I write about R every weekday at the Revolutions blog: http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com and every month I post a summary of articles from the previous month of particular interest to readers of r-help. In case you missed them, here are some articles related to R from the month of May: R tops the annual KDNuggets Data Mining Software poll for the first time: http://bit.ly/Kjr9mr R 2.15.1 is scheduled for June 22: http://bit.ly/KjraH2 . (Revolution R Enterprise, released on June 5, is based on 2.14.2: http://bit.ly/KjraH3 .) A tutorial uses R, Hadoop, and the RHadoop project to simulate and analyze a Facebook-sized social network: http://bit.ly/KjraH1 The New York Times uses R to chart the size of Facebook's public offering: http://bit.ly/Kjr9ms An R-based analysis of US politician speeches finds them speaking at 8th-grade level, and getting worse: http://bit.ly/Kjr9mt The tabplot package gives you a quick visual overview of a data frame: http://bit.ly/KjraH4 An R-based analysis of the TV series "Mad Men" finds issue with the use of the word "callback": http://bit.ly/Kjr9mv You can see video of R integrated into end-user applications (QlikView, Excel, Jaspersoft, and an iPad app) in this Revolution Analytics webinar replay: http://bit.ly/Kjr9mu A FourSquare engineer explains how R fits in to their social geolocation application and recommendation engine: http://bit.ly/Kjr9mw A sociology Ph.D candidate explains why he switched from Stata to full-time use of R: http://bit.ly/KjraH5 R is classified as a "major programming language" by O'Reilly, in a report noting that books about R have grown in sales by 127%: http://bit.ly/Kjr9mx Google's former CIO writes about Big Data and R in Forbes: http://bit.ly/Kjr9my The replay and slides for the webinar, "Big Data Analytics with R and Hadoop": http://bit.ly/Kjr9mz Other non-R-related stories in the past month included: Google BigQuery (http://bit.ly/KjraH8), a statistician in the Time 100 (http://bit.ly/Kjr9mA), why a statistician couldn't send an email more than 500 miles away (http://bit.ly/Kjr9mB), an EU ruling on a SAS case finds that programming languages can't be copyrighted (http://bit.ly/KjraHd), a clever application of Game Theory (http://bit.ly/Kjr9mD), a review of the 2012 Data Science Summit (http://bit.ly/Kjr9mC), results of the 2012 Future of Open Source Survey (http://bit.ly/KjraHe) and a fun use of PhotoShop (http://bit.ly/KjraHf). There'a a new R user group in Cologne (http://bit.ly/KLbHzE). Meeting times for local R user groups (http://bit.ly/eC5YQe) can be found on the updated R Community Calendar at: http://bit.ly/bb3naW If you're looking for more articles about R, you can find summaries from previous months at http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/roundups/. Join the Revolution mailing list at http://revolutionanalytics.com/newsletter to be alerted to new articles on a monthly basis. As always, thanks for the comments and please keep sending suggestions to me at david at revolutionanalytics.com . Don't forget you can also follow the blog using an RSS reader like Google Reader, or by following me on Twitter (I'm @revodavid). Cheers, # David -- David M Smith <david at revolutionanalytics.com> VP of Marketing, Revolution Analytics? http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com Tel: +1 (650) 646-9523 (Palo Alto, CA, USA) Twitter: @revodavid