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Old 09-18-2012, 07:09 PM
 
Location: USA
3,068 posts, read 7,979,675 times
Reputation: 2482

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Quote:
Originally Posted by annie_himself View Post
Hard to believe that Texas and Louisiana share little call data.
Yeah, I agree Annie. I don't even know anyone in Mississippi if they are referring to personal and business calls(?)
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Old 09-18-2012, 08:32 PM
 
Location: Charlotte (Hometown: Columbia SC)
1,441 posts, read 2,925,043 times
Reputation: 1184
The Connected States of America | Visuals

This interactive map is interesting as well by county
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Old 09-19-2012, 06:21 AM
 
Location: The City
22,379 posts, read 38,678,927 times
Reputation: 7974
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonofaque86 View Post
The Connected States of America | Visuals

This interactive map is interesting as well by county

This makes more sense to me, also it shows individual county connectivity


the SMS may be most interesting to get at personal life connections


Nice find
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Old 09-19-2012, 07:55 AM
 
Location: Pittsburgh PA
1,125 posts, read 2,335,258 times
Reputation: 585
Quote:
Originally Posted by kidphilly View Post
It appears the Area code over lays may be playing a role as I look at the data. May actually be a local effect more than regional effect in this regard
This is what I am thinking. I do not see the connection between Erie and southern WV for any practical reasons
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Old 09-19-2012, 11:46 AM
 
Location: Louisiana to Houston to Denver to NOVA
16,505 posts, read 26,092,111 times
Reputation: 13275
Quote:
Originally Posted by Smtchll View Post
Northern Mississippi is full of suburbs of Memphis. A lot of people who live there are originally from Memphis. I see far more Mississippi licence plates in Memphis than I see Arkansas plates.
True. West Memphis and the area aren't as populated as northern Mississippi as far as Memphis suburbs are concerned.
Quote:
Originally Posted by hdwell View Post
Yeah, I agree Annie. I don't even know anyone in Mississippi if they are referring to personal and business calls(?)
Lots of people actually, think about Natchez and Vidalia, Baton Rouge and everything south of Natchez, New Orleans, and the gulf coast and southern Mississippi like Hattiesburg and McComb. In your neck of the woods it should be more focused on Texas and Arkansas.
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Old 09-21-2012, 09:28 AM
 
Location: Washington D.C. By way of Texas
20,500 posts, read 33,311,608 times
Reputation: 12109
I think Western Louisiana should be the same color as Eastern Texas to be honest. Eastern Louisiana is about right. You can't have Eastern Texas as the same color as Mississippi. There isn't enough people or data to support that. That maybe explains the sharp cut off and that's why I understand why it doesn't show in that map. It's basically a compromise.
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Old 09-21-2012, 10:31 AM
 
Location: Shaw.
2,226 posts, read 3,831,656 times
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Other people have pointed out the surprises, but there's a lot in there that confirms things we'd expect.
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Old 09-21-2012, 10:48 AM
 
61 posts, read 110,087 times
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More proof that the border between Northern and Southern California is the 36th parallel.
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Old 09-21-2012, 05:03 PM
 
Location: south central
605 posts, read 1,158,631 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sonofaque86 View Post
The Connected States of America | Visuals

This interactive map is interesting as well by county
Clicking on some of the southern North Carolina counties, I'm surprised that there is a pretty clear dividing line between North and South Carolina. Not even much spillover around Charlotte as might be expected. Although this appears less true when operating from the South Carolina side.
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Old 09-21-2012, 05:13 PM
 
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
6,327 posts, read 9,095,365 times
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I don't understand why Western PA is in the same area as the entire state of WV. I don't know a single person here who knows or go to anywhere in WV besides Morgantown and the northern panhandle (Wheeling).
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