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Posted: Dec 13, 2013 2:24 PM
by Jeremy
Tammer in Philly wrote:WilNJ wrote:Tammer in Philly wrote:... but seriously, what is the list of non-college-degree 6-figure jobs? A median income in the $80s is high for the vast majority of the country, "superzips" with double that notwithstanding.
-tammer
I'm guessing but what you're likely seeing is owners of blue collar enterprises, many of those came up through the trades.
Okay, I'd lump that in with my initial example. If you went from apprentice --> tradesman --> owner of your business employing a dozen tradesmen, you are a tradesman. And many of them do very, very well, and demand is tied to population growth more or less.
-tammer
Small business owners are part of it for this area, we do have a few. Also, I wonder what they consider "college educated" to be. Most define that as a bachelor's degree or better, and ignore the associate's level degrees. There are a lot of dental hygienists, nurses, CNAs, and other "low level medical staff" in this area with comfortable incomes that might not fit their "college educated" criteria. Then the SBOs and other tradespeople push the median income up from there.
Just a guess. There's also the possibility that a rather affluent sub-section of the zip is driving up the median income for the whole area. There's a cluster of houses up on the ridge that are obviously owned by people with very healthy earnings.
Perhaps it's all of that together. It'd be interesting to find out, but I don't know how I'd do that exactly.
Posted: Dec 13, 2013 2:26 PM
by davintosh
Tammer in Philly wrote:WilNJ wrote:Tammer in Philly wrote:... but seriously, what is the list of non-college-degree 6-figure jobs? A median income in the $80s is high for the vast majority of the country, "superzips" with double that notwithstanding.
-tammer
I'm guessing but what you're likely seeing is owners of blue collar enterprises, many of those came up through the trades.
Okay, I'd lump that in with my initial example. If you went from apprentice --> tradesman --> owner of your business employing a dozen tradesmen, you are a tradesman. And many of them do very, very well, and demand is tied to population growth more or less.
-tammer
Not to argue, but I'd think someone who's run the gamut like that would have a much wider skill set than a tradesman; "entrepreneur" would be a better label, if a label is needed.
Posted: Dec 13, 2013 3:13 PM
by Tammer in Philly
davintosh wrote:Tammer in Philly wrote:WilNJ wrote:Tammer in Philly wrote:... but seriously, what is the list of non-college-degree 6-figure jobs? A median income in the $80s is high for the vast majority of the country, "superzips" with double that notwithstanding.
-tammer
I'm guessing but what you're likely seeing is owners of blue collar enterprises, many of those came up through the trades.
Okay, I'd lump that in with my initial example. If you went from apprentice --> tradesman --> owner of your business employing a dozen tradesmen, you are a tradesman. And many of them do very, very well, and demand is tied to population growth more or less.
-tammer
Not to argue, but I'd think someone who's run the gamut like that would have a much wider skill set than a tradesman; "entrepreneur" would be a better label, if a label is needed.
Sure, it's a matter of interpretation. I don't apply the "entrepreneuer" label to every business owner; I tend to reserve it for those who can transition ideas into viable business interests. But I wouldn't say that being a plumber means one can only do plumbing. Everyone is better off if they have some practical bigger-picture skills to complement their specialty.
-tammer
Posted: Dec 13, 2013 6:35 PM
by Tammer in Philly
Posted: Dec 13, 2013 7:43 PM
by Jeremy
I really like those. I get really confused when people try to give me directions by telling me to go to an area that doesn't exist specifically on any map. "So, you head over to Federal Hill, take your second right, then just keep going until you reach Chippens Hill, and it'll be on your left."
Um, wait ... what? It seems that only the longtime locals know the boundaries of these mysterious areas a lot of times.
Posted: Dec 14, 2013 12:02 AM
by Tammer in Philly
Jeremy wrote:I really like those. I get really confused when people try to give me directions by telling me to go to an area that doesn't exist implicitly on any map. "So, you head over to Federal Hill, take your second right, then just keep going until you reach Chippens Hill, and it'll be on your left."
:? Um, wait ... what? It seems that only the longtime locals know the boundaries of these mysterious areas a lot of times.
Learning neighborhood boundaries, especially hearing people's opinions of what street is "the line" between two neighborhoods when it is in dispute, is something I enjoy when traveling in new cities.
-tammer
Posted: Jan 06, 2014 10:26 PM
by davintosh
Here's a new one:
http://www.sightsmap.com/#
You may not be familiar with Google Maps’s Panoramio service. It aggregates uploaded photos with geotagged information and presents them in a map format. Now, they have released a heat map showing the most popular places in the world for photography.
http://www.popphoto.com/news/2013/12/mo ... -to-google
Posted: Jan 06, 2014 10:47 PM
by Tammer in Philly
That's really neat.
Posted: Jan 10, 2014 5:01 PM
by CharleyDog
Posted: Jan 14, 2014 9:57 AM
by John in VA
Posted: Jan 14, 2014 3:01 PM
by unt0uchable
This should waste a good portion of your afternoon:
http://dsl.richmond.edu/historicalatlas/
Something like 500+ maps from the 18th century onward....
Posted: Jan 30, 2014 10:44 AM
by John in VA
22 Maps That Show How Americans Speak English Totally Differently From Each Other:
http://www.businessinsider.com/22-maps- ... 013-6?op=1
Posted: Jan 30, 2014 11:23 AM
by davintosh
Thought this was quite apropos considering the snowgasm going on in the south... A map showing the amount of snow it takes to close schools in a given area.
(click on the map for a bigger version)
Lots of discussion about it in the
Reddit thread about the map; based on one of the comments, I think this thread should be renamed to
MapPorn or something similar. Just a suggestion.
Posted: Jan 30, 2014 11:58 PM
by djazz
Closer to home,
http://www.318ti.org (bottom of main page) has a cool map showing members and a ping ((O)) symbol for the ones that are online.
Posted: Jan 31, 2014 12:39 PM
by funfunfer
djazz wrote:Closer to home,
http://www.318ti.org (bottom of main page) has a cool map showing members and a ping ((O)) symbol for the ones that are online.
That's very cool!
Posted: Mar 19, 2014 6:11 PM
by davintosh
Here's another good one, that's actually quite depressing considering the fact that I was in sunny SoCal last weekend and came back here -- 18 counties away from the Pacific Ocean -- to snow.
http://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comment ... ic_coasts/
Click the image for more detail.
Posted: Mar 19, 2014 7:11 PM
by RonW
davintosh wrote:Here's another good one, that's actually quite depressing considering the fact that I was in sunny SoCal last weekend and came back here -- 18 counties away from the Pacific Ocean -- to snow.
http://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comment ... ic_coasts/
Click the image for more detail.
Well, today I learned something new about Delaware and Rhode Island.
Posted: Mar 19, 2014 10:36 PM
by Tammer in Philly
davintosh wrote:Here's another good one, that's actually quite depressing considering the fact that I was in sunny SoCal last weekend and came back here -- 18 counties away from the Pacific Ocean -- to snow. :facepalm:
http://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comment ... ic_coasts/
Click the image for more detail.
Counties in the west are big, so I'll bet that map lines up pretty well with a sort of "center of mass" view of the US. Would like to see that, in fact. Population distribution and a "balance point".
Posted: Mar 19, 2014 10:46 PM
by 1st 5er
davintosh wrote:... I was in sunny SoCal last weekend...
Did you pick up your My Pretty Pony T-Shirt?
Posted: Mar 19, 2014 11:24 PM
by geordi
1st 5er wrote:davintosh wrote:... I was in sunny SoCal last weekend...
Did you pick up your My Pretty Pony T-Shirt?
No, but I bet he took his turn on the motorcycle with the gorilla mask and furry Na-nookie hat on making vroom-vroom noises.
Posted: Apr 17, 2014 7:41 PM
by Tammer in Philly
Posted: Apr 17, 2014 7:47 PM
by Tammer in Philly
davintosh wrote:Here's another good one, that's actually quite depressing considering the fact that I was in sunny SoCal last weekend and came back here -- 18 counties away from the Pacific Ocean -- to snow. :facepalm:
http://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comment ... ic_coasts/
Click the image for more detail.
Revisiting this on a bigger monitor, I feel a little ripped off. My 21-county route to the Atlantic actually puts me in Baltimore, which is on a river mouth that leads to a bay that leads to the Atlantic. <sigh>
Posted: Apr 17, 2014 8:28 PM
by Karl Grau
My old world map was printed in 1986 so besides being a little rough around the edges (literally), a lot of borders and names had changed. I bought this HUGE one from Amazon. I can't believe how expensive maps are.
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 10:29 AM
by Tammer in Philly
For the baseball fans:
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014 ... eball.html
I live in a majority-Cubs-fan ZIP bordering the northern edge of the White Sox zone. As I grew up in Boone County, Indiana (as a Cubs fan, naturally), I am feeling good about my neighborhood selection. :-)
Also of note, you can see all the retirees in Florida--the 2nd and 3rd most popular teams in most areas of Florida are the Yankees and Red Sox.
-tammer
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 10:52 AM
by Jeremy
I love baseball rivalries. Especially since I grew up and still live right near the infamous "Munson-Nixon line". There really isn't a clear line, but there are definite border areas where the rivalry is fierce. Families are divided. Mom is a Yankee fan, dad's a Red Sox fan. Son1 roots for the Sox, son2 for the pinstripes.
It's mostly friendly aside from a few jerks, but it's good fun at the bars come end of season and playoff time. I used to go to a bar where one half was all Red Sox memorabilia and the other half was Yankees. Yankees had one bartender, the Red Sox had another. It was pretty hilarious on game nights.
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 11:09 AM
by unt0uchable
That is awesome. Thanks for posting Tammer!
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 12:29 PM
by davintosh
Here's an interesting map showing the relative amount of land owned by the federal government in each state.
The question that comes to mind is, "Why is there that much government land in the western states?" That topic is probably best left to the Tailpipe I guess.
http://www.thefederalistpapers.org/us/w ... d-takeover
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 12:40 PM
by unt0uchable
davintosh wrote:...The question that comes to mind is, "Why is there that much government land in the western states?" That topic is probably best left to the Tailpipe I guess.
That is a very interesting topic. I might follow this to the TP if it makes it. I'm curious to know why as well.
Posted: Apr 25, 2014 6:23 PM
by Karl Grau
unt0uchable wrote:davintosh wrote:...The question that comes to mind is, "Why is there that much government land in the western states?" That topic is probably best left to the Tailpipe I guess.
That is a very interesting topic. I might follow this to the TP if it makes it. I'm curious to know why as well.
I don't know about the other states but in California the National Parks are about the size of Connecticut and then add in military installations and you have a second Connecticut. There are also 100 Federal Indian reservations but I don't know how much land they take up.
Posted: May 02, 2014 3:27 PM
by davintosh
Another interesting map graphic broaching a topic that probably be relegated to The Tailpipe:
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/1171 ... ged-states