I wonder what the map would look like
if it only showed cyclists who died undertaking a lorry at a junction?
Apparently it is one of the major causes of cycling deaths.
I am willing to bet even showing all cyclist deaths caused by another vehicle would not make a map with many features.
If the map was fairly empty that would mean there is not a problem of cyclist deaths, right?
Or is that map meaningless?
I suspect the latter.
( , Tue 12 Sep 2017, 18:51, Share, Reply)
if it only showed cyclists who died undertaking a lorry at a junction?
Apparently it is one of the major causes of cycling deaths.
I am willing to bet even showing all cyclist deaths caused by another vehicle would not make a map with many features.
If the map was fairly empty that would mean there is not a problem of cyclist deaths, right?
Or is that map meaningless?
I suspect the latter.
( , Tue 12 Sep 2017, 18:51, Share, Reply)
I wonder what the map would looked like if the author had bothered to research even the basics
of cartography or data visualisation. Certainly not a mass of dots all on top of each other with absolutely no reference to the base geography. All that image does is show you where the major urban centres are and some highlights of the road network, it does absolutely nothing to explain the underlying data.
( , Wed 13 Sep 2017, 9:50, Share, Reply)
of cartography or data visualisation. Certainly not a mass of dots all on top of each other with absolutely no reference to the base geography. All that image does is show you where the major urban centres are and some highlights of the road network, it does absolutely nothing to explain the underlying data.
( , Wed 13 Sep 2017, 9:50, Share, Reply)