Recent comments in /f/dataisbeautiful
dorothii t1_j8jm3h1 wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
Is this why Brighton fans supposedly are the healthiest?
Belnak t1_j8jlnwa wrote
Reply to comment by AverageAustralian111 in [OC] New Mexico Now Produces More Oil Than Mexico & Venezuela by latinometrics
Yes, self-sufficiency would mean we can cut ourselves off from the global market. We can't. Just because we pump enough crude doesn't mean we're able to refine that crude and distribute its products internally. That's why we import about as much as we export. The infrastructure that is in place isn't structured to allow us to use what we're pumping, and too much infrastructure that is in place is structured around imports. There's no financial incentive for companies to tear apart what exists and rebuild it for self-sufficiency.
querry22 t1_j8jk6mt wrote
Reply to comment by wnaj_ in [OC] The Eagles are the most proficient pass-rushing team to go without a sack in the Super Bowl (chart) by JPAnalyst
The title is wrong and makes no sense. All it is a comparison of ave sacks per game vs in the Super Bowl having 0
[deleted] t1_j8jk1p6 wrote
querry22 t1_j8jk0t5 wrote
Reply to [OC] The Eagles are the most proficient pass-rushing team to go without a sack in the Super Bowl (chart) by JPAnalyst
Why is making a title correct such a common error on posts like this?
NMGunner17 t1_j8ji731 wrote
Reply to comment by latinometrics in [OC] New Mexico Now Produces More Oil Than Mexico & Venezuela by latinometrics
Yeah I’m gonna call bullshit on Burger King offering $28 an hour in NM, unless you’re just talking about the head manager.
XSavage19X t1_j8jhv94 wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
I'm opening a chips shop next to Brighton's stadium. I need investors.
JPAnalyst OP t1_j8jgtd4 wrote
Reply to comment by GrandArchitect in [OC] The Eagles are the most proficient pass-rushing team to go without a sack in the Super Bowl (chart) by JPAnalyst
Rules won’t have anything to do with this, as those rules have been in place all season when the Eagles were getting 4+ sacks per game.
JPAnalyst OP t1_j8jgt1c wrote
Reply to comment by GrandArchitect in [OC] The Eagles are the most proficient pass-rushing team to go without a sack in the Super Bowl (chart) by JPAnalyst
Rules won’t have anything to do with this, as those rules have been in place all season when the Eagles were getting 4+ sacks per game.
TheKingMonkey t1_j8jfq6e wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
I’m sure I’ve made it from the North Stand to the Villa Chippy by Witton Station in less than five minutes. Never at half time though.
PostsNDPStuff t1_j8jfimr wrote
Reply to comment by ILLRATEDATBUTT in [OC] New Mexico Now Produces More Oil Than Mexico & Venezuela by latinometrics
What about new Venezuela?
[deleted] t1_j8jffrh wrote
Reply to comment by pleetf7 in My stripper earnings on Super Bowl Sunday and Monday as compared to the rest of the year [OC] by nerdydancing
[removed]
Spid1 t1_j8jfa3w wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
That seems more than it'd take me at Spurs but I guess it depends what stand you're in as they serve it in the south stand
Menacingamaranth OP t1_j8jek9f wrote
Reply to comment by Samatic in [OC] Job Search by Menacingamaranth
Hahaha shoot maybe so!! Would be better than my other nefarious side gigs
sebatakgomo t1_j8jdng9 wrote
Reply to comment by treethirtythree in [OC] Road Death Rate VS Income per Capita by ismaelsow
public transit = less idiots in cars
joejimbobjones t1_j8jdmfa wrote
This is terrible. It's not clear where the nodes are for many of the acts and the connections are confusingly busy. It looks lovely me it was auto-generated without any optimization.
F_redrik OP t1_j8jdh4l wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
Source: extensive searching on Google Maps + this site
bubba-yo t1_j8jd4s0 wrote
Reply to comment by conspires2help in College Tuition Has Outpaced Inflation by More Than 3x Over the Last 40 Years by ThePinkHulk
Except that public education doesn't set its own price. The legislature does. And if you look at the difficulty of getting into many schools (median GPA of incoming students at my campus was a 4.2) that suggests that tuition is priced well *below* demand. We had 120,000 application for 4,000 seats. We could have doubled tuition and still found enough qualified students. Clearly we were not responding to market dynamics. College loans *should* cause universities to expand because they make college more affordable. The state doesn't have a profit motive here. They do have an educated workforce motive, so their drive is more students completing degrees, not more profit from students, because there are no profits from students. Not even at privates. Their endowments don't come from excess tuition but from donors.
I worked at a UC. So top tier research university. We absolutely paid faculty hundreds of thousands of dollars, especially in market competitive disciplines. I've been involved in retention pay increases of hundreds of thousands of dollars. The professor does not get salary in that way off of grants. They can build in 3 months of salary into a grant (most faculty have 9 month appointments) and at some institutions can use a grant to buy out their teaching. But in most cases the salary is coming out of the larger pool of money of state subsidy, tuition, grant overhead, and external funding sources. In the case of medical faculty, there is also usually a clear split between the teaching institution and a hospital/clinic.
And you're right that the faculty aren't the sole driver of that inflation, but they also aren't the sole source of rising costs. A blackboard and a bunch of tablet chairs are no longer adequate for teaching. We record lectures, transcribe them for accessibility, we have large technology budgets and support around instruction. Lab costs have skyrocketed because again, students still take up the same amount of space as they did 50 years ago, but what's in the lab has changed. A basic computer lab is $1000/sq ft to build. A STEM lab is often 5 times that much. It's not enough to give our EEs a soldering iron and a handful of analogue meters like the 1960s, now it's a programmable oscilloscope at $50K per station, because the market these students are going into has also changed. That lab needs tech support, and the harder we run the institution, the more those costs go up. Want to keep that lab occupied 40 hours a week - you'll need at least two techs available to keep the equipment running and the lab configured as needed. You can't have one tech working from 7AM to 10PM 5 days a week. We could run the lab less, but now we need another lab, that's another $5M to build.
Building and securing a semi-public wireless network that spans multiple square miles is incredibly expensive. Universities typically have their own cellular infrastructure as well. How good are the people who do this? Apple used to hire our techs to design and setup their infrastructure for product announcements back when they were operating out of rented facilities. They were the best you could get, and they aren't cheap. But students losing network access in the middle of an exam, or during a class is a bit of a calamity.
And as you saw last night if you watched the coverage, you saw a quite good response to an active shooter. Universities have to now massively overspend on police and training. Classroom costs skyrocket when you incorporate active shooter safety issues into their design, which we now do on all new constructions. Universities also now invest heavily in other emergency planning. When covid broke out, we had N95s. We had shipping containers full of them, because we have fires here, we are prepared for potential chemical and biological attacks, because we are in a high target terrorism area. We have equipment to do search and rescue for a campus of 50,000 people after an earthquake, emergency food and water and all that.
NONE of these things were in budgets 25 years ago when I started. Some is that the safety issues have dramatically increased - guns, fires. Some is that the expectations have changed - earthquakes, etc.
I just retired 2 years ago and I was a pretty high level administrator and made less than 6 figures (cost was over 6 due to benefits) and for some of my time I had to generate my own salary. That's a LOT of administrators. We expanded into community education programs - summer camps for K-12 students, things like that. We hired a bunch of administrators for those programs. Why? Because there was no way to cover the costs of our needed growth without additional revenue. Our administration cost growth was in areas where they were expected to raise their salary. Yeah, you have high level institution administrators, but they aren't as expensive as you might think. If one of those 6 figure salary faculty becomes a slightly higher 6 figure salary administrator, and you hire a 5 figure adjunct to cover their classes while they are administrator, you haven't increased your costs by that administrators salary, just by the delta from their teaching salary plus the cost of the adjunct. Our university had about the same budget as Twitter did have in revenue. What would you expect CEO pay for that company to be? They aren't small organizations.
If you think wages for professors haven't risen that much, it's because of how universities have abused the adjunct system to make it appear that way. Rank and file faculty make good money. Depending on discipline, they make very good money. You don't think doctors at a top research hospital aren't making near 7 figures? They are the faculty.
Samatic t1_j8jcvlt wrote
Reply to [OC] Job Search by Menacingamaranth
Hell you should start your own resume writing business according to these stats fuck the job!
welkinator t1_j8jbeip wrote
Don't you mean "OR Venezuela"?
bazillaa t1_j8j9z8b wrote
Questions about how meaningful the metric is aside...
- Where are the labels for countries that drop out of the top 10 before 2020?
- Where's the rest of the Italy line? (blank spots where it should be 1995-2010)
- If Russia gets a new line when the USSR splits up, shouldn't Germany get a new line when East and West merged?
sKY--alex t1_j8j9z0z wrote
This but for modern rap would be interesting
GeneralNathanJessup t1_j8j9nc7 wrote
Reply to comment by Empire_Engineer in [OC] New Mexico Now Produces More Oil Than Mexico & Venezuela by latinometrics
I do understand that. That's why I told you that Venezuela's government was the sole shareholder of PDVSA, Venezuela's national oil company.
Not only did Venezuela nationalize all the oil, they nationalized the food, agriculture, electricity, telecommunications, mining, manufacturing, and finance sectors of the economy. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-election-nationalizations/factbox-venezuelas-nationalizations-under-chavez-idUSBRE89701X20121008
But you probably knew that.
MarcTullyCicero t1_j8j9jjk wrote
Reply to comment by redditor1101 in [OC] Linking Related Bands by How Often They Appear Together Online by infegy
I have no idea what this visualization is telling me.
bonjeroo t1_j8jmvo1 wrote
Reply to [OC] Which Premier League stadiums have a Fish&Chips shop close enough for you to walk/run to and be back before the 2nd half starts? by F_redrik
Mother Hubbard opposite Spurs does the best fish and chips I've ever had, simply perfection