Thanks for the new post—I’d thought the series was over, and it’s fantastic to have even more data (plus charts!).
I’m confused by the group layout in North America. It portrays a large group of EAs somewhere in southern California, with no large group in the Bay Area, which doesn’t match the data tables in the post. Were some of the circles misplaced?
Glad you enjoyed the post, we have a few more supplementary posts coming out.
In the North America-only map there is a large circle over a wide “Bay area” (approx. Redding in the top & Santa Maria in the bottom of the circle), with a small point on San Francisco itself near the centre. In the World Map there is a small point on San Francisco itself, and medium circles over LA/Southern California which are all encompassed within a larger “West Coast” circle.
Thanks for the new post—I’d thought the series was over, and it’s fantastic to have even more data (plus charts!).
I’m confused by the group layout in North America. It portrays a large group of EAs somewhere in southern California, with no large group in the Bay Area, which doesn’t match the data tables in the post. Were some of the circles misplaced?
1. The images with the cities was created by flattening this interactive charts:
https://marcin-wosinek.github.io/ea-charts/ea-survey/city/
where dots can be hovered with a mouse, and name + exact value should appear. This can help troubleshoot this or any other issue
2. what was there in the data as ‘SF Bay Area’ was merged to ‘San Francisco’. I’ve no idea how good assumption was that.
3. The small dots in California are for Oakland, San Jose, Berkley, Concord + few more.
Glad you enjoyed the post, we have a few more supplementary posts coming out.
In the North America-only map there is a large circle over a wide “Bay area” (approx. Redding in the top & Santa Maria in the bottom of the circle), with a small point on San Francisco itself near the centre. In the World Map there is a small point on San Francisco itself, and medium circles over LA/Southern California which are all encompassed within a larger “West Coast” circle.