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    • Mr.MU$IC Mix Vol.14販売のお知らせ
      mrmusictokyo@gmail.com

    • Step On Hallelujah
      step out-10th anniversary tokyo special -giga gig- open/start 24:00 前売り 2000円(d別)/当日 2300円(d別)

    • Death penalty statistics from the US and around the world
      The execution by firing squad of Ronnie Lee Gardner in Utah has shone a light on capital punishment around the world. See who has been executed in the US this year, how states compare with each other - and with other countries• Get the dataRonnie Lee Gardner has become the first American in 14 years to be put to death by firing squad - only the third person to die by firing squad in the US since 1977.The death penalty puts the US in some interesting company: China leads the world in executions - with thousands killed in 2009, according to Amnesty International. Since Cuba stopped carrying out executions in 2003, the US has been the only country in the Americas to execute people, with the exception of St Kitts and Nevis, where one person was put to death in 2008, according to AI.We have collated statistics from AI - and the excellent Death Penalty Information Centre to show how US capital punishment breaks down across America - and we've included the latest world estimates.In the spreadsheet below you will find:• US executions in 2010• Execution rates by US state since the reintroduction of capital punishment in 1976• Executions around the world in 2009• Method of US execution - and how many have died that wayWhat can you do with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterUnited StatesCapital punishmentUS domestic policyChinaCubaAmnesty InternationalSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms ユタ州のロニー李ガードナーの銃殺の実行は、世界中の死刑に光を輝いている

    • Does hate crime rise where the BNP has councillors? The data
      Finding out if race crime was worse in areas with a BNP councillor took weeks of freedom of information requests before we could tell the story. See the data we received here• Get the dataOver a period of several months we used the freedom of information act to gather statistics for racial and religiously aggravated crimes in areas where the British National Party has won council seats. We asked police forces to provided data that mapped as closely as possible onto the electoral ward boundaries and in most cases they were able to do precisely that. The data - which we received in wildly varying formats and with different levels of data - showed crime statistics before and after BNP councillors won seats as well as the overall trend for racial and religiously aggravated crimes for the police force area as a whole. The exercise revealed that in some cases, incidents of such crime rose following in the election of BNP members while at the same time the overall force trend was falling. We wrote about our findings in January. Following several requests from readers to access the data we received from police forces, it is published here.Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary BNPLocal electionsFree our dataCrimeRace issuesRace & religionFreedom of informationPoliceRobert Boothguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds レース犯罪が悪い地域でBNPパリバの議員となったかどうかを見つける私達が話をする前に情報の要求の自由週間かかった

    • World government data: try our new, improved search of the world's best statistics. US, Canada, NZ, Aus, Lon, San Francisco, Toronto plus API
      Our data search now includes California, San Francisco, Toronto and London - as well as the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the UK. See how to find the world's government data• Search the world's government data• Use the World Government data API• Full list: the world's open data sitesHow do you navigate around the huge amounts of data now being released by the world's governments? How do you compare crime in one part of the world to crime in another?Well, this is the place. We have created the ultimate gateway to world government data.At World Government Data our busy team of developers has added lots of new data to the site, including for the first time:• London• San Francisco• California• TorontoAnd that's in addition to data from the UK, USA, Australia and New Zealand.The site is pretty simple to use and allows you to help us find the best datasets by ranking them, collect similar datasets together from around the world and browse all datasets by each country, city or state.There's an API too to enable developers to build applications around the data - you can read more about how to use that here.So, take a look, see what you can discover - and let us know which datasets change your view of the world.World government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterGovernment dataFree our dataSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 我々のデータの検索は、現在カリフォルニア州、サンフランシスコ、トロント、ロンドンを含む - だけでなく、米国、カナダ、オーストラリア、ニュージーランド、英国など

    • European birth rates data: what's happening to Germany?
      Western European countries are having fewer babies - and the lowest of them all is Germany. See how the data compares• Get the dataThe world's population may be growing at a startling rate, but Western Europe tells another story. Birthrates across many Western European countries are now at their lowest for years. And the lowest of them all, according to the latest figures from Eurostat, is Germany.Germany's birth rate - which is the number of births per 1,000 women of child-bearing age - is now 7.88. That's down 16% in the last ten years and the lowest in the country's history. Other countries whose rates have also declined include Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal.Meanwhile, the UK and Spain have seen their birthrates rising, as have most of Eastern Europe.We've extracted the data for you play with - including ISO country codes. What can you do with the numbers?Download the data• DATA: download the full list as a spreadsheetCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.ukWorld government data• Search the world's government datasets• More environment data• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterSummary dataGermanyPopulationEuropean commissionItalySpainPortugalNetherlandsSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 西欧諸国が少ない赤ちゃんを抱えている - それらの最低のすべてのドイツがある

    • Mapping Twitter city landscapes
      Urban tick have used Twitter geospatial data to draw startling new maps of the world's most active citiesIncreasingly developers are starting to use Twitter as a source for data - especially the handy geolocation details.And one of the most elegant we've seen is this lovely piece of work from UrbanTick. This is how they did it:The data is derived from tweets sent via a mobile device that includes the location at the time of sending the message. The contours correspond to the density of tweets, the mountains rise over active locations and cliffs drop down in to calm valleys, flowing out to tweet deserts. Throughout the emerging landscape features have been renamed to reflect these conditions.So London now looks like this, with the highest peak Soho Mountain, extending Eastward towards Liverpool Street:And Paris like this:And here's New York:They got the data from their rather lovely Tweet-o-Meter, which measures Tweets in the most active Twitter locations around the world and is a joint project by CASA, University College LondonAny other Twitter geo visualisations we should be looking at?World government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterTwitterSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 都市ダニは世界で最もcitiesIncreasingly活発な開発者の驚くべき新しいマップを描画するデータのソースとしてTwitterを使い始めているTwitterの地理空間データを使用している - 特に便利位置情報を最も我々が見てきたエレガントなdetails.Andは、この素敵な作品ですUrbanTickからの仕事の

    • Which is the world's most expensive city? Costs of living compared and visualised
      It's not where you might expect. Mercers have ranked the world's most expensive places for ex-pats to live. See how the cities compare• Get the dataYes, it's Luanda in Angola. According to the latest research from Mercers, this is the world's most expensive city for expatriatesAccording to the latest Cost of Living Survey from Mercer. Tokyo is in second position, with Ndjamena in Chad in third place. Moscow is in fourth position followed by Geneva in fifth while Karachi is ranked as the world's least expensive city. The survey found that Luanda is three times as costly as Karachi. From the survey, London (rank 17) is the UK's most expensive city, followed by Aberdeen (149), Glasgow (155), and Birmingham (158). Belfast (182) is ranked as the UK's least expensive city. The survey covers 214 cities across five continents and measures the comparative cost of over 200 items in each location, including housing, transport, food, clothing, household goods and entertainment. New York is used as the base city for the index and all cities are compared against New York. The cost of housing – often the biggest expense for expats - plays an important part in determining where cities are ranked.There's some great country comparisons below. What can you do with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary EconomicsFuture of citiesConsumer affairsLondonNew YorkSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to ou それはどこに予想ではない

    • Every British prime minister listed since 1721. As a spreadsheet
      Full list of every British prime minister, ever, including David Cameron• Get the dataNow that David Cameron has finally entered Downing Street, he's joined a tradition that goes back nearly 300 years. What makes him unusual is that as a coalition prime minsiter, he's one of a pretty select few - there was a national coalition in the 1930s and a national government during the second world war. But First Past the Post tends to deliver governments with majorities - as is obvious from the list below.So, this is every British prime minister ever, with an entry for each year and all their parties. Can you mash it up with one of our other datasets? Some years had two prime ministers, so let us know if there's a better way to display this.Data summary Download the data• DATA: British prime Ministers since 1721World government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterPolitics pastGeneral election 2010David CameronGordon BrownSecond world warSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds デービッドキャメロン•含むすべてのイギリスの首相の完全なリストは、これまで、彼は約300年前に伝統に参加だdataNowがデビッドキャメロンがついにダウニングストリートに入っている情報をゲット

    • Firearms and shotgun certificates data by police force
      Cumbria - scene of horrific shootings - has over 22,000 legally-held shotguns. See how it compares• Get the dataThe UK may pride itself on a relatively low rate of gun crime, but the Cumbria shootings have brought fresh attention to the issue of legally-held weapons.In England and Wales, 1.8m shotguns and other firearms are legally held. The latest figures from the Home Office show that there are 138,728 firearms certificates on issue, plus another 574,946 for shotguns. That's a rise of 7.9% for firearms and 4.7% for shotguns between 2008/09 and 2007/08 - the latest year we can get the data for.Get the full data - and see which police forces have the most legally-held firearms and certificates on issue. You can download the data below - and see our summary of the key figures.Download the data• DATA: download the full list as a spreadsheetCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.ukWorld government data• Search the world's government datasets• More environment data• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterKey dataGun crimePoliceCumbria shootingsSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds カンブリアは - 恐ろしい銃乱射事件の現場 - 22,000以上の法的携。散弾銃を持って

    • National debt and deficit data for every OECD country
      Developed economies around the world are in trouble with their budget deficits. See how their national debts compare• Get the dataThe global recession and credit crunch has hit the most-developed economies hard - even though the OECD is now talking up their prospects.As George Osborne bases the £6bn of cuts around getting our deficit down, we have (with thanks to the Institiute for Fiscal Studies) extracted the key data from the OECD. We wanted to show how our budget deficit and national debt compare to equivalent economies.The full data (mapped above by Many Eyes - you can see the full version including debt here) shows that while the UK has a lower national debt than many economies, its deficit is rapidly becoming one of the worst. The full data below goes back to 1960. Can you visualise that for us?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary Economic growth (GDP)Economic policyUS economic growth and recessionGreen shootsEuropean debt crisisGreeceUnited StatesBudgetGeorge OsborneCredit crunchSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 世界中の開発経済がトラブルでの財政赤字とされます

    • Eurovision 2010: full list of winners, 2010 participants and UK performance since 1956
      It's the Eurovision final this Saturday. Pick your favourites from the list of participants• Get the dataThe final of the Eurovision Song Contest takes place in Oslo on Saturday night. Josh Dubovie will be representing the United Kingdom with his song That Sounds Good To Me, penned by popmeisters Mike Stock, Pete Waterman and Steve Crosby. Can he better the credible fifth place of last year's UK entrant Jade Ewen (ably supported by Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber)?Josh's entry aside, the participants are a mixed bag of heartfelt ballads and campy Europop, which is what we love about Eurovision after all. A competition for statisticians and mathematicians, run by Kaggle, puts Azerbaijan's Safura, singing Drip Drop, in first place, followed by Germany (Satellite, sung by Lena) and Armenia (Apricot Stone, sung by Eva Rivas). Azerbaijan and Armenia will of course need to make it through the semi-final tonight to be sure of performing on Saturday.Check out the table below for this year's contestants (including at semi-final level - some of these have already been voted out of the competition), and download the spreadsheet to see the UK's finishing position in all Eurovisions since it started in 1956 - and the full list of all winners ever, with ISO country codes.Download the data• DATA: Eurovision 2010World government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary EurovisionPop and rockKaty Stoddardguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds これは、ビジョンの最終今週の土曜日です

    • World Cup 2010: Statistics from all the football World Cup finals since 1930
      The football World Cup starts in South Africa in June. Find out which team has the best track record• Get the dataHost nation South Africa is making the final preparations for the football World Cup, which kicks off there next month. You can follow the build-up and coverage of the tournament on the Guardian microsite.Spain are the current favourites, though England are close behind with odds of 6/1. But who has triumphed at past World Cups? Who has scored the most goals (or let the most goals in)? And who has been caught offside most often in recent years?We've compiled a dataset of World Cup statistics since the first tournament in 1930, taken from the FIFA World Cup archive. Only seven teams have held the trophy aloft in the 18 tournaments held since 1930 (see table below). Brazil have the most wins, with five titles, but only top the table for the most games won (all seven in 2002). Perhaps surprisingly, Hungary have scored the most goals in a single tournament (27 in 1954), while Portugal have had the most shots on target (56 in 2006, though they only scored seven).Check out the table below for basic statistics for the winning teams, or download the spreadsheet for detailed data on every competitor at every World Cup finals tournament, including ISO codes, goals for and against, corners and penalties.Download the data• DATA: Statistics from every World Cup finals tournamentWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary World Cup 2010BrazilFifaKaty Stoddardguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | サッカーワールドカップが南アフリカで6月に開始されます

    • Debt crisis: how Fitch, Moody's and S&P rate each country's credit rating. Visualised - with a spreadsheet
      Fallout from Greece's financial crisis has shone a light on the work of credit ratings agencies. See how different country scores compare• Get the dataAs the fate of Greece's bailout is being thrashed out, the role of the credit ratings agencies is being examined afresh. There are fears over Spain now: the Spanish public deficit was one of the highest in the euro area last year, at 11.4% of GDP. The government has pledged to reduce the deficit to 3% by 2013 and is due to announce a fresh round of cost savings later today.So, who are the ratings agencies? The big three agencies are Fitch, Moody's and Standard & Poors. What they do is assess how likely a borrower is to be able to repay its debts and help those trading debt contracts in the secondary market. That means for those trading debt contracts such as treasury gilts after they've been issued, ratings agencies help assess a fair price to charge. Ratings agencies have been criticised for having too much clout in jittery markets during the financial crisis. They were widely attacked for failing to warn of the risks posed by certain securities, in particular mortgage-backed securities.Losing your rating or being downgraded can have a fatal effect on your country's ability to borrow money on the markets.Thanks to the three big agencies, we can bring you the ratings of countries around the world as of today. Because each agency's approach is slightly different, we've colour-coded them in three broad categories too.Can you do something with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get フォールアウトはギリシャの金融危機から信用格付け機関の仕事に光を輝いている

    • Volcanic ash: how do you spot the next volcano to disrupt flights? Every one listed
      The world's airlines fly over active volcanoes every day. Now a comprehensive list from the Smithsonian gives us a guide to each one• Get the dataThe decision not to fly any aircraft across Europe since last Thursday is based on the latest guidance from the International Civil Aviation Organisation. In turn, the UK's traffic control organisation, Nats, and the Civil Aviation Authority follow the guidance to the letter.The flight which sparked this system was BA 009 - a 747 from Kuala Lumpur to Perth where all four engines stopped at 37,000 feet in 1982. An international agreement followed - and the bottom line now is that volcanic ash means no flights.The agreement set up a number of volcanic ash warning centres around the world. VAAC London (actually based at the Met Office in Exeter) covers Iceland - which is why the UK has taken the lead on this volcano.Behind the agreement sits a mountain of data - in particular a complete list of the world's volcanos from the Smithsonian Institution. ICAO used this to categorise each volcano by its type and its eruption history.The Eyjafjöll volcano in Iceland (row 1449 on the spreadsheet) is categorised here as S0 - which typically means tall plumes of ash. It's based on historic records - the last time Eyjafjöll erupted was in the 19th century.This is the full dataset - which includes geographic coordinates and the categorisations. As the map above shows - they straddle the world's main flight routes.Can you do anything with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More a 世界の航空会社は活火山で、毎日飛ぶ

    • Maternal mortality: how many women die in childbirth in your country?
      A new study in the Lancet shows how many women still die in childbirth around the world. See what the figures are• Get the dataJust as many women are dying in pregnancy and childbirth in the UK as they were 20 years ago, leaving Britain trailing behind countries like Albania, Poland and Slovakia as well as the wealthier nations of Europe.The stagnation of the UK, only 23rd in the global league table, contrasts strikingly with the developing world where, according to a major new and comprehensive study in the Lancet, real inroads are being made on death rates among women in childbirth.Globally, the number of deaths dropped from more than 500,000 a year in 1980 to 343,000 a year in 2008. In the last 20 years, deaths have been declining at a rate of about 1.4% a year.The figures - shown below, show the Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) - the number of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.The attached spreadsheet also includes ISO country codes. Can you do anything with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary HealthMillennium Development GoalsHealth & wellbeingPopulationPregnancyChildbirthUnited NationsObesitySimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds ランセットの新しい研究では、どのように多くの女性がまだ出産世界中で死ぬ示しています

    • Simon Singh's libel victory: how many libel cases are there?
      As science writer Simon Singh wins his libel case, we look at how the numbers of proceedings have changed• Get the dataSimon Singh has won his libel case - over a piece he wrote in the Guardian. The British Chiropractic Association dropped its libel action against the science writer today, filing a notice of discontinuation in the high court.The case had become a cause celebre, with scientists, celebrities and freedom of speech campaigners lining up to condemn the British libel laws and argue that Singh had a right to express his opinion in print.The sudden end to the case (read the full judgment here) will strengthen the campaign for reform of the libel laws, which Jack Straw, the justice secretary, is considering. It is also a specific pledge in the Liberal Democrats' manifesto.According to statistics from the Ministry of Justice, libel cases have seen a huge jump recently - and big cases are now the largest percentage of the total they have ever been. The Libel Reform Campaign now has 50,000 signatures in its' petition to reform the laws - in addition to commitments from Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats.And defending yourself in a libel case is an expensive buisness: Singh tells the Datablog he lost 46 solid weeks of work in defending his article and it cost him £200,000.We've pulled together the data from several years below. What can you do with it?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary LawLabourConservativesMedia lawJack StrawPress f 科学ライターのサイモンシンは彼の名誉毀損の勝訴として、我々は手続の番号が変更されてどのように•dataSimonシンは彼の名誉棄損訴訟を獲得して入手してください - 彼はガーディアンに書いた作品で見てください

    • United Nations population data for every country in the world
      The world's population is growing at a startling rate. These figures show the number of people in each country on the globe• Get the dataHow many people live in each country in the world - and how is the world's population growing? The best source on earth for the answer is the United Nations population division and this comprehensive set of data shows estimates for the populations of every country in the world, going from 1950 all the way up to 2050. It shows that the developed world will shrink and the developing world will grow. These are the figures compared, courtesy of Timetric:Showing these by percentage change over the whole period - giving you the fastest growing countries globally - could be an interesting visualisation. Robin McKie writes that Britain will become one of the world's 'lifeboats' as resources get scarce as the world's population increases. And, at the end of last year, Africa got its billionth citizen:Climbing from 110 million in 1850, Africa's headcount reached this threshold in 2009, according to the United Nations, although patchy census data in many countries means that no one can say where or when.These are the latest figures - what can you do with them?Download the data• DATA: World populations by country - up to 2050World government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary PopulationUnited NationsSimon Rogersguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 世界の人口は驚くべき速度で成長している


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