Sentences with phrase «interesting as these graphs»

As interesting as these graphs are, it is hard to determine whether these particular women are representative of anything beyond their own success.

Not exact matches

As you can see, the team took an interesting concept from one of their blog posts and turned it into a simple graph.
Flipboard's head of ad product, Dave Huynh, explains how the new feature works: If an advertiser says they are looking to appeal to readers who are interested in big data, for example, Flipboard can look into its interest graph and tell them that readers who like that topic are also interested in other topics such as Amazon and the cloud.
As part of that pitch, Flipboard announced on Monday that it is opening up its interest graph to advertising partners.
To illustrate the magnitude of this, we can estimate the effects of a 100 basis point reduction in the cash rate on net interest payments (as a share of household disposable incomes; Graph 6).
(As shown in the graph, the interest rate applied to the loan is expected to be lower when it switches to P&I (by around 40 basis points) but this effect is more than offset by the principal repayments.)
A little over half of the turnover in Asian interest rate derivatives is in OTC instruments such as fixed for floating swaps, many of which are centrally cleared (Graph 5, LHS).
You see, I've been interested in personal finance since I was tall enough to peek over the edge of my Grandpa's desk and watch him as he sorted his stamp collection, inventoried his coin collection, or documented his CD ladders on graphing paper.
The ongoing growth in debt has seen a steady increase in interest payments as a proportion of disposable income, and at the end of 2003 this measure of the debt - servicing burden exceeded its previous peak in the late 1980s (Graph 31).
The ongoing accumulation of household debt has led to a further increase in the debt - servicing ratio; interest payments as a proportion of disposable income rose to 9.3 per cent in the September quarter (Graph 23), and are expected to rise further.
Specifically, we have generated clusters of transcripts that behave the same way under the entire spectrum of the sixty - seven experimental conditions; we have assembled genes in groups according to their time of expression during successive days of ES cell differentiation; we have included expression profiles of specific gene classes such as transcription regulatory factors and Expressed Sequence Tags; transcripts have been arranged in «Expression Waves» and juxtaposed to genes with opposite or complementary expression patterns; we have designed search engines to display the expression profile of any transcript during ES cell differentiation; gene expression data have been organized in animated graphs of KEGG signaling and metabolic pathways; and finally, we have incorporated advanced functional annotations for individual genes or gene clusters of interest and links to microarray and genomic resources.
The carb graph was included as a «teaser» to make the work seem more interesting.
Why do you think the major dating sites such as Zoosk, Match and eHarmony, haven't integrated friends, or the interest graph into their dating experience?
Loveflutter uses Freebase's interest graph to connect matching and similar interests between two people as a way to spark conversations.
These two problems will likely limit the potential of Graph Search as a dating tool for now, but Fishman suggests this could change in the future if Facebook adds additional relationship status options like «Looking for a date,» and if the social network can accrue enough real - time interest data for users from its partnerships with other websites.
OkCupid tries to reach a broad audience with its blog by choosing interesting topics and great graphs that provide information as well as entertainment.
«Using the interest graph as the matching foundation makes it easier to break the ice on your first date because you'll have more to talk about.»
This graph is of interest in its own right (see our paper), but it does not represent the annual change of pension wealth (known as the accrual rate).
Because math instruction is interwoven with the business and economics focus at NSCS, the students are explicitly taught the math skills through direct instruction, after which they use the skills and an economics - based context, focusing on every day, real - world application such as formulating compounding interest, how to read and develop bar graphs, understanding savings and loans agreements, etc..
For me, the most interesting graph was the «number of authors earning 10K, 25K...» Such a curve is always going to slope down as income increases, but it was encouraging to see the path was overwhelmingly in favour of indie authors.
Including interest payments makes the graph worse, and more so as time goes on.
The simple graph below indicates just how much money you can save on interest rates as you improve your credit score.
As shown in the graph, yield curve usually shows annual interest rate on the vertical axis and duration of investments in the horizontal axis.
I don't keep track / archive most stuff though: a) if it's related to an investment theme / perspective, I find I retain the key points as I build up a much bigger picture — I don't save, unless there's some obviously useful data / charts / graph I can refer back to, and b) any company or analysis I come across that seems any way interesting — I don't retain, since I would have to do my own analysis anyway, but I do record the company / ticker in a file I keep for further analysis or monitoring.
But if you can afford higher monthly payments a 15 - year fixed - rate mortgage allows you to repay your loan twice as faster and save more than half the total interest costs of a 30 - year loan, as illustrated on our graph:
Consequently, I even developed a graph as a component of the F.A.S.T. Graphs ™ research tool that measured a stock's P / E ratio in relation to the interest rate of a 10 - year Treasury note.
While history may not be a perfect mirror for the future, it's worth looking at the history of stock returns and interest rate movements as shown in this graph from
While history may not be a perfect mirror for the future, it's worth looking at the history of stock returns and interest rate movements as shown in this graph from JP Morgan Asset Management.
As you can see in the graph above, the higher the down payment is, the lower your interest rate will be.
As can be seen on a payment allocation graph, the portion of a payment allocated to accruing interest decreases, and the amount to principal increases over time.
Chuck recently introduced the graphs as a separate subscription product, which is the reason for this interview as many readers have expressed interest in them.
I posted about context as a filter over friendship and how the interest graph is the playing field for connections and dynamic communities of interest.
My friends over at bit.ly published an interesting graph that reveals the devices as well as the days / times that people use different devices and how and when they consume information.
What is interesting is that there has been an obvious increase in El Nino intensity and reduction in La Nina under the post-1980 AGW, (as this MEI graph illustrates) Discussion of it is presumably disappeared within discussion of the PDO or IPO.
«BTW, this graph also switches to 1880 - 1920 as a base period, because of the widespread interest in the magnitude of warming relative to pre-industrial time.
The graph uses American network evening news coverage as a proxy for broader news interest, so it's a sketch, akin to using borehole temperature or tree rings as substitutes for thermometers:
The Associated Press has put out an interesting interactive mapof climate change data, including the emission trends from countries in the northern hemisphere, graphs of the various indicators of global warming such as glacier melts and global temperatures, and the pledges that different countries have made when it comes to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
One interesting facet of the graph above is how much of the stimulus spending has been focused on carbon capture and sequestration, the process of catching CO2 as it leaves a power plant, compressing it and stashing it in the earth for safekeeping.
It's interesting that if one splices on the last 25 years, even using the data from the previous IPCC report, 1998 would come out as the highest in a thousand years (though only just beating out the MWP maximum, and there's no indication on interannual variability in the early IPCC graph).
I haven't made a dCO2 / dt graph with my formula, as the year - by - year variability of CO2 around the trend is of minor interest.
Here's something interesting... using either HADCRUT4 or NASA / GISS data, redraw an 1880 - 2013 global temperature graph MINUS the record warm 1998 signal (and if you want also take out the following 1999 cold phase as well since it is all part of one ENSO wave).
Some time ago while researching some of my interests in areas such as meteorology, the cosmos and perceived man - made global warming I came across Carl's website and in particular a very interesting graph which Carl Smith created showing an extension to Dr. Landscheidt's work.
But as we didn't see the article / book or graphs by Salby yet, I am very interested where his knowledge is based on...
Particularly I'm interested in those historically greyed gradations between what the Greeks called «persuasion» («pathei» if I remember, though I'm probably wrong) and what became, via the Christian concept of «Truth», «honesty», a totally alien concept to the classical world (for no one was capable of «lieing», then)-- to «persuade», even in the 1300's, with «graphs» would have classed you as a mountebank and a charlatan.
It's interesting that they have made much use of volcanoes in their latest work, such as El Chihcon in 1982 and Pinatubo in 1991 (though slightly unfortunate that they have labelled them wrongly in their graph).
As the comparison of temperature changes post 1990 is the «purpose» of the pseudo-skeptical interest in the FAR projections, the graphs are not suitable for the underlying purpose.
I'm out for the next few days but it would be interesting if anyone could produce the yearly data points in bar graph form as that might allow more «eyeballing» to try to discern the trend.
Interesting graphs which apparently come to the same conclusion as I did that the climate is not quite at the end of a warm spot and due, around 2040, to get a lot colder.
The so called «spaghetti» graphs used in figure 2 above are interesting, but their range of variability (excepting Moberg et al) remain almost as limited as their iconic predecessor the «Hockey stick» produced by Dr Michael Mann et al and from which the IPCC third assessment report graphic from 2001 was derived.
I only take interest only if I can reproduce it from data myself, as many of visitors of this blog know via many graphs I originated and presented.
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