May 2016:
March 2014:

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Nobody ever told me this...


I do drawings for a living. Oh, not artistic stuff. Drawings to make things of wood and steel, at work. AutoCAD, almost entirely.

Been doing drawings for a living for a long time. Usually, when you put text on a drawing, it is horizontal. Sometimes it is vertical. Here's the thing nobody ever told me, but I found out by having to cock my head from one side to the other to read my own drawings: When you do text vertical, you want to turn them all the same way, so you can tilt your head to the left and read them all. You don't want to have to swing that weight to the left to read one annotation, then to the right to read the next one, then back again for another. You don't want to do that.

See the text labels for the left and right scales on this graph?


You're swingin' that weight to read them.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Kinda like assembly language mnemonics


NonFederal Debt relative to GDP
For me it is not easy to read the title of the above graph:

(All Sectors; Credit Market Instruments; Liability, Level-Federal Government; Credit Market Instruments; Liability, Level)/Gross Domestic Product

It is much easier for me to know that "TCMDO" is the number that measures "All Sectors; Credit Market Instruments; Liability, Level"... that "FGTCMDODNS" is the number that measures "Federal Government; Credit Market Instruments; Liability, Level"... and that "GDP" is "Gross Domestic Product"... and then to read this:

(TCMDO-FGTCMDODNS)/GDP

It's just easier.

Maybe it's me.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

I like this one!

FREDBlog: The peculiar Swiss unemployment rate, 2 June 2014. I customized their graph to show recession bars:


Those recession bars are probably the NBER dates for U.S. recessions -- not really related to the Swiss economy. Which probably explains why FREDBlog had the recession bars turned off in the first place. Oh well.

The reason I like this post so much? Because it shows something "peculiar", unique, and interesting, as opposed to the tiresome political complaints you can find all over the web.

That's what graphs are for, you know? To see the interesting things.

It's a really big jump in unemployment, between 1990 and 1994. Remarkable.

Want to know something odd? The timing of that rise in Swiss unemployment corresponds precisely with a unique fall in the U.S. debt-per-dollar ratio.

Now that's odd.