Alex Wein
@alexwein.bsky.social
170 followers 540 following 330 posts
data worker, word game liker, pretty boring quite frankly. Oakland, CA
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
alexwein.bsky.social
shit...damn...motherfucker
alexwein.bsky.social
i feel like this is going to sound ironic but it's 100% not: I want so badly to know what Kieron thinks about pie charts
alexwein.bsky.social
not enough discussion of charts and graphs
tldrcomicbookclub.bsky.social
🔥 FRIAR SIDE CHAT 🔥

DIE is set to return, so we simply had to chat with @kierongillen.bsky.social

Between his series with @stephaniehans.bsky.social returning and his other can't-miss @imagecomics.com with @casparw.bsky.social, THE POWER FANTASY, this was a loaded interview 😏⬇️
Kieron Gillen's Charts and Graphs (and DIE)
Podcast Episode · TLDR Comic Book Club · 10/13/2025 · 1h 1m
podcasts.apple.com
alexwein.bsky.social
Reading this prompted a rewatch of Julio Torres's My Favorite Shapes. Bunch of good shapes in there.
alexwein.bsky.social
when i started my job, i talked a lot about how valuable good documentation is. but now I have to write good documentation and I do not want to.
alexwein.bsky.social
fun stuff...although after reading, i am less certain i understand either what a theory is or what a shape is
mjskay.com
to appear at #alt.vis 2025: THEORY IS SHAPES

sure "theory figures" are great, but @matthew.wiki, @maryamhed.bsky.social, me, and Carolina Nobre wonder: why always a 2D plane or a flowchart? why not icebergs, horseshoes, Möbius strips, or BLT sandwiches?
arxiv.org/abs/2510.01382

#ieeevis #hci
Abstract and teaser figure of the paper "Theory is Shapes" by Matthew Varona, Maryam Hedayati, Matthew Kay, and Carolina Nobre.

The teaser figure is an "iceberg" theory figure, showing four levels: the tip of the iceberg, containing a nested set diagram and a Cartesian plane. The next level down (just under the water) has a complicated flow charts and a combination flow chart and matrix. The next level down has the iceberg figure itself and a horseshoe. The final level contains a Möbius strip and a BLT sandwich.

The abstract reads:

"Theory figures" are a staple of theoretical visualization research. Common shapes such as Cartesian planes and flowcharts can be used not only to explain conceptual contributions, but to think through and refine the contribution itself. Yet, theory figures tend to be limited to a set of standard shapes, limiting the creative and expressive potential of visualization theory. In this work, we explore how the shapes used in theory figures afford different understandings and explanations of their underlying phenomena. We speculate on the value of visualizing theories using more expressive configurations, such as icebergs, horseshoes, Möbius strips, and BLT sandwiches. By reflecting on figure-making's generative role in the practice of theorizing, we conclude that theory is, in fact, shapes.
alexwein.bsky.social
had to get into some of the nuances of marvel snap's in-game currencies with my therapist this week
alexwein.bsky.social
2 hours and 50 minutes? maybe a few of those battles could have happened concurrently. (the runtime was fine actually, i just needed to get the dumb joke out of my head.)
alexwein.bsky.social
I know that complaining about long movies makes me a philistine, but I would have enjoyed the 3.5 hour movie more if it were shorter.
Reposted by Alex Wein
burrata.bsky.social
This was a really fun conversation. I don’t get too many chance to talk about puzzles as independent media, but I really believe in the point and Phil is a pretty brilliant interlocutor.
alexwein.bsky.social
this morning i discovered that my blog has been down for a month...back up now, but still no new posts since april alex-we.in
alexwein.bsky.social
"wanting to blog" is such an embarrassing hobby
alexwein.bsky.social
you can add an S to the end of 56k words (in wordnik) and get a valid word. Of the 56k there are 112 already end in S.
a screenshot of an Obserable notebook. It contains a table with columns: tail, n_words, n_words_5plus, n_words_8plus. The value for tail is always a unique single letter. Below the table is the following duckdb sql query:

with tails as (
  from wordnik
    select
      word,
      substring(word, 1, length(word) - 1) as head,
      substring(word, length(word)) as tail,
where substring(word, 1, length(word) - 1) in (
  select word from wordnik
  )
)

from tails
select
  tail,
  count(*) as n_words,
  count_if(length(word) >= 5)::int as n_words_5plus,
  count_if(length(word) >= 8)::int as n_words_8plus,
group by all
order by n_words desc
alexwein.bsky.social
just listened to it again this morning bsky.app/profile/alex...
alexwein.bsky.social
not totally sure how it happened but my album of the year so far is 2009's "It's Blitz!" by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
alexwein.bsky.social
i enjoyed the part in one battle after another where junglepussy said "hi, i'm junglepussy" www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQuo...
Junglepussy - State of the Union
YouTube video by JUNGLEPUSSY
www.youtube.com
alexwein.bsky.social
is anything else in the works for the "Voices" line?
Reposted by Alex Wein
alexwein.bsky.social
unironically, i love it every time there's poptimism discourse
alexwein.bsky.social
I love this though! I made my own janky bird based word search game earlier this year loopyletters.val.run/birds
Loopy Letters
loopyletters.val.run
Reposted by Alex Wein
jerthorp.bsky.social
I had an idea yesterday about making a word search that, when solved, would be a data visualization.

So, I coded it up... and it worked!

This shows abundance of three bird species in Brooklyn Bridge Park over a year.

It feels like there are some fun possibilities here.

📊🪶
alexwein.bsky.social
It might be easier if you provided the starting letters in col 1. The letters in a series aren't necessarily adjacent, but they will mostly be close-ish (unless something interesting is happening!): if I had a starting point, I might be able to find the next letter.
alexwein.bsky.social
another good debbii dawson single. this one is produced by luka/elvira (who did all of addison) and has a writing credit from max martin (jessie j's "domino")
alexwein.bsky.social
in my last role i had a peer with an overlapping skill profile and workload, but i'm more siloed now and my sql is going to get way more idiosyncratic
alexwein.bsky.social
i was in the snowflake docs a little while back and noticed asof join (added last year), and i now have a load-bearing asof join
Reposted by Alex Wein
datavizsociety.bsky.social
📊 Academic papers can be challenging to read, especially for students new to a field.

Alyxander Burns shares an activity that uses data comics to help students better understand and engage with academic literature.

www.nightingaledvs.com/learning-academic-papers-making-data-comics
Learning to Read Academic Papers by Making Data Comics, Nightingale
Learning to read academic papers is a considerable challenge for many college students.
nightingaledvs.com