Natalie
Shout outs to Natalie
Thanks Natalie. I saw your 2 months old msg just today! :) 13 days ago
Thanks for featuring the Olympics graph! 20 days ago
Thx Natalie. I'm a french newbie here. It seems to be very interesting & usefull. 22 days ago
Hi Natalie - thanks for advice...it was the dd/mm setting that was causing the problem 25 days ago
I posted the Starbucks chart on the Swivel Data Team group as you suggested! 29 days ago
Hi there! about 1 month ago
About Me
Have you checked out Swivel Business?
Featured Graphs
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On 1 July 2008, Starbucks announced the closure of around 600 outlets in the US. More drastically, on 29 July they then announced that 61 of the 84 Australian outlets would be closing. Although the US closures represent a far smaller proportion of total outlets than here in Australia, they still represent a striking turnaround in the previously relentless growth of the coffee giant. Could this presage a significant change in the fortunes of one of the darlings of the MBA set? Or is it simply the evolution from growth to maturity? |
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Viewing U.S. Census Bureau Population Projections for changes and trends in the aging population over the next 40 years is a revealing exercise. The rainbow of lines in the resulting graph represents trends for age groups from 50 to 100+ in five-year increments across the next 40 years, from 2010 to 2050. |
Featured Data Sets
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In "Measuring the Health of Nations: Updating an Earlier Analysis," Ellen Nolte and Martin McKee of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine compare trends in deaths that could have been prevented by access to timely and effective health care ('amenable deaths'), between 1997–98 and 2002–03 in the United States and in eighteen other industrialized countries. Such deaths account, on average, for 23 percent of total mortality under age seventy-five among males and 32 percent among females. The decline in amenable mortality in all countries averaged 16 percent over this period. The United States was an outlier, with a decline of only 4 percent. If the United States could reduce amenable mortality to the average rate achieved in the three top-performing countries, there would have been 101,000 fewer deaths per year by the end of the study period. |
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The Daily History of the US Goverment Debt from 1/4/1993 to 1/4/2008 |





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