[R] Revolutions Blog: November Roundup

David Smith david at revolutionanalytics.com
Fri Dec 17 00:17:19 CET 2010


I write about R every weekday at the Revolutions blog:
 http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com
and every month I post a summary of articles from the previous month
of particular interest to readers of r-help.

In case you missed them, here are some articles related to R from the
month of November:

Dirk Eddelbuettel and Romain Francois went to Google to talk about
integrating R (using Rcpp, for example), and we gave a review of the
video presentation: http://bit.ly/ev1WxP

R co-creator Ross Ihaka wins a Lifetime Achievement Award in Open
Source: http://bit.ly/9PdD5C

Revolution has job openings for R programmers: http://bit.ly/hgtkSK

We're looking for suggestions about useful R functions that more
people should know about: http://bit.ly/i9w0FP

Brock Tibert wrote some R code to scrape a website of election results
and chart the returns in real time: http://bit.ly/hZPMbc

We published the final installment of the "R is Hot" article series:
http://bit.ly/hFKsAm

We launched the free "Pretty R" tool for publishing highlighted R code
to the Web: http://bit.ly/bra4ap

Slides from Saptarshi Guha on using Hadoop and R to analyze 100Gb of
data: http://bit.ly/gYGokk

Forbes Magazine names R as a "Name You Need To Know in 2011" in their
December issue, based on a lively and informative online comment
thread: http://bit.ly/gVwzb8

In honor of 11/11, Drew Conway created a visualization in R on veteran
homelessness in the US: http://bit.ly/gkpS6J

Some good advice on thinking about writing loops in R by Yihiu Xie:
http://bit.ly/gr4OlV

Revolution's Joe Rickert reviews the R talks at the ACM Data Mining
Camp: http://bit.ly/ebo9Pk

The competition to create a recommendation engine for R packages
continues, with new data and new prizes: http://bit.ly/ezF5WB

There's a new package to access the InfoChimps API from R, for
geolocation, census demographic data, and more: http://bit.ly/gTWiAA

A tutorial from FlowingData on making bubble charts with R: http://bit.ly/hNL41L

An analysis of the users of the prediction competition site Kaggle
revealed that R was the preferred software of competitors:
http://bit.ly/elsyLb

John Chambers gave a presentation on "R and Multilingualism", with
examples of the new Reference Classes feature of R 2.12:
http://bit.ly/gB3bCZ

News about a forthcoming integration between Revolution R and Hadoop:
http://bit.ly/gF7LEn

Other non-R-related stories in the past month included another lottery
coincidence (http://bit.ly/hN1qHU), epidemiology of unusual diseases
from 1632 (http://bit.ly/iceodU), a discussion on Statistics moderated
by the Dataists on Reddit (http://bit.ly/h5r25S), a visualization of
asteroid discoveries (http://bit.ly/enidWV), the the emerging
discipline of "digital humanities" (http://bit.ly/eMbzCw), and the
science of airport security (http://bit.ly/eiMyIY). On a lighter note,
we had: a T-shirt for Stats geeks (http://bit.ly/aLOCyZ).

There are new R user groups in Houston (http://bit.ly/c0XFGp) and
Cincinnati/Dayton (http://bit.ly/97FpZx).

The R Community Calendar has also been updated at:
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/calendar.html

If you're looking for more articles about R, you can find summaries
from previous months at http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/roundups/.
Join the Revolution mailing list at
http://revolutionanalytics.com/newsletter to be alerted to new
articles on a monthly basis.

As always, thanks for the comments and please keep sending suggestions
to me at david at revolutionanalytics.com. Don't forget you can also
follow the blog using an RSS reader like Google Reader, or by
following me on Twitter (I'm @revodavid).

Cheers,
# David

--
David M Smith <david at revolutionanalytics.com>
VP of Marketing, Revolution Analytics  http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com
Tel: +1 (650) 646-9523 (Palo Alto, CA, USA)



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