The Tableau fiddling begins

I’m wanting knowledge on as many different kinds of data visualization software as possible, and the latest one I’ve started working with is Tableau Public.

However, for this particular software, I’m working on it at home instead of on the work computer, because Tableau only works with Windows and not MacOS. Then there’s the question of how much I would actually be able to use it with work projects, since the data visualizations are in JavaScript and our CMS will only play with Flash codes being plugged into the HTML editor. (the same reason I haven’t been able to use Google Gadgets for quick-and-dirty charts.)

But I’m still excited. I like Tableau’s potential for using rawer, itemized data sets as comparable to the other data visualization tools I’ve used. It does all the summarizing for you.

Plus, it’s big on highlighting specific data on request. Go ahead, click on just about anything down there, and it highlights specific information for you. Pretty handy if the data sets start getting complex.

So, here’s my first simple Tableau data visualization. It’s based off of Ultimate Championship Wrestling, a ministry I’m involved with at my church here in Yuba City. Yes, go ahead and laugh, I’m a pro wrestling mark and I don’t care.

I compiled a list of every individual title reign for the two championships UCW uses, and then built this graph to where you can see how many times each individual wrestler has won each title.

It’s real basic, but it’s a start and is really just scratching the surface of what Tableau is capable of.

Oh, and if you’re interested, UCW’s March Madness XIII is at 7 p.m. on March 11 at Calvary Christian Center in Yuba City.

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How I used Stephan Pastis to advocate for more than comics

As I hinted in my last post, when I went about defending newer comics strips in newspapers, I’ve come to realize I was writing about more than comic strips.

I was really talking about the struggles of journalism as a whole, and how readers could become one of the great catalysts of change – should they choose to be.

Honestly, is there any better analogy for the issues facing print journalism today than the comics page? Look at a typical comics page. You’ll find three or four strips that are relatively new, edgy, dare say controversial at times. A Pearls Before Swine or a Lio or, when it was still being published, a Boondocks. And they’ll often be placed right next to a comic that Methuselah would have read as a child. A Blondie or Alley Oop or, quite possibly, you read one of the newspapers out there still carrying Gasoline Alley or Snuffy Smith, which have both been around for over 90 years.

Think about that. How many businesses out there are performing the exact same service the exact same way in the 2010s that they were in the 1910s? Continue reading

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My adventure wading into the comics

I defended Stephan Pastis two weeks ago, and now old people hate me.

Here’s the background.

Last month, the editor at my paper decided to make a change to the comics page, replacing Jan Eliot’s Stone Soup with Terri Libenson’s The Pajama Diaries. I can’t say I ever read Stone Soup all that closely, so it wasn’t particularly tragic for me.

But, it’s a change to the comics page. For anybody who might read this that isn’t involved in the newspaper industry, there are few things you can do that will illicit more anger on a newsroom that a change to the comics page. So in come the irate e-mails. But, not only do most of these e-mails decry the ditching of Stone Soup, they also demonized any changes to the comics page whatsoever and bashed several strips in paricular: Pastis’ Pearls Before Swine, Darby Conley’s Get Fuzzy and Tony Carillo’s F Minus.

I joined the paper right after another extremely controversial comics change, when a previous editor added Pearls Before Swine by getting rid of Alley Oop, which I came to discover had been running in our newspaper since at least 1935.

No, that’s not a typo. 1935. Continue reading

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Back from the dead

Had to take the site down temporarily. Unfortunately, I’ve lost quite a few of my posts. I’ve been able to salvage some, and you’ll see them below.

I’ll also be rebuilding all of my old highlight pages, but I’ve done a few new things to show off since I last updated them, so it’s not all bad.

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No, actually, I don’t want to sell more papers…

“If you wanted to sell more papers…”

I got that line in a recent e-mail from the chairwoman of a local Democratic Central Committee, followed by some sage advice on what she thinks will make people flock to reading our publication in abundance, weeping with joy at having our written words grace the presence of their tear-streaked faces.

Obviously, as the sarcasm in the above paragraph this is not the first time I’ve had a sentence starting with those six words written or spoken to me.

William Allen White’s sage advice still stands: Making love, poking a fire and running a newspaper will never be done to everybody’s satisfaction. Although I’ve been given a lot more unsolicited advice on how a newspaper should operate than how I’m maintaining any campfires I happen to be around.

But, there’s just one problem. Everybody seems to assume that since I work for a newspaper, I want to sell more newspapers.

Actually, I’m not sure that I do. I do want the business to be profitable enough that the suits in the Southern California corporate towers (business park) will see fit to keep me employed, but that doesn’t necessarily mean I want to sell more papers. In fact, selling more papers right now could actually be detrimental.

Why? Basically, I think it would just a be a recurrence of the same problem that got newspapers into the mess they’re in today: They wouldn’t be forced to change.

As you know, I generally oppose the concept of Internet paywalls for newspaper websites. That’s for three main reasons.

First, I consider them ineffective because all non-local news can just be accessed at other still-free news sites.

Second, people have been used to getting news free for what amounts to multiple lifetimes in the Internet era that they’re more likely to just go without local news rather than pay for it.

Third, the newspaper industry never actually charged the customers for the price of producing the content, we just charged them the cost of delivering it. (This is, I admit, a weak argument, since an industry in transition can simply change that method. In fact, I think that should happen- but for getting the news in print instead of online)

But right now, the newspaper industry’s popular-again method for generating online revenue is paywalls. And they aren’t even really geared at developing new online revenue as they are a tactic to try and get people to still subscribe to the print version, since that still generates most of the money.

But retrenching tactics like that aren’t going to result in anything but a death spiral. If you continue to focus so much effort on keeping customers using one product that, while money-making, is become less popular instead of trying to aggressively diversify where the money comes in from, the money from that popular product will just continue to be less and less.

That will ultimately affect the quality of the product, which will drive away more customers, which will result in less money, then less quality, then less customers and so on.

So, the goal shouldn’t be to “sell more papers.” The goal should be “To generate maximum revenue in a way that keeps our product as easily accessible as possible.”

Pulling this off will create a “life spiral” instead of a death spiral. Because if a news business starts making more money from somebody just freely and openly using their product, it will encourage them to make it more open, thus more people use it, and thus making more money.

So, the next time somebody gives you advice to “sell more papers” (or, if you’re a non-newspaper journalist reading this, you want to tell a journalist how you think they can “sell more papers”) , consider the possibility the right response will be “maybe we don’t want to.”

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