#importance of data visualiation
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sigmasolveinc · 2 years ago
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The correct data collection and integration method is discovered through big data solutions for creating user-friendly dashboards that help elevate the visualizing performance. Data visualization streamlines the analytics process by converting large datasets into simple visualizations. When you hire experts in data visualization services, you’ll have access to cutting-edge discovery and visualization tools, and user-friendly dashboards.
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darkmaga-returns · 6 months ago
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By Tyler Durden
Since August 2020, prices for “food at home” (groceries) have increased by 20% according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the steepest inflation seen since the 1970s.
On average, American households are paying about $270 per week ($1,080 a month) for groceries, according to Delish, which sourced their findings from the latest Census Bureau estimates.
But how does this change across the country? From the same source, Visuali Capitalist’s Pallavi Rao maps the weekly grocery bill for an American household by each state. Figures are rounded.
Ranked: U.S. States by Weekly Grocery Bills
Hawaii and Alaska, the two non-mainland states, have the highest grocery costs for an average American household: both topping $300 a week, or about $1,200 a month.
Shipping is the primary reason for driving up prices, and neither state produces enough food locally to offset the import costs.
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essential-randomness · 3 years ago
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i entered a solid like 5 days to a week where creating a ethical social media app with useful /enjoyable features was constantly looping in mind. i think on of the more interesting ideas i had was having a system sortve based on the structure of tumblr + pinterest blogs combined, where you can have 'sorting tags' you put on a reblogged post so that it goes in a certain section of your blog. so the blog would be normal tumblr style, but you could also easily scroll through the sorting tags for like, 'avengers' or 'anime' or some shit, and you could also follow that sorting tag instead of the entire blog. id also think thisd help for stuff like posting comics/ stories /au ideas you post once in a while, so if i had a steven universe comic that i posted weekly, and didnt want to make a whole seperate blog just so people could read it easily and get updates easily, i could tag it #sucomic or something and people cpuld put notifications on just for that tag. i havent actually looked thru much of the bobaboard stuff yet, so idk if this is applicable at all, but id definitely love for this to be on tumblr.
So one thing I should premise anything BobaBoard with, is that its initial inception phase is as mainly a community software (think a mixture of public Discord servers with a more Tumblr & LJ/DW & Old Forums format + a dash of a lot of other social stuff). There's a lot of reasons I'm starting from this use case, and they'll likely be their own post at some point so I'll avoid ranting about that for now.
The medium-term plan is to also allow a more "personal blog" experience connected to it, with the caveat that I'm pretty much set on not forcing people to have their own blog on Boba, but instead want to use open social protocols (e.g. ActivityPub or RSS) so they can fully own their data and content. Ideally, Tumblr blog themselves should be part of this, since they allow RSS. How to make this easy is part of the exploratory work I'm doing that Boba is a starting point of. Regardless, I do believe people will end up using "Realms" (a BobaBoard concept that roughly maps to a Discord server) as personal "bases", and I also expect to port many of the concepts to any "personal blog" solution I end up creating.
(ok this is getting long, read more time)
With that premise, something that Boba does differently from other socials and I think is relevant here is having multiple types of tags. There's a special kind of tag called "category tag" that allows you to categorize posts/threads for your own use, without conflating that with global search. This is the sidebar of our !brains board, for example, and you can see some categories we added on the side (these sections are customizable, so you can choose what to highlight):
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When you click on those, you can see only threads that have been tagged with that category in that particular board. I expect that when I implement personal spaces, they're going to have a similar functionality.
Letting people follow only some combinations of categories+boards (or categories within threads, even) is definitely in the roadmap. I'm mostly focusing on the posting/community experience and leaving the design and implementation of the searching/following experience for later. After all, if no one likes using the site, no one will have any use for searching content on it. The design of search and follow features is extremely important, so I'm waiting to learn more from how people use Boba before going deep into it. And, also, as I mentioned I have a particular interest in open protocols, and I fully intend to explore how we can leverage those to have a good search experience that allows people to create independent realms, boards and blogs and own their own data. It will take time.
Another thing Boba does, is that it has "threads" as a central concept, rather than just posts. Threads can be visualized in many different ways, including "gallery" which is more visually-oriented. Various types of thread visualizations are fairly experimental now, but I expect more will be added with time. Anyway, this is our one of our galleries on our !thirst board:
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(Boobies—that's our official name for BobaBoard users—do love their Luigis)
So if you had a webcomic and wanted to update it in BobaBoard, I can see a few different ways that could eventually materialize. Again I think how that will work best is something people will show me with time, rather than something I fully know at this stage. It will depend a lot on how certain features get implemented, which in turn will depend a lot on how I see people using the site itself. If there's something this year+ testing Boba taught me, is that people use things way differently than you initially imagine, so there's a lot of value in waiting and seeing rather than deciding upfront.
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tipdm · 2 years ago
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Desktop Cloud Visualization: the new technology to remote access 3D interactive applications in the Cloud
We would demonstrate DCV (Desktop Cloud Visualization), a novel solution that enables users to remotely access interactive 2D and 3D apps over a common network. This enables medical professionals from different locations to collaborate while also acquiring anatomical or pathological pictures and visualizing them for further research.
Both physical and virtual servers may be used as application hosts well with NICE Desktop Cloud Visualization (DCV) interface.
NICE DCV characteristics
These are some characteristics that NICE DCV provides:
·        Shares the full desktop — use the fast NICE DCV protocols to distribute complete remote desktop control of the remote desktop.
·        Solely for transport photos - transports rendered pictures as pixels rather than scene and geometry data. Since no confidential client information gets sent over the network, this adds another degree of protection.
·        Supports encoding based on H.264 - uses H.264-based video encoding and compression to minimize bandwidth use.
·        Supports the compression of video at the lossless quality - when network and CPU circumstances permit, supports lossless video compression.
·        Displays that match — automatically changes the server's display layout and screen resolution to fit the client window's dimensions.
·        Support for multiple screens - allows you to use up to four monitors to enlarge the session desktop. Large pixels For Windows and macOS, native clients are available that enable density monitors.
·        Adjusts compression settings - Based on that network's available latency and bandwidth the video compression settings are automatically adjusted.
·        Facilitates cooperation - dynamic sessions that assist several collaborating clients are offered. During the session, clients have the option to join and disconnect at every moment.
·        Per server, allows for many sessions — To maximum cost savings, supports numerous virtual sessions on a single Linux NICE DCV server.
·        Allows for GPU share (Linux NICE DCV servers only) — enables you to use a Linux NICE DCV servers with numerous virtual sessions to share one or even more physical GPUs.
·        Supports gamepads, stylus input, and touch input — allows you to use input devices connected to your local machine to communicate with a distant NICE DCV session.
·        Supports Smart Card and USB, and remote control of a stylus - allows you to utilize your peripherals exactly as you might on your own computer during a NICE DCV session.
·        Supports copying and pasting, printing, and audio out and in — enables you to carry out these important operations between the sessions and your local PC.
·        Enables file transfer - allows you to move files from your local computer to the session.
·        Provides a client for HTML5 - provides an HTML5 customer that is compatible with Windows and Linux with any current web browser.
·        Enables contemporary Linux operating systems — supports contemporary Linux desktops, including RHEL 8's Gnome 3.
When each detail counts
3D visualization Cloud brings that information to life in situations where it counts, such as industrial facility management, design evaluation for assets (such as truck engines), preoperative surgical planning, and more. It is what enables designers, engineers, medical professionals, and students to comprehend complicated information and take the appropriate action.
3D experience without limitations
Bring high-quality, very three-dimensional models to devices you use for work and collaboration. To function on the target hardware, such as portable devices and 3d virtual headsets, you frequently need to shave off and reduce high-quality 3D models, which results in the loss of crucial detail required for vital business and design choices. Visualize the models in their original, complete, and unaltered form.
End Note
Users may remotely view interactive 2D and 3D visualization apps using NICE Desktop Cloud Visualization (DCV) across a shared network. In addition to gathering anatomical or pathological images and displaying them for future research, this enables medical specialists from many locations to collaborate. The system enables you to share one or perhaps more actual GPUs using a NICE DCV server with several virtual sessions. It supports modern Linux desktops, including Gnome 3.3d virtual headsets in RHEL 8, Smart Card, and USB, as well as a pen remote control.
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