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16 Kommentare

  1. I know what you’re saying, but seriously, why no legend? Someone could interpret it either way

  2. Do you think one day people could live normally in the outback just like southern US became habitable thanks to modern technology?

  3. DistractionCitron on

    Why doesn’t anyone live in the bottom and top middle? I know most people like living near large bodies of water and this is a whole island.

  4. flippertyflip on

    Some of these white areas are all but dead tbh. I reckon you increase it to about 3+% and the yellow would be much bigger.

  5. Ok-Push9899 on

    Curious to know how you did this. Manually or with some code? Are these census districts?

    You presumably started with a table of district vs population, or perhaps district vs density. Did you start from the least dense and just move out grabbing consecutive regions until the 2% threshold was met? If you did it programmatically, what info gave you the spatial relationships between districts, or wasn’t it necessary? i.e. the least dense are contiguous.

    What does 1% and 3% look like? Was it instantly obvious that 2% was the most dramatic?

  6. I didn’t realize north central and north eastern Aus. were so uninhabited. I’m assuming lack of freshwater is one of the primary reasons. Is inhospitable landscape the next big issue or something else? It seems like desalination plants could be put there if the terrain was forgiving enough near the coast or far enough inland for such a large chunk of coastal area to be unpopulated. Hopefully it’s protected for wildlife

  7. onlycodeposts on

    Couldn’t you just draw a circle around Newcastle and say the same thing?

  8. Because every time someone tries to move there the kangaroos knock on your door for a kick box match. They’ll wait there all day until you need to go to the store. They’ve been training for hundreds of years. No one wants a kickboxing match against a professional everyday, that’s exhausting.

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