flkr The Smithsonian adds Halo 2600 and Flower videogames to its collection

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flkr The Smithsonian adds Halo 2600 and Flower videogames to its collection

Sdyn War s Fiercest Battle Yet
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Visualization takes raw data and turns it into storytelling. But some statisticians 鈥?tapping into the same instinct that makes us want to taste luscious food we see in photos 鈥?are experimenting with ways to experience data through our other senses. One of these great visionaries is attempting to brew data into beer. As Nathan Yau wr [url=https://www.stanleywebsite.us]stanley drinking cup[/url] ites on his blog Flowing Data, statisticians are exploring concepts that use the world around us as data-plotting devices, such as composing music or creating meals. And then, one day, a potentially world-changing idea hit him: I ;m curious. I like to cook. I like data. What do you get when you combine the two, and does the food help you understand data differently than you would from a bar graph Wait a second. I a [url=https://www.cup-stanley.uk]stanley mugs[/url] lso like beer. Data plus beer. Multivariate beer. Okay, gotta do it. Yau is developing a program that spits out a beer recipe based on data from the latest American Community Survey release from the United St [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley vaso[/url] ates Census Bureau. The program creates a recipe for each county in the U.S., taking into account: Percent of people with at least a bachelor degree Percent of people who are employed Percent of people covered by health care Median household income Population density Percent of population that is white, black, hispanic, and Asian Yau notes that: The great thing about beer is that it has plenty of dimensions to work with: body, bitterness, head retention, hop profile, color, aroma, alcohol by volume, and plenty more