An interactive descriptive comparison of the provisions of the different health care bills in congress, with additional info on the White House’s preferences.

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The graphics are distracting, but the data is interesting.

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A very nice interactive radial design based on Ski Magazine’s 2010 survey. The resorts are separately ranked for the East and West. Click on the color scale at the bottom to see ranking by category, or click on a resort to see a more detailed write-up and links to their websites.

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I don’t know why, but I’ve actually daydreamed about these before. I suppose it would also be useful for the wall of a science classroom. Can also be purchased as a poster or t-shirt.

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Who owns the United States debt?

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Simple instructions on how to break into a Master combo lock in less than 100 attempts (instead of trying all 64,000 possible combinations). (via)

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A timeline of Nobel Peace Prize award winners since 1994:

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and the pre-announcement bookie odds on who the winner was going to be:

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A table of how much various annual achievement awards pay out.

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An annotated timeline of landmarks in gold prices.

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The FT takes a graphic look at a number of currency trends (dollar/euro, carry trade, commodity currencies, the renminbi, and a trade weighted exchange index). [the links on the below images all go to the same interactive tool]

 

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Interactive of the cost, coverage, and provisions of congress’s three health care bills.

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Sort of an interactive article on recent brain research related to spiritual experiences, drill down through different topics and more detailed write-ups.

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A decent infographic of nuclear weapons around the world. Having watched a documentary last weekend on what would happen to Washington DC after just a small detonation, I found this graphic and accompanying article interesting (I thought China had more, for example). (via)

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What countries have improved the most since 1990? (it’s an index of life expectancy, literacy, education, and per capita GDP).

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As usual, Michael Moore isn’t completely right, but the distribution of income growth isn’t what it used to be.

Two-thirds of the country’s total gains in the five years to 2007 accrued to the top 1%, whereas the bottom 90th percentile saw only 12% of the extra income.

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