #UX #UI #MatthewButterick #CharlieMunger #Tufte #EdwardTufte -
Comment designer des tableaux clairs et efficaces ?
Quelle forme de présentation de données choisir entre tableaux et graphiques, des bonnes pratiques de représentation de l'information en tableau et leur traduction en développement web.
https://www.teotimepacreau.fr/blog/designer-des-tableaux-clairs-et-efficaces/
#WebDev #UX #UI #MatthewButterick #CharlieMunger #Tufte #EdwardTufte -
Comment designer des tableaux clairs et efficaces ?
Quelle forme de présentation de données choisir entre tableaux et graphiques, des bonnes pratiques de représentation de l'information en tableau et leur traduction en développement web.
https://www.teotimepacreau.fr/blog/designer-des-tableaux-clairs-et-efficaces/
#WebDev #UX #UI #MatthewButterick #CharlieMunger #Tufte #EdwardTufte -
Comment designer des tableaux clairs et efficaces ?
Quelle forme de présentation de données choisir entre tableaux et graphiques, des bonnes pratiques de représentation de l'information en tableau et leur traduction en développement web.
https://www.teotimepacreau.fr/blog/designer-des-tableaux-clairs-et-efficaces/
#WebDev #UX #UI #MatthewButterick #CharlieMunger #Tufte #EdwardTufte -
6 Little-Known Maps by the 19th Century's Most Famous Infographic Designer [Charles Minard]
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https://www.mentalfloss.com/photos/565562/charles-minard-maps <-- shared technical article
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https://bigthink.com/strange-maps/229-vital-statistics-of-a-deadly-campaign-the-minard-map/ <-- shared technical article
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https://youtu.be/hlb1uM_SOcE?si=nahlAd6M029Xiuvn <-- shared technical overview video, "Napoleon’s March to Moscow"
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https://info5940.infosci.cornell.edu/notes/dataviz/minard/ <-- shared technical article, tutorial, coding of buildin a complicated, layered graphic
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https://infowetrust.com/project/minard1861 <-- shared technical article
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#spatial #mapping #infographics #cartography #history #historic #CharlesMinadr #French #datavisualisation #visualization #infrastructure #investment #engineering #statisticalmapping #spatialanalysis #spatiotemporal #economics #Tufte #statistics #drawing #illustration -
I've added a sparkline of “posts per month over the years” to the home page of my website. And here I discuss some of the hows and whys and whatnots
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I've added a sparkline of “posts per month over the years” to the home page of my website. And here I discuss some of the hows and whys and whatnots
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What’s the most Tufte-like block theme?
#design #wordpress #theme #Tufte
https://wordpress.com/forums/topic/whats-the-most-tufte-like-block-theme/
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@hotdogsladies I can tell the training set leans less toward #Tufte, more toward USA Today.
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On Talks and Slides
Some history of style.Once upon a time, Ed Tufte called me a "sanctimonious assohole". I suggested that he up the dosage of his medications and stopped recommending his books to my students and colleagues1. But — The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint remains a pretty good essay (sometimes excessive) on some of its il
https://flipphillips.com/bloggery/on-talks-and-slides/
#Bloggery #Folklore #history #knuth #latex #pixar #porter #powerpoint #presentations #talks #tufte -
@TfTHacker loving the Tufte Style Sidenotes in Obsidian. THANKS
#tufte #sidenotes #obsidian -
Tufte CSS: Elegant if slightly twee CSS from a visual designer
https://edwardtufte.github.io/tufte-css/
#visualization #design #tufte #css #web #+ -
Currently experimenting with adapting the @pandoc output from #Markdown to #HTML to work with the awesome #CSS built for #arxiv by @dginev. I could also use #pandoc to convert to #LaTeX and then use #LaTeXML through their https://github.com/dginev/ar5ivist tool for #arxiv but why the round-trip? The changes are yet incomplete as not all font things are adjusted and right now all footnotes are represented through the same symbol. Yet, I'm quite happy with the intermediate results :-)
This gives me reactive footnotes, either in the margins (almost #Tufte style) or through hovering, nicer link highlighting, quite acceptably justified text (I'm surprised how far the web has come). I didn't yet tweak the fonts further and I want to keep my code indented.
Left: Run through pandoc with custom HTML template & some #Lua filters
Right: Current state as seen on https://ljrk.codeberg.page/unixv6-alloc.html produced with a minimalist CSS stylesheet I stole from somewhere.
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Edward Tufte offers two principles for making efficient graphical representations:
- erase non-data-ink, within reason.
- erase redundant data-ink, within reason.Above all, show the data! Tufte
Do you know that you can get Tufte's "MAXIMAL DATA, MINIMAL INK" theme for plots in a single click with @LabPlot via Theme > Tufte?
Get the project via File > Open Example.
#LabPlot #Tufte #ChartJunk #Data-Ink-Ratio #DataViz #InfoViz #Visualization #CognitiveLoad #Minimalism #Simplicity #OpenSource
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[3/3] That analogy and complaint might seem a bit forced, but they aren't. We still refer to the NYT and other heavies as a "paper," but it became something utterly different decades ago. It's now an international, transmedia operation more like its progeny (News Corp in particular), and it's no accident that coincides with the terminal stage of US journalism. That could have played out very differently. There's always a risk of utopian nonsense in observations like this, but if the NYT had focused its efforts on strengthening serious journalism across the US, it — rather than PE and Gannett — could have vacuumed up locals across the country and built a very different kind of empire, much more responsive to local issues, needs, etc. The ideas needed to form a vision like that were explicit and widely discussed, so we can legitimately criticize the NYT's choice to follow a winner-take-all path. And the country, and the world in general, are paying a very, very heavy price for that, imo.
I think that's a pretty good "frame" for thinking not just about Snowfall. It also offers a pretty good frame for thinking about dataviz more generally. I love design and have devoted much (though by no means *all*) of my life to it, but a *lot* of people involved in it can't see much farther than their nose — which is one reason they can be so brilliant at what they do. As I noted in my post about dataviz a few days ago, datavizzies are still mired in a sort of nouveau-riche drive to dress their field up in signs of tradition and legitimacy, so the ways they historicize and "socialize" their field are, in a word, silly. It's way past time for them to rip down their #Playfair posters, burn their #Tufte books, and start thinking more deeply about the construction of all the data they visualize.
I should add: if you like this, maybe make a note to hassle me every few weeks (via DMs/email plz) to FINISH THE FUCKING BOOK I've been researching and writing for a decade+.
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[3/3] That analogy and complaint might seem a bit forced, but they aren't. We still refer to the NYT and other heavies as a "paper," but it became something utterly different decades ago. It's now an international, transmedia operation more like its progeny (News Corp in particular), and it's no accident that coincides with the terminal stage of US journalism. That could have played out very differently. There's always a risk of utopian nonsense in observations like this, but if the NYT had focused its efforts on strengthening serious journalism across the US, it — rather than PE and Gannett — could have vacuumed up locals across the country and built a very different kind of empire, much more responsive to local issues, needs, etc. The ideas needed to form a vision like that were explicit and widely discussed, so we can legitimately criticize the NYT's choice to follow a winner-take-all path. And the country, and the world in general, are paying a very, very heavy price for that, imo.
I think that's a pretty good "frame" for thinking not just about Snowfall. It also offers a pretty good frame for thinking about dataviz more generally. I love design and have devoted much (though by no means *all*) of my life to it, but a *lot* of people involved in it can't see much farther than their nose — which is one reason they can be so brilliant at what they do. As I noted in my post about dataviz a few days ago, datavizzies are still mired in a sort of nouveau-riche drive to dress their field up in signs of tradition and legitimacy, so the ways they historicize and "socialize" their field are, in a word, silly. It's way past time for them to rip down their #Playfair posters, burn their #Tufte books, and start thinking more deeply about the construction of all the data they visualize.
I should add: if you like this, maybe make a note to hassle me every few weeks (via DMs/email plz) to FINISH THE FUCKING BOOK I've been researching and writing for a decade+.
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[3/3] That analogy and complaint might seem a bit forced, but they aren't. We still refer to the NYT and other heavies as a "paper," but it became something utterly different decades ago. It's now an international, transmedia operation more like its progeny (News Corp in particular), and it's no accident that coincides with the terminal stage of US journalism. That could have played out very differently. There's always a risk of utopian nonsense in observations like this, but if the NYT had focused its efforts on strengthening serious journalism across the US, it — rather than PE and Gannett — could have vacuumed up locals across the country and built a very different kind of empire, much more responsive to local issues, needs, etc. The ideas needed to form a vision like that were explicit and widely discussed, so we can legitimately criticize the NYT's choice to follow a winner-take-all path. And the country, and the world in general, are paying a very, very heavy price for that, imo.
I think that's a pretty good "frame" for thinking not just about Snowfall. It also offers a pretty good frame for thinking about dataviz more generally. I love design and have devoted much (though by no means *all*) of my life to it, but a *lot* of people involved in it can't see much farther than their nose — which is one reason they can be so brilliant at what they do. As I noted in my post about dataviz a few days ago, datavizzies are still mired in a sort of nouveau-riche drive to dress their field up in signs of tradition and legitimacy, so the ways they historicize and "socialize" their field are, in a word, silly. It's way past time for them to rip down their #Playfair posters, burn their #Tufte books, and start thinking more deeply about the construction of all the data they visualize.
I should add: if you like this, maybe make a note to hassle me every few weeks (via DMs/email plz) to FINISH THE FUCKING BOOK I've been researching and writing for a decade+.
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[3/3] That analogy and complaint might seem a bit forced, but they aren't. We still refer to the NYT and other heavies as a "paper," but it became something utterly different decades ago. It's now an international, transmedia operation more like its progeny (News Corp in particular), and it's no accident that coincides with the terminal stage of US journalism. That could have played out very differently. There's always a risk of utopian nonsense in observations like this, but if the NYT had focused its efforts on strengthening serious journalism across the US, it — rather than PE and Gannett — could have vacuumed up locals across the country and built a very different kind of empire, much more responsive to local issues, needs, etc. The ideas needed to form a vision like that were explicit and widely discussed, so we can legitimately criticize the NYT's choice to follow a winner-take-all path. And the country, and the world in general, are paying a very, very heavy price for that, imo.
I think that's a pretty good "frame" for thinking not just about Snowfall. It also offers a pretty good frame for thinking about dataviz more generally. I love design and have devoted much (though by no means *all*) of my life to it, but a *lot* of people involved in it can't see much farther than their nose — which is one reason they can be so brilliant at what they do. As I noted in my post about dataviz a few days ago, datavizzies are still mired in a sort of nouveau-riche drive to dress their field up in signs of tradition and legitimacy, so the ways they historicize and "socialize" their field are, in a word, silly. It's way past time for them to rip down their #Playfair posters, burn their #Tufte books, and start thinking more deeply about the construction of all the data they visualize.
I should add: if you like this, maybe make a note to hassle me every few weeks (via DMs/email plz) to FINISH THE FUCKING BOOK I've been researching and writing for a decade+.
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#MareyCharts are fascinating. I recall seeing them on a book like #Tufte's "The Visual Display of Quantitative Information". This is a good explainer, "How can a Marey chart help analyze the flow of work?": https://www.3cs.ch/analyze-work-flow-with-marey-chart/
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#Rstats people who write articles & presentations may like this:
#thesisdown https://github.com/ismayc/thesisdown
#rmdformats https://github.com/juba/rmdformats
#rticles https://github.com/rstudio/rticles
#tufte https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/
#prettydoc https://prettydoc.statr.me/
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#rmarkdown-website-template https://github.com/privefl/rmarkdown-website-template
#template https://github.com/cboettig/template
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#uiucthemes https://github.com/illinois-r/uiucthemes
#CSUNtemplate https://github.com/carlganz/CSUNtemplate -
#Rstats people who write articles & presentations may like this:
#thesisdown https://github.com/ismayc/thesisdown
#rmdformats https://github.com/juba/rmdformats
#rticles https://github.com/rstudio/rticles
#tufte https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/
#prettydoc https://prettydoc.statr.me/
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#rmarkdown-website-template https://github.com/privefl/rmarkdown-website-template
#template https://github.com/cboettig/template
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#uiucthemes https://github.com/illinois-r/uiucthemes
#CSUNtemplate https://github.com/carlganz/CSUNtemplate -
#Rstats people who write articles & presentations may like this:
#thesisdown https://github.com/ismayc/thesisdown
#rmdformats https://github.com/juba/rmdformats
#rticles https://github.com/rstudio/rticles
#tufte https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/
#prettydoc https://prettydoc.statr.me/
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#rmarkdown-website-template https://github.com/privefl/rmarkdown-website-template
#template https://github.com/cboettig/template
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#uiucthemes https://github.com/illinois-r/uiucthemes
#CSUNtemplate https://github.com/carlganz/CSUNtemplate -
#Rstats people who write articles & presentations may like this:
#thesisdown https://github.com/ismayc/thesisdown
#rmdformats https://github.com/juba/rmdformats
#rticles https://github.com/rstudio/rticles
#tufte https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/
#prettydoc https://prettydoc.statr.me/
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#rmarkdown-website-template https://github.com/privefl/rmarkdown-website-template
#template https://github.com/cboettig/template
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#uiucthemes https://github.com/illinois-r/uiucthemes
#CSUNtemplate https://github.com/carlganz/CSUNtemplate -
#Rstats people who write articles & presentations may like this:
#thesisdown https://github.com/ismayc/thesisdown
#rmdformats https://github.com/juba/rmdformats
#rticles https://github.com/rstudio/rticles
#tufte https://rstudio.github.io/tufte/
#prettydoc https://prettydoc.statr.me/
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#rmarkdown-website-template https://github.com/privefl/rmarkdown-website-template
#template https://github.com/cboettig/template
#manuscriptPackage https://github.com/jhollist/manuscriptPackage
#uiucthemes https://github.com/illinois-r/uiucthemes
#CSUNtemplate https://github.com/carlganz/CSUNtemplate -
> A.. finding in this work is.. that the.. participants without technical training..performed just as well as the group.. with.. technical training ... #visualizations make it easier for people lacking quantitative experience to understand your results.. to level the playing field. If you want your findings to be.. accessible, it’s probably better to present a visualization.. if someone is having trouble interpreting your visualizations, it’s.. your fault.
https://www.r-bloggers.com/2012/03/visualization-series-insight-from-cleveland-and-tufte-on-plotting-numeric-data-by-groups/
#Tufte -
New Core Paper documentation site theme based on #Tufte! https://corepaper.org/
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Today in "books I really should own already"... Getting new books is always nice though!