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by revorad 5651 days ago
Slightly less intuitive is the fact that positive emotional updates receive fewer comments (perhaps there’s nothing more to say) whereas negative emotional updates receive more comments (perhaps as a consolation).

This is not so unexpected, given the like button. If I post a message about getting a new dog, my friends can just like it without saying anything. If I say my dog is dying, the only way to show support is by writing something. There is no sympathise or dislike button. This confirms that if you give people shortcuts for being nice, they will gladly take them.

I'm making a tool which might help your team do such analyses faster. I just sent you a message on Facebook. My contact details are also in my profile.

1 comments

Not sure why, but I didn't get your message on Facebook.
That's strange. It is showing in my sent messages. Anyway, here's what I wrote:

Hey Venky,

I'm the founder of Pretty Graph (http://prettygraph.com/), a simple web-based tool for making graphs.

I noticed that your data team uses R for their analysis and graphs. Making good looking graphs can be a big time sink in R. When you are trying to publish blog posts, you want to make your graphs look nice and web-friendly.

Pretty Graph also uses R on the backend, but makes creating complicated graphs a lot easier and faster. You can import data in various formats and get a graph ready to publish in a few minutes. So your team can spend more time analysing the data rather than adjusting margins, title sizes and colours.

If it's something that interests your team, I'd love to hear from them.

Thanks, Hrishi

Feel free to reply to hrishi@prettygraph.com.

Thanks, that's cool. I'll post it on our team group.