Recent comments in /f/dataisbeautiful

amanamongbotss t1_j6kl7ya wrote

Both those things are part of that equation. They’re tracking personnel constantly, with each new snap AND Burrow has 2 elite WRs. He’s making that throw 90% of the time in this situation because he’s on the road in a championship game and you have to.

So you’re wrong about that.

Then to go onto say Burrow didn’t play really well- well, we’ll have to just agree to disagree.

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TravellingTabby OP t1_j6kjt1l wrote

I just collect it in a spreadsheet. There is a column for each metric, and a row for each day of the year. I try to fill it in every night before bed, but normally I'll do it once every two or three days. It only takes a couple of minutes to fill in!

Some of the columns I'll only fill in once a week. That is stuff like hours slept and steps taken, where all I do is enter the values on the health app on my phone.

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phdoofus t1_j6kho09 wrote

You need to rethink your presentation of this. I'm sure it's interesting but the presentation sucks. No axes labels, no obvious assumptions up. Really, I should be able to look at this and discern what's going on and what the important conclusions are without going to the comments to see if there's a bunch of explanation. If I have to read a paper to understand this, it's should be posted in r/researchpapersarebeautiful

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InsuranceToTheRescue t1_j6ka5ja wrote

If you're looking at refining it, I think doing the math for ml of alcohol would be a better metric. Then you don't have to worry about type of drink so much as you've got an absolute number that ties them all together and is accurate regardless of location.

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spiralshapesun t1_j6k6hk1 wrote

Reply to comment by alxwx in [OC] My Not-So-Dry January by HoldMyDirrk

I assume this is a U.S.-centric graphic (as most things on Reddit are), in which case:

> In the United States, one "standard" drink (or one alcoholic drink equivalent) contains roughly 14 grams of pure alcohol, which is found in:

> 12 ounces of regular beer, which is usually about 5% alcohol

> 5 ounces of wine, which is typically about 12% alcohol

> 1.5 ounces of distilled spirits, which is about 40% alcohol

https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/alcohols-effects-health/overview-alcohol-consumption/what-standard-drink

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