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juliasilge.com | ||
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kieranhealy.org
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| | | | | With the 2020 U.S. Census in motion already, I've been looking at various pieces of data from the Census Bureau. I decided I wanted to draw some population pyramids for the U.S. over as long a time series as I could. What's needed for that are tables for, say, as many years as possible that show the number of males and females alive at every year of age from zero to the highest age you're willing to track. This sort of data is available on the Census website. But it tuned out to be somewhat tedious to assemble into a single usable series. (Perhaps it's available in an easy-to-digest form elsewhere, but I couldn't find it.) I initially worked with a couple of the excellent R packages that talk to the Census API (tidycensus and censusapi), hoping they'd give m... | |
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sebastianraschka.com
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| | | | | I'm Sebastian: a machine learning & AI researcher, programmer, and author. As Staff Research Engineer Lightning AI, I focus on the intersection of AI research, software development, and large language models (LLMs). | |
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jmablog.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] A data scientist analyzes UK meteorite strike data using R and creates a stylized visualization with Affinity Photo. | |
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willpgfx.com
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| | | Here we take the work previously presented in Peter Shirley's excellent book, and move it to run entirely on the GPU. | ||