Why do developers of otherwise great websites neglect page titles?
It hasn't had a format change for at least as long as I've used it (since 2009). The gauges both reflect the industrial nature of the data as well as show the portion of the capacity being used.
The trend charts are great too, telling the story of the short, medium and long term generation sources.
https://www.gridstatus.io/home
Shows fuel mix, load, and price data for all of the ISOs. It's been really exciting to watch lately because you can see the huge uptick in solar and battery deployments in markets like CAISO and ERCOT.
Baseballsavant is another excellent example.
Both are targeted towards laypeople. In fact, most baseball fans are not data savvy (or even data friendly!) so these are targeted at an audience that needs things spoon fed and look for any reason to hate something.
https://www.fangraphs.com/players/tony-gwynn/1005166/stats?p...
https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/savant-player/mookie-betts-60...
The ecosystem is extremely open especially compared to other pro sports leagues like, say, the Premier League.
Edit: Just remembered this one, Ballmer's side project https://usafacts.org/
Tech Stack: TypeScript, Node.js, NestJS, React, RxJS, AWS, Kubernetes, MongoDB, PostgreSQL
I reach for it several times per week. Never struggle finding what I want, nor getting it into the shape I want it.
Open Data Network: http://www.opendatanetwork.com/
https://weatherspark.com/y/47913/Average-Weather-in-Paris-Fr...
It’s a shame the actual forecast data aren’t the best (at least here in the UK), and I do also wish the graphs had confidence intervals on them.
In terms of really great well-designed apps that aren’t Apple’s the Norwegian meteorological agency maintains a really nice one called yr.no. It’s totally free (paid for by Norwegian taxes) and available worldwide. I use it in Scandinavia all the time, but less so in the States because like in your case the accuracy is diminished the further away you get from Norway. I bet it works pretty well in the UK though given the UK’s proximity to Norway.
Rtings.com uses charts for its reviews, but most it is over my head.
Statista has a ton of info but a lot of it is behind quite expensive paywall.
I wonder if there is a middle path here - something that costs less than Statista (maybe not as comprehensive as Statista, they are a $150M company after all) and better than city-data.
A few interesting pages to check out:
- Scottie Scheffler's (Current Top Golder in the World) Player's Profile: https://datagolf.com/player-profiles?dg_id=18417
- Approach Skill Analysis: https://datagolf.com/approach-skill
I created this data dashboard with Observable Framework[1] and Rust-Script[2] so I can check-in daily to better understand the data collected during Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)[3] sessions.
Meta analysis on nutritional supplements
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/docs/intrinsics-guid...
The graphical tables are nice, too: https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=29.7687&lon=-9...
Scroll down to see lots of different kinds of data about a particular selected gene, with a navigation menu sticking at the top.
I can get the the data, and the definitions, quickly.
powered by D3
This is how it is for me on many many HN pages. I assume because link only replies are auto-set to below some threshold, as are anything with even one downvote.
How can I change that? I set "showdead" -> yes in my profile. What else can I set?