The Chartmaker directory has a nice matrix showing which tools can be used to produce many kinds of chart, with examples of how.
Two new tools allow you to interactively create bespoke chart layouts without programming
URL Page_Title Date Transcript Img_Title Img_URL Keywords from http://www.andromedayelton.com/dckx.php | |
http://xkcd.com/1 Barrel - Part 1 [[A boy sits in a barrel which is floating in an ocean.]] Boy: I wonder where I'll float next? [[The barrel drifts into the distance. Nothing else can be seen.]] {{Alt: Don't we all.}} Don't we all. http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/barrel_cropped_(1).jpg | |
http://xkcd.com/2 Petit Trees (sketch) [[Two trees are growing on opposite sides of a sphere.]] {{Alt-title: 'Petit' being a reference to Le Petit Prince, which I only thought about halfway through the sketch}} 'Petit' being a reference to Le Petit Prince, which I only thought about halfway through the sketch http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/tree_cropped_(1).jpg | |
http://xkcd.com/3 Island (sketch) [[A sketch of an Island]] {{Alt:Hello, island}} Hello, island http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/island_color.jpg | |
http://xkcd.com/4 Landscape (sketch) [[A sketch of a landscape with sun on the horizon]] {{Alt: There's a river flowing through the ocea |
The Chartmaker directory has a nice matrix showing which tools can be used to produce many kinds of chart, with examples of how.
Two new tools allow you to interactively create bespoke chart layouts without programming
Michael Hoffman's tweet about not having ‘that slide’
Arvind Narayanan highlighted part of the @enigmaconf speaker guide
Pac-Man rule: https://twitter.com/LaurenceMillar/status/931795364843200513
Firsts: organizing a workshop - a blog post by Veronika Cheplygina
This is a list of some standard operating procedures/policies/onboarding documents from various research groups.
Lab carpentry “was founded at the DDD Training Workshop at UC Davis in October 2015 by C. Titus Brown, Casey Greene, Raman Shah, Blair Sullivan, and Matt Turk.”
Resources for Running Research Groups
Eugene Wu’s Research Setup Wiki
As an example, the Insulator specification image could become:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no" ?>
<svg
xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#"
xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
xmlns:svg="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# James Scott-Brown, 2016-01-25 | |
# This script loops through each of a user's repositories | |
# for each, it prints the name of each release asset, and how | |
# many times it has been downloaded | |
import urllib2 | |
import json |
#Logged Positions of Captain Cook's journey from Cape of Good Hope to England. April-July 1771 | |
#Extracted from http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/c/cook/james/c77j/chapter11.html | |
Wednesday, 17th latitude 32 degrees 14 minutes South, longitude 344 degrees 8 minutes West. | |
Thursday, 18th latitude 31 degrees 14 minutes South, longitude 345 degrees 19 minutes West. | |
Friday, 19th latitude 31 degrees 14 minutes South, longitude 345 degrees 33 minutes West. | |
Saturday, 20th latitude 29 degrees 40 minutes South, longitude 346 degrees 10 minutes West. | |
Sunday, 21st latitude 28 degrees 43 minutes South, longitude 347 degrees 42 minutes West. | |
Monday, 22nd latitude 27 degrees 27 minutes South, longitude 349 degrees 24 minutes West. | |
Tuesday, 23rd latitude 26 degrees 19 minutes South, longitude 350 degrees 42 minutes West. | |
Wednesday, 24th latitude 25 degrees 6 minutes South, longitude 351 degrees 16 minutes West. |
#Logged Positions of Captain Cook's journey from Batvia to Cape of Good Hope. January - February 1770 | |
#Extracted from http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/c/cook/james/c77j/chapter10.html | |
Thursday, 17th latitude 7 degrees 32 minutes South; longitude 255 degrees 35 minutes West. | |
Friday, 18th latitude 7 degrees 55 minutes South; longitude 255 degrees 54 minutes West. | |
Saturday, 19th latitude 8 degrees 48 minutes South; longitude 255 degrees 51 minutes West. | |
Sunday, 20th latitude 9 degrees 14 minutes South; longitude 256 degrees 15 minutes West. | |
Monday, 21st latitude 9 degrees 46 minutes South; longitude 257 degrees 5 minutes West. | |
Tuesday, 22nd latitude 9 degrees 29 minutes South; longitude 257 degrees 8 minutes West. | |
Wednesday, 23rd latitude 9 degrees 30 minutes South; longitude 256 degrees 50 minutes West. | |
Thursday, 24th latitude 9 degrees 34 minutes South; longitude 256 degrees 50 minutes West. |
#Logged Positions of Captain Cook's journey from Tahiti to New Zealand. August - October 1769 | |
#Extracted from http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/c/cook/james/c77j/chapter4.html | |
Friday, 11th latitude 18 degrees 59 minutes South, longitude 151 degrees 45 minutes West. | |
Saturday, 12th latitude 20 degrees 15 minutes South, longitude 151 degrees 36 minutes West. | |
Sunday, 13th latitude 21 degrees 47 minutes South, longitude 151 degrees 9 minutes West. | |
Monday, 14th latitude 22 degrees 26 minutes South, longitude 150 degrees 55 minutes West | |
Wednesday, 16th latitude 25 degrees 00 minutes South, longitude 150 degrees 19 minutes West. | |
Thursday, 17th latitude 26 degrees 10 minutes South, longitude 149 degrees 46 minutes West. | |
Friday, 18th latitude 26 degrees 48 minutes South, longitude 149 degrees 42 minutes West. | |
Saturday, 19th latitude 27 degrees 40 minutes South; longitude 149 degrees 6 minutes West. |
#Logged Positions of Captain Cook's journey from England to Rio Janeiro August to October 1768 | |
#Extracted from http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/c/cook/james/c77j/chapter1.html | |
Friday, 26th latitude 49 degrees 30 minutes North, longitude 5 degrees 52 minutes West | |
Saturday, 27th latitude 48 degrees 42 minutes North, longitude 6 degrees 49 minutes West | |
Sunday, 28th latitude 47 degrees 16 minutes North, longitude 9 degrees 7 minutes West | |
Monday, 29th latitude 46 degrees 38 minutes North, longitude 9 degrees 29 minutes West | |
Tuesday, 30th latitude 46 degrees 9 minutes North, longitude 9 degrees 52 minutes West | |
Wednesday, 31st latitude 45 degrees 3 minutes North, longitude 8 degrees 43 minutes West | |
Thursday, September 1st latitude 44 degrees 56 minutes North, longitude 9 degrees 9 minutes West |