Flicker Fusion

Another view of that tax cut chart

Jed Sundwall created an alternate view of that tax chart I posted to the other day, replacing the circles with bars.

Jed makes the point that circles are “terrible for displaying comparable quantitative information” and to a degree he’s right. The circles give an approximate view of the differences but are inexact and his bars certainly do a better job of showing just how enormous the disparity the proposed tax break is for the highest earners under the Republican plan.

I still like the circles, though. Jed’s bars do tell the story of how incredibly unfair the Republican proposal is but at the expense of any further information; the bars only tell one story. Even given that his bars are interactive, it’s basically impossible to give any context to the other numbers on the chart. You could argue it’s because that bottom red bar blows everything out of proportion, but should that limit the reader’s ability to draw any further meaning from the numbers?

For instance, with the Post’s circles, you can tell, even at a glance, that both Republican and Democratic tax plans are going to cut taxes for everyone making less than $500,000 a year at almost identical rates. You can also see that the Democrat’s plan looks pretty unfair to the top two tiers of income earners – I’d expect those circles to keep getting bigger, though certainly not the exponential increase that Republicans are proposing. By adding a second dimension, you tell a broader story at the expense of some exactness, a worthy goal for a newspaper. My one beef with the Post’s chart is with the colors – why not use the standard navy blue and red that everyone already associates with Democrats and Republicans?

Numbers are meant to be infallible but we all know, especially in politics, that’s a damn lie. They tell stories just like any other facts and rely on the story teller to present them honestly.

Chrome offers a “click-to-play” feature for all plug-ins

Chrome offers a “click-to-play” feature for all plug-ins

Works just like ClickToFlash for Safari by disabling a plug-in until the user clicks it, except it does this for all plug-ins (Quicktime, Windows Media, Real (LOL!)). You can whitelist sites you like.

In a quick test, it seemed a little slow to me and there’s no right-click enabled to immediately add the current site to your whitelist. Still, I love this approach to sandboxing plug-ins being built right in.

Zepto.js, a jQuery-compatible mobile JavaScript framework in 2K

Zepto.js, a jQuery-compatible mobile JavaScript framework in 2K

Thomas Fuchs has created exactly what jQuery mobile should be – a lightweight framework that does away with a lot of the cross platform cruft that weighs down jQuery, designed just for mobile. It also does away with all of the fake, timing-based animations that most javascript frameworks use and shifts animations and transitions to CSS3. It’s even got touch events!

I got so frustrated with jQuery mobile a few weeks ago that I started building a mobile mini-framework but have only gotten as far as cloning jQuery’s selector syntax, chaining, event handling and ready listener (if that sounds impressive, trust me, it isn’t). Zepto looks like exactly the sort of thing I wanted, built by people much smarter than I.

Every candidate who pledged support for net neutrality lost on Tuesday

Every candidate who pledged support for net neutrality lost on Tuesday

It’s bizarre to me that the tea party not only opposes net neutrality but claims that it’s anti-freedom. I understand that most normal people don’t care but this strikes me as the sort of libertarian, “get your damn hands off me” sort of legislation that the tea party should support. Instead, they seem all too happy to just hand over the keys to a few service providers.

I’m starting to think that maybe the tea party doesn’t really understand freedom…

I am pleased to announce that I am running for Chairman of the House Republican Conference! Constitutional Conservatives deserve a loud and clear voice in leadership!

I am pleased to announce that I am running for Chairman of the House Republican Conference! Constitutional Conservatives deserve a loud and clear voice in leadership!

Michele Bachman wants a seat at the party! Bachmann is, of course, insane on the fringe of the already right veering establishment Republicans, who have nominated some fella from Texas for the spot she wants. Pop some corn, kids, this outta be fun!

In a few months, when Boehner and Cantor and McConnell wonder what the hell happened to their party, it should be helpful to remind them that they are the ones who invited the tea party in.