Ever struggled to make sense of tiny slices in your pie charts?
Good news! In last week's Collabora Office 25.04 release, we introduced Pie-of-Pie and Bar-of-Pie charts to Calc! These new chart types let you take a slice from your main pie and break it into a separate, clearer sub-chart.
With data visualization, it's the same as with dating - looks may matter, but what's most important is communication.
Here I compare charts for the Stanford dataset "How Couples Meet and Stay Together" - from the original academic paper, The Economist, Statista, and crucially, from Redditors and TikTokers. We'll see how different media shape the way data is presented.
As the cherry on top, we'll explore what we can do with AI to tweak aesthetic style to match our narrative - and the medium
'God We Need You Now' Struggle Jennings & Caitlynne Curtis (Live Acoustic)
#God We #Need You #Now Struggle Jennings & Caitlynne Curtis (Live Acoustic)15,660,193 views | Premiered Sep 12, 2021
We need your help! Help us keep #independent_artists Struggle Jennings and Caitlynne Curtis on the #top of the #charts, stream/download "God We Need You Now" on iTunes.
* Software Architect (PhD) Supervisor -25 years 300K PMS (project management) hours * EXPERT BLACK BOX TESTER (1999) * Founder of SEO (Search Engine Optimization, (1999) * Founder of RTB (Real Time Bidding (1999) * Founder of HFT (High Frequency Trading 2001) * Founder of the first Screen Recorder (Applets) on the Planet (2000)
**Material philology and Syriac excerpting practices: A computational-quantitative study of the digitized catalog of the Syriac manuscripts in the British Library**
“_The results reveal that most manuscripts contain fewer than 20 excerpts, but a small number show much higher levels of excerpting, highlighting the immense intellectual and literary activities implicated in their production._”
Maeir N (2025) Material philology and Syriac excerpting practices: A computational-quantitative study of the digitized catalog of the Syriac manuscripts in the British Library. PLOS ONE 20(3): e0320265. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0320265.
Pretty fascinating look at how "Covid changed everything", in 30 charts.
"Decades from now, the pandemic will be visible in the historical data of nearly anything measurable today: an unmistakable spike, dip or jolt that officially began for Americans five years ago this week."
Weil die "Generation Z" alte Songs bei TikTok entdeckt, wird weniger neue Musik gehört. Bands wie The Police und Alphaville landen wieder in den Charts. Die Musikindustrie und TikTok befeuern den Trend strategisch. Von C. Lindemann.