1331: Frequency
Frequency | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title text: This comic shows estimated average frequency. I wanted to include the pitch drop experiment, but it turns out the gif format has some issues with decade-long loops. |
Explanation
This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Some numbers (per minute) are still wrong. If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks. |
This comic shows a number of common events, arranged in a grid. Each of the events flashes with their average frequency.
For example, statistically a child is born somewhere on the world approximately every 0.24 seconds, or four times per second. Therefore the tile "One birth" blinks about 4 times per second.
The title text refers to the Pitch drop experiment which measures the flow of a piece of pitch over many years. At room temperature, tar pitch flows at a very slow rate, taking several years to form a single drop. The title text jokes that Randall tried to include a tile that flashes about once every ten years, but the tiles are all animated GIFs and while the file format supports animations of any length, the resulting file would be too big (at least 10 megabytes).
A thorough analysis of the frequencies present in this comic and how they relate to the underlying technology (the GIF format) was published as Reverse Engineering xkcd's 'Frequency'.
The table below lists all the events and their duration / frequency. Some events make reference to other comics.
Picture | Text | Period (seconds) | Frequency (per minute) | Frequency (per year, N/I = not interesting) |
Explanation and/or references to other comics. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heartbeat | 0.86 | 70 | 33,000,000 | The typical resting heart rate in adults is 60–80 beats per minute (bpm). | |
One birth | 0.24 | 250 | 131,490,000 | The birth rate happens on earth. | |
One death | 0.56 | 107 | 56,360,000 | The Mortality rate is much lower than the birth rate shown above, the world population still increases. | |
Someone edits Wikipedia | 0.67 | 90 | 47,100,000 | Wikipedia is an online, freely editable encyclopedia. | |
Someone buys a vibrator | 2.99 | 20 | 10,550,000 | This is just a joke, there are no reliable statistics on world wide vibrator productions or sells. | |
China builds a car | 1.89 | 32 | 16,700,000 | China is the biggest market for many western car manufacturers — most car makers are happy on that market — but the most cars for their own country they do produce in China itself. | |
Japan builds a car | 4.01 | 15 | 7,870,000 | Toyota is the biggest car seller by the time of this comic. | |
Germany builds a car | 5.8 | 10 | 5,440,000 | Volkswagen tries to overcome Toyota by 2018. | |
The US builds a car | 6.95 | 8.6 | 4,540,000 | The US car market did change, many rumours, but it isn't that misbehave published often in the press. | |
Someone else builds a car | 1.03 | 58 | 30,640,000 | All car manufactures dwarf about this — those "unknown" or "not recognized" countries like Brazil, India, will play an important rule on the future markets. | |
A European Union resident has their first kiss | 5.53 | 11 | 5,700,000 | ||
A US fire department puts out a fire | 23 | 2.6 | 1,370,000 | ||
Someone hits a hole-in-one | 180 | ⅓ (20 per hour) |
175,320 | A hole in one is a feat in golf in which the player hits the ball directly from the tee into the cup with one shot. This does not account for possibility of Rocket Golf. | |
My turn signal blinks | 0.94 | 64 | N/I | This, together with "The turn signal of the car in front of me blinks", forms a reference to 165: Turn Signals. | |
The turn signal of the car in front of me blinks | 0.9 | 67 | N/I | This, together with "My turn signal blinks", forms a reference to 165: Turn Signals. | |
Earthquake (magnitude 1) | 2.43 | 25 | 13,000,000 | 711: Seismograph | |
Earthquake (magnitude 2) | 24.26 | 2.5 | 1,300,000 | Review USGS's Quake Map for verification. | |
Earthquake (magnitude 3) | 242.6 | ¼ (15 per hour) |
130,000 | 1037: Umwelt | |
Earthquake (magnitude 4) | 2426 | 0.025 (1.5 per hour) |
13,000 | 723: Seismic Waves; below this magnitude earthquakes pass by largely unnoticed by Tweeters.[1] | |
A member of the UK parliament flushes a toilet | 10.06 | 6 | 3,140,000 | Note that probably during the daytime in Britain such a toilet is flushed 8.5 times per minute, while at night it is flushed only 1 time per minute. | |
An airline flight takes off | 0.93 | 65 | 34,000,000 | ||
Someone buys To Kill a Mockingbird | 42.05 | 1.4 | 750,000 | “To Kill a Mockingbird” is a novel by Harper Lee, often an assigned reading in high school. | |
Someone's pet cat kills a mockingbird | 1.82 | 33 | 17,340,000 | Whereas the previous item references the well-known book “To Kill a Mockingbird”, this one talks about mockingbirds being literally killed (in this case, by cats). There are 45 million mockingbirds in the world;[2] this means that according to Randall, cats kill 39% of mockingbirds in one year, i.e. in 2.5 years they are able to kill all mockingbirds (excluding the ones that are born in the meantime). | |
Someone in Phoenix buys new shoes | 1.08 | 56 | 29,200,000 | Since metro Phoenix has 4,200,000 inhabitants, according to Randall people in Phoenix buy 7 pairs of shoes per capita per year. | |
Someone in Phoenix puts on a condom | 2.05 | 29 | 15,390,000 | Buy two pair of shoes, get a free condom? | |
Someone locks their keys in their car | 2.43 | 25 | 13,000,000 | ||
A Sagittarius named Amelia drinks a soda | 7.79 | 7.7 | 4,000,000 | Randall Munroe is a fan of The Baby Name Wizard blog and its Name Voyager tool which shows that "Amelia" has recently exploded in popularity. This particular frequency is taken from:
According to our figures, 6881 Amelias drink 1,44 million liters of soft drinks per year in the United States alone, which means that Randall's figures only account for American Amelias (drinking 356 cc or 12 fl. oz. of soda in each drink). | |
A dog bites someone in the US | 7.01 | 8.6 | 4,500,000 | ||
Someone steals a bicycle | 24.93 | 2.4 | 1,265,000 | ||
A bald eagle catches a fish | 2.69 | 22 | 11,700,000 | ||
50,000 plastic bottles are produced | 1.27 | 47 | 1.24 trillion | ||
50,000 plastic bottles are recycled | 4.64 | 13 | 340 billion | 27% of the plastic bottles manufactured get recycled | |
A bright meteor is visible somewhere | 1.15 | 52 | N/I | ||
Old Faithful erupts | 5640 (94 minutes) |
0.011 (15 per day) |
5,595 | Old Faithful is a geyser in Yellowstone National Park in the US, that tends to erupt every 65 or 91 minutes. XKCD's period of 1h 34m falls between the mean and median of recent Old Faithful eruptions and corresponds to a February 16, 2014 eruption. | |
A fishing boat catches a shark | 0.83 | 72 | 38,000,000 | 1326: Sharks; Shark populations have experienced severe declines due to fishing impacts both of finning and by-catch.[4] | |
Someone in the US is diagnosed with cancer | 18.99 | 3.2 | 1,660,000 | 881: Probability | |
Someone in the US dies from cancer | 54.34 | 1.1 | 580,000 | 881: Probability | |
Someone adopts a dog from a shelter | 15.6 | 3.8 | 2,000,000 | ||
Someone adopts a cat from a shelter | 21.3 | 2.8 | 1,500,000 | ||
Someone gets married | 0.75 | 80 | 42,000,000 | ||
Someone registers a domain | 0.64 | 94 | 49,300,000 | ||
Someone in the US buys a house | 6.22 | 9.6 | 5,000,000 | ||
Someone in the US gets a tattoo | 2.06 | 29 | 15,300,000 | ||
The star PSR J1748-2446AD rotates 1,000 times | 1.4 | 42.9 | N/I | PSR J1748-2446ad is the fastest spinning pulsar known. | |
Someone lies about their age to sign up for Facebook | 4.32 | 14 | 600,000 per month |
To sign up for Facebook, the user must claim to be at least 13 years old. This is a reflection of the U.S. Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. | |
Someone breaks an iPhone screen | 0.93 | 65 | 34,000,000 | ||
A Little League player strikes out | 1.23 | 49 | N/I | Little League is a system of local youth baseball and softball competitions. A strikeout is a situation in baseball and softball. | |
Someone has sex in North Dakota | 1.38 | 43 | 22,900,000 | Since North Dakota has 723,000 inhabitants (ranked the 48th state), and if we estimate the sexually active population as 80% (and if someone means a couple) this means that people in North Dakota have sex 79.1 times a year. It is estimated that 3.93% of the world population has sex on a given day;[5] Randall's rate for North Dakota is 17.3% which is not low. | |
Justin Bieber gains a follower on Twitter | 4.73 | 13 | 556,000 per month |
802: Online Communities 2; Justin Bieber is a Canadian pop music singer whose Twitter account is extremely popular | |
Someone in Denver orders pizza | 1.27 | 47 | 2,000,000 |
Transcript
- [Repetitive events are written in grey and arranged in a grid. Each statement pulses to black and then returns to grey at an interval characteristic of the named event.]
Heartbeat (0.86 sec) |
One birth (0.24 sec) |
One death (0.56 sec) |
Someone edits Wikipedia (0.67 sec) |
Someone buys a vibrator (2.99 sec) |
China builds a car (1.89 sec) |
Japan builds a car (4.01 sec) |
Germany builds a car (5.8 sec) |
The US builds a car (6.95 sec) |
Someone else builds a car (1.03 sec) |
A European Union resident has their first kiss (5.53 sec) |
A US fire department puts out a fire (23 sec) |
Someone hits a hole-in-one (180 sec) |
My turn signal blinks (0.94 sec) |
The turn signal of the car in front of me blinks (0.9 sec) |
Earthquake (magnitude 1) (2.43 sec) |
Earthquake (magnitude 2) (24.26 sec) |
Earthquake (magnitude 3) (242.6 sec) |
Earthquake (magnitude 4) (2426 sec, 42 min) |
Member of the UK Parliament flushes a toilet (10.06 sec) |
An airline flight takes off (0.93 sec) |
Someone buys To Kill a Mockingbird (42.05 sec) |
Someone's pet cat kills a mockingbird (1.82 sec) |
Someone in Phoenix buys new shoes (1.08 sec) |
Someone in Phoenix puts on a condom (2.05 sec) |
Someone locks their keys in their car (2.43 sec) |
A Sagittarius named Amelia drinks a soda (7.79 sec) |
A dog bites someone in the US (7.01 sec) |
Someone steals a bicycle (24.93 sec) |
A bald eagle catches a fish (2.69 sec) |
50,000 plastic bottles are produced (1.27 sec) |
50,000 plastic bottles are recycled (4.64 sec) |
A bright meteor is visible somewhere (1.15 sec) |
Old Faithful erupts (5640 sec, 94 min) |
A fishing boat catches a shark (0.83 sec) |
Someone in the US is diagnosed with cancer (18.99 sec) |
Someone in the US dies from cancer (54.34 sec) |
Someone adopts a dog from a shelter (15.6 sec) |
Someone adopts a cat from a shelter (21.3 sec) |
Someone gets married (0.75 sec) |
Someone registers a domain (0.64 sec) |
Someone in the US buys a house (6.22 sec) |
Someone in the US gets a tattoo (2.06 sec) |
The star PSR J1748-2446ad rotates 1,000 times (1.4 sec) |
Someone lies about their age to sign up for Facebook (4.32 sec) |
Someone breaks an iPhone screen (0.93 sec) |
A little league player strikes out (1.23 sec) |
Someone has sex in North Dakota (1.38 sec) |
Justin Bieber gains a follower on Twitter (4.73 sec) |
Someone in Denver orders a pizza (1.27 sec) |
Discussion
I have began the transcript. Should a table be embedded with all the statements?108.162.250.11 07:33, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- That would be apt. Dammit Randall, why couldn't you have made the comic one image so it'd be easy to put up here? Davidy²²[talk] 07:36, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- If I've calculated it correctly (from the core numbers of prime factors extracted from the set of millisecond cycles extracted below by the script), a single image that contained each and every cycle (exactly as they are individually, without fudging any of them to avoid awkward factors) before repeating from the start again would have a total duration of 8.74E+056ms. (That's around 2.77E+046 years!) I haven't worked out how many frames that would require (at approx 300kp, each, before compression)although I would hazard a guess that most (if not all of them) would probably sustain at a duration of no more than a single figure of milliseconds.
- You might be able to make a more efficient and vastly smaller representation with the .swf format, but I've not used that for a while so might have forgotten some limitations that would apply in that event.
- (Realistically, recreating the array of individual images is the best solution you have. Another case where Randall goes outside the 'traditional' single, simple image format, and messes with everyone's automated XKCD-strip-grabbing scripts, no doubt. At least this time round. ;) 141.101.99.41 02:02, 19 February 2014 (UTC)
- I have created a table but someone else has already updated the transcript in a different style; here is my attempt
<table> <tr> <th>Heartbeat</th> <th>One Birth</th> <th>One Death</th> <th>Someone Edits Wikipedia</th> <th>Someone Buys a Vibrator</th> </tr> <tr> <td>China Builds a Car</td> <td>Japan Builds a Car</td> <td>Germany Builds a Car</td> <td>The US Builds a Car</td> <td>Someone Else Builds a Car</td> </tr> <tr> <td>A European Union President Has Their First Kiss</td> <td>A US Fire Department Puts Out a Fire</td> <td>Someone Hits a Hole-In-One</td> <td>My Turn Signal Blinks</td> <td>The Turn Signal of the Car in Front of Me Blinks</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Earthquake (Magnitude 1)</td> <td>Earthquake (Magnitude 2)</td> <td>Earthquake (Magnitude 3)</td> <td>Earthquake (Magnitude 4)</td> <td>Member of the UK Parliament Flushes a Toilet</td> </tr> <tr> <td>An Airline Flight Takes Off</td> <td>Someone Buys <em>To Kill A Mockingbird</em></td> <td>Someone's Pet Cat Kills a Mockingbird</td> <td>Someone in Pheonix Buys New Shoes</td> <td>Someone in Pheonix Puts on a Condom</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Someone Locks Their Keys in Their Car</td> <td>A Sagittarius Named Amelia Drinks a Soda</td> <td>A Dog Bites Someone in the US</td> <td>Someone Steals a Bicycle</td> <td>A Bald Eagle Catches a Fish</td> </tr> <tr> <td>50,000 Plastic Bottles are Produced</td> <td>50,000 Plastic Bottles are Recycled</td> <td>A Bright Meteor is Visible Somewhere</td> <td>Old Faithful Erupts</td> <td>A fishing Boat Catches a Shark</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Someone in the US is Diagnosed With Cancer</td> <td>Someone in the US Dies from Cancer</td> <td>Someone Adopts a Dog from a Shelter</td> <td>Someone Adopts a Cat from a Shelter</td> <td>Someone gets Married</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Someone Registers a Domain</td> <td>Someone in the US Buys a House</td> <td>Someone in the US gets a Tattoo</td> <td>The Star <em>PSR J1748-2446AD Rotates 1,000 Times</em></td> <td>Someone Lies About their Age to Sign up for Facebook</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Someone Breaks an iPhone Screen</td> <td>A Little League Player Strikes Out</td> <td>Someone has Sex in North Dakota</td> <td>Justin Bieber Gains a Follower on Twitter</td> <td>Someone in Denver Orders a Pizza</td> </tr> </table>108.162.250.11 10:06, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks, I have replaced the transcript with this one as it is closer to the actual comic format. --173.245.53.152 10:24, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
I would like to point out a few things: the title text refers to an experiment that shows a piece of tar, if I remember correctly, which looks like a solid material, dripping very very slowly. It takes a year or more for a drop to fall, and there should be a live stream of it somewhere, I think.
The second is the turning signal being out of sync with the other car. Randall made a comic about that one already. It's a recurring thing.Dulcis (talk) 07:57, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- A year? It took 12 years for the last drop to fall... 108.162.249.114 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
- About turning signals, see XKCD #165--KoundelitchNico (talk) 09:32, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks, I thought of that one too. I have added this in the explanations column of the table I created, feel free to add more / edit if you feel the need to do so. --173.245.53.152 10:24, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
I found a simple tool that calculates the duration of GIF files on github: https://raw.github.com/alimony/gifduration/master/gifduration.py Slightly edited, this is the output:
amelia.gif: 7790 ms (7.79 seconds) bieber.gif: 4730 ms (4.73 seconds) bike.gif: 24930 ms (24.93 seconds) birth.gif: 240 ms (0.24 seconds) book_mockingbird.gif: 42050 ms (42.05 seconds) bottles.gif: 1270 ms (1.27 seconds) car_china.gif: 1890 ms (1.89 seconds) car_elsewhere.gif: 1030 ms (1.03 seconds) car_germany.gif: 5800 ms (5.80 seconds) car_japan.gif: 4010 ms (4.01 seconds) car_us.gif: 6950 ms (6.95 seconds) cat.gif: 21300 ms (21.30 seconds) cat_mockingbird.gif: 1820 ms (1.82 seconds) death.gif: 560 ms (0.56 seconds) denverpizza.gif: 1270 ms (1.27 seconds) dogbite.gif: 7010 ms (7.01 seconds) dog.gif: 15600 ms (15.60 seconds) domain.gif: 640 ms (0.64 seconds) eagle.gif: 2690 ms (2.69 seconds) earthquake1.gif: 2430 ms (2.43 seconds) earthquake2.gif: 24260 ms (24.26 seconds) earthquake3.gif: 242600 ms (242.60 seconds) earthquake4.gif: 2426000 ms (2426.00 seconds) facebook.gif: 4320 ms (4.32 seconds) fire_dept.gif: 23000 ms (23.00 seconds) flight.gif: 930 ms (0.93 seconds) heartbeat.gif: 860 ms (0.86 seconds) holeinone.gif: 180000 ms (180.00 seconds) house.gif: 6220 ms (6.22 seconds) iphone.gif: 930 ms (0.93 seconds) keys.gif: 2430 ms (2.43 seconds) kiss.gif: 5530 ms (5.53 seconds) littleleague.gif: 1230 ms (1.23 seconds) meteor.gif: 1150 ms (1.15 seconds) ndsex.gif: 1380 ms (1.38 seconds) oldfaithful.gif: 5640000 ms (5640.00 seconds) parliament_toilet.gif: 10060 ms (10.06 seconds) phoenix.gif: 2050 ms (2.05 seconds) phoenixshoes.gif: 1080 ms (1.08 seconds) pulsar.gif: 1400 ms (1.40 seconds) recycled.gif: 4640 ms (4.64 seconds) shark.gif: 830 ms (0.83 seconds) tattoo.gif: 2060 ms (2.06 seconds) turnsignal1.gif: 940 ms (0.94 seconds) turnsignal2.gif: 900 ms (0.90 seconds) us_cancer_death.gif: 54340 ms (54.34 seconds) us_cancer.gif: 18990 ms (18.99 seconds) vibrator.gif: 2990 ms (2.99 seconds) wedding.gif: 750 ms (0.75 seconds) wikipedia.gif: 670 ms (0.67 seconds)
This could be useful in creating some kind of table in the Explanation. 108.162.231.109 09:25, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks, I'm working on an explanation right now. --173.245.53.152 09:57, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- OK, I'll leave it at this - the conversions to events per minute don't make sense for all of the tiles and some of them can use more explanation but I'll leave that for someone else to pick up - need to go back to work :-) --173.245.53.152 10:12, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- The edits on Wikipedia doesn't seem very accurate: 0.67s are 3.9M edits per month, while [6] has only edit counts around 3M for the last available months for English Wikipedia. --108.162.254.160 11:17, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
Suggestion: grid like coordinates to refer to other flashing text? (think E4, B6, D5, ...) sirKitKat 173.245.53.173 11:19, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
Someone from the UK parliment flushed the toilet while someone in Phoenix used a condom, while a bald eagle caught a fish... (I know, it's just the frequency, not the exact time it is shown to occur) 141.101.98.131 11:28, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
Shouldn't the North Dakota one have been "two people"? Djbrasier (talk) 11:57, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
He should have added a PNG saying "your screen's refresh rate"... --Kronf (talk) 12:06, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Technically possible
Technically you can create an animated GIF that will repeat every 10 years. The standard says that maximum interval between frames is 65535*0.01 seconds, so to create a 10-year video you'll need 31557600*10/655.35=481538 frames. Since GIF registers only changes pixels for each frame, most of these frames will be empty (I'm not sure about the size, but around 20 bytes), so the whole file would be around 9.6 megabytes. Please include this in the explanation (possibly correcting numbers). --Zverik (talk) 13:18, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- @Zverik; Any reason you not just adding that to the explanation yourself? Spongebog (talk) 20:31, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
Update: Randall used some Adobe software to create highly redundant animated GIFs (with a color profile written to every frame). The thing is, frames are not equal, they gradually change brightness, so each frame is written anew and takes 3670 bytes (measured with oldfaithful.gif). So the estimate for 10-year animated GIF with that software would be 1.77 gigabytes (1.65 GiB). That would be too much indeed. --Zverik (talk) 13:51, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Still, there are only 166 shades of gray between black and the default gray. So all it would take is an additional 166 bigger (in terms of number of bytes) frames. That he uses inferior software is no excuse. --108.162.254.181 14:58, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
Is it possible that the comment Amelia is the most common US name [7] is made in good faith? 173.245.50.84 16:05, 17 February 2014 (UTC). It also said that Sagittarius is the most common star sign, which is false, so I deleted the comment. 173.245.50.84 16:16, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- In fact it appears the most common star sign in the US is going to be Leo or Virgo: http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/16/7/1512.long . Being part way through the cycle, Sagitarius is probably about 1/12 of the population. 141.101.98.10 09:11, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
Anybody understand why there are so many references to Phoenix ? Spongebog (talk) 20:31, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- Because 2 references are not really "many". 173.245.50.84 20:40, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- high birthrate perhaps? people down there seem to have large families (in my experience), at least that may be what he is saying about the condoms.Ercannon (talk) 22:24, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
- I'll hazard a guess here by saying that multiple references to a common item using unrelated topics is a comedic element in itself! In addition, referring to the comment immediately below, unnecessary or impossible precision is also an element of comedy. ExternalMonolog (talk) 23:51, 17 February 2014 (UTC)ExternalMonolog
- Excess precision
To 108.162.245.114 who said that all members of the UK parliament flush a toilet 3,136,938 times per year, please read False precision. 173.245.50.84 22:10, 17 February 2014 (UTC)
This should work for the heading, but it's a complete mess and messes up the entire layout. Could someone have a look at this monstrosity:
<table class cellspacing="5" style="background-color: #FFFFFF; border: 1px solid #AAAAAA; color: black; font-size: 88%; line-height: 1.5em; margin: 0.5em 0 0.5em 1em; padding: 0.2em; text-align: center; width:98%; {{{bodystyle|}}}"><!-- ### Navigation bar (previous, next...) ### --><tr><td><!-- --><ul style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 10px;" class="no-link-underline"><!-- ### If there is an article for the comic prior to this one, create a "prev" ### -->{{#ifexist:{{#expr:1331 - 1}}<!-- -->|<li style="background-color: #6E7B91; border: 1.5px solid #333333; border-radius: 3px 3px 3px 3px; box-shadow: 0 0 5px 0 gray; display: inline; font-size: 16px; font-variant: small-caps; font-weight: 600; margin: 0 4px; padding: 1.5px 0;"><!-- -->[[{{#expr:1331 - 1}}|<span style="color: #FFFFFF; padding: 0 12px;">< Prev</span>]]<!-- --></li><!-- -->|<li style="display: inline; font-size: 16px; margin: 0 4px; padding: 1.5px 12px;"><!-- --> <!-- --></li><!-- -->}}<!-- ### Create a centre button with comic number, date (if exists) and link ### --><li style="background-color: #6E7B91; border: 1.5px solid #333333; border-radius: 3px 3px 3px 3px; box-shadow: 0 0 5px 0 gray; display: inline; font-size: 16px; font-variant: small-caps; font-weight: 600; margin: 0 4px; padding: 1.5px 0;" class="plainlinks"><!-- -->[http://www.xkcd.com/1331/ <!-- --><span style="color: #FFFFFF; padding: 0 12px;">Comic #1331 (February 17, 2014)</span>]<!-- --></li><!-- ### If there is an article for the comic following this one, create a "next" ### -->{{#ifexist:{{#expr:1331 + 1}}<!-- -->|<li style="background-color: #6E7B91; border: 1.5px solid #333333; border-radius: 3px 3px 3px 3px; box-shadow: 0 0 5px 0 gray; display: inline; font-size: 16px; font-variant: small-caps; font-weight: 600; margin: 0 4px; padding: 1.5px 0;"><!-- -->[[{{#expr:1331 + 1}}|<span style="color: #FFFFFF; padding: 0 12px;">Next ></span>]]<!-- --></li><!-- -->|<li style="display: inline; font-size: 16px; margin: 0 4px; padding: 1.5px 12px;"><!-- --> <!-- --></li><!-- --><!-- --></ul><!-- --></td></tr><!-- ### Comic title ### --><tr><td style="font-size: 20px; padding-bottom:10px"><!-- -->Frequency<!-- --></td></tr>}}<!-- ### Comic image and title text ### --><tr><td><!-- --><center><table><tr> <td>[[File:heartbeat.gif]]</td> <td>[[File:birth.gif]]</td> <td>[[File:death.gif]]</td> <td>[[File:wikipedia.gif]]</td> <td>[[File:vibrator.gif]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:car china.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:car japan.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:car germany.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:car us.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:car elsewhere.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:kiss.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:fire dept.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:holeinone.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:turnsignal1.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:turnsignal2.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:earthquake1.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:earthquake2.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:earthquake3.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:earthquake4.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:parliament toilet.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:flight.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:book mockingbird.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:cat mockingbird.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:phoenixshoes.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:phoenix.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:keys.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:amelia.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:dogbite.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:bike.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:eagle.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:bottles.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:recycled.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:meteor.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:oldfaithful.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:shark.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:us cancer.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:us cancer death.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:dog.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:cat.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:wedding.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:domain.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:house.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:tattoo.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:pulsar.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:facebook.gif ]]</td> </tr><tr> <td>[[ File:iphone.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:littleleague.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:ndsex.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:bieber.gif ]]</td> <td>[[ File:denverpizza.gif ]]</td> </tr></table><!-- --><br /><span style="{{{captionstyle|}}}"><span style="color:grey">Title text:</span> This comic shows estimated average frequency. I wanted to include the pitch drop experiment, but it turns out the gif format has some issues with decade-long loops.</span></td></tr></table></center>173.245.53.184 22:31, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
- I'm currently adding the ability to put replace the image field with an optional custom field. Will keep you posted. Davidy²²[talk] 22:40, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
- See Template:comic, in particular the last parameter and the last bullet point in the notes section. Added just for you. This'll be pretty useful for other comics that we've made in the past as well. Thanks for making me get off my butt and do something useful with my admin powers. Davidy²²[talk] 23:13, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
- Cool. Next up: click and drag :D 108.162.231.121 12:24, 19 February 2014 (UTC)
- The awesome thing is, it might be possible for us to port Randall's code/enable javascript and duplicate that comic exactly as it appears on the main xkcd site. The custom field isn't limited to just images, so we can literally represent anything that can be rendered by mediawiki now. Davidy²²[talk] 08:28, 20 February 2014 (UTC)
- Cool. Next up: click and drag :D 108.162.231.121 12:24, 19 February 2014 (UTC)
- See Template:comic, in particular the last parameter and the last bullet point in the notes section. Added just for you. This'll be pretty useful for other comics that we've made in the past as well. Thanks for making me get off my butt and do something useful with my admin powers. Davidy²²[talk] 23:13, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
−
- I don't understand this problem. The HTML-Code is just from the main page, it doesn't explain your problem. I did add all the GIF images yesterday, and for entering all that links in an easy way I changed this table layout to an easy WIKI-Table. In my opinion all the sortable tags should be removed, this is not increasing the depth at this explain. But this is still an open task here, yesterday I just did focus on all the missing GIFs here. --Dgbrt (talk) 22:53, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
Am i alone in thinking that there are many "references to other comics" which are not references at all, but merely about the same subject? "One birth" is supposedly a reference to 746, with presumably the only reason that they both handle the subject of concieving children. The only "correct" reference in my opinion is the reference to 165 (turn signals). 141.101.80.215 15:24, 19 February 2014 (UTC)
Just returning to the "10 years = too large a GIF" thing, without trying to slot into the huge mess it became above ... the thing we should be looking at here is not overall file size, but *rate*. The overall size was somewhere beyond 10mb? OK, but, so what - we've got 10 years to download it, and GIF is an inherently streaming format (each frame displays as it loads, if there hasn't been enough time / bandwidth to pre-buffer it). 1 megabyte per year is 2871 bytes per average day, 120 per hour, 1.99 per minute... and a grand total of 0.266 BITS per second (ie 3.76 seconds per bit). A tortoise could transmit that GIF using morse code and it wouldn't be badly delayed. And the amount of storage represented by 10mb by the time it's finished sending won't even be worth calculating in terms of cost or percentage of available space, when a 16gb flashdrive already costs under £10 retail.
Also, these GIFs seem to be pretty inefficiently compressed; I'm following another webcomic at the moment where most of the frames are high-resolution full-colour aniGIFs, and each one tends to clock in around 40 to 100kb unless there's a lot of action in it... but the "magnitude 1 earthquake" one here is 123kb. Even so, the mag 4 quake GIF - 1000x longer - is but 280kb, so the size obviously doesn't scale linearly with length. The difference is most likely in levels of grey shown during the fade, and as even the 42-second "to kill a mockingbird" one is noticeably slower fading than the more frequent ones around it (not quite enough, at 30fps and maybe 3-4 seconds of fading, to cover the whole 166 shades between lightest and darkest text - but the mag 4 one would easily manage it even at a lower framerate, as it probably takes a good 30 seconds if not a couple minutes). It's possible that 300kb is all it takes for the actual image payload even of a full-fade panel with a lot of high frequency, non repeating patterned text, and all the rest is just padding / blank / repeat overheads.
Which means even our 0.27-bit-per-second tortoise would get all THAT sent in a little over three months, not much more time than would be needed to show the likely fadeout in realtime if it was the first thing that actually appeared. If it was sent by any other realistic communication method, even as POST data from the client end of a 1200/75 baud modem, it'd have entirely ample time to buffer (the first frame would likely appear within 1 to 5 minutes), and your more realistic concern would be not only stopping your computer from rebooting before the GIF had time to run through a cycle, but keeping it running continuously for that length of time (and, if needed, downloading the file really slowly throughout) in any case. 141.101.98.150 19:08, 29 September 2014 (UTC)
Anyone notice how the explanations for the car-related frequencies are nonsensical? They're so nonsensical that I can't tell how to fix them without actually knowing the subject. Please fix.108.162.219.206 05:20, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
I'm filling in the remaining fields the best I can. I did the last one; Denver pizza. Math is not my strong point. It's probably a joke statistic, but someone may want to double-check my math. I didn't see any figures for Denver's pizza consumption, but I figured it was one of those things where it just maybe worked out to match the Denver population. -- 4jonah (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
All fields are now filled out to the best of my ability. I have not edited ones already completed, but finished empty ones as accurately as possible. -- 4jonah (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
"About half of all cyclists have their bikes stolen, oftentimes more than once, but riders have a 90% chance of theft, all according to this report." It's a very confusing sentence and doesn't match the data in the linked report. About half of all people who ever cycle get their bikes stolen at some point. People who cycle every day are 90% more likely to have their bike stolen than people who cycle infrequently. Not 90% chance of theft. I will update this if nobody objects. AmbroseChapel (talk) 23:47, 27 August 2017 (UTC)
Not sure if it's the sort of interesting fact that should be added or not, but under the "Sagittarius named Amelia" section, that link to the Baby Name Wizard shows the peak popularity for the name "Amelia" was in 2012. The character of Amelia Pond was on Doctor Who from 2010 to mid-2012, and that was also the height of the immense popularity in America of Matt Smith playing the title role. Might be the source of the popularity of that name. Also, does the previous analysis take into account the fact that Sagittarius named Amelia wouldn't start drinking soda until they are at least a few years old? Would taking out all the ones under the age of five or six let us bring back in SNA in the rest of the world, given that soda is much more popular in America than elsewhere? CritterKeeper (talk) 19:00, 5 May 2020 (UTC)
Anyone want to help calculate the odds of all of these flashing at the same time? IJustWantToEditStuff (talk) 01:01, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
- If I have all the timings entered correctly (because I just did it on a calculator when I should have gone with a script on the source data) it's... Approximately 2.77x1046 years.
- That's because I have factorised the ms durations of each gif (as given above, give or take a typo) and the lowest common multiple is built up as being (2⁷ * 3⁵ * 5⁴ * 7 * 11 * 13 * 19 * 23 * 29² * 31 * 41 * 43 * 47 * 67 * 71 * 79 * 83 * 103 * 127 * 139 * 211 * 269 * 277 * 311 * 401 * 503 * 701 * 1213) milliseconds... But feel free to validate my assumptions. 172.70.86.4 03:50, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
Sorting table by frequency doesn’t sort by frequency
When I click the heading to sort by it it goes .33, .25, .011, .025, 1.1, 1.4, which doesn’t seem right… -- Theanswertolifetheuniverseandeverything (talk) 17:13, 7 October 2024 (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
- Before checking (and correcting/implementing), I'd say that it's a data-sort-* issue.
- By default, it'll base its sort on the literal cell contents and (unless given an override by data-sort-type="" option) might treat it as a string-sort (where "0.33" and ".33" might sort differently against other things to numeric 0.33 value). There's some allowance for various different forms of numbers (and even some prefixes/suffixes to numbers), but it's easy to 'break' this by changing the contents of a single cell so that it isn't numeric.
- But all this can be 'corrected', as necessary, with a data-sort-value="" cell option. e.g. give the freetext of "about 3" an actual value of 3 for sorting purposes.
- If it's not that (it might not be), maybe I'll discover what it is when I actually go to check. But that's normally the answer to this sort of thing, for future reference. 172.70.86.199 21:26, 7 October 2024 (UTC)