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 April: Information Age published a feature article on R, describing how new graduates are driving adoption of R in industry: http://bit.ly/KLbHzr Bob Muenchen has updated his list of R package equivalents to SAS and SPSS procedures: http://bit.ly/KLbHzt A history of Data Science, including Bill Cleveland's 2001 paper: http://bit.ly/KLbHzs Researchers at SUNY Buffalo are using Revolution R and IBM Netezza with genetic data to research a cure for Multiple Sclerosis http://bit.ly/KLbJY5 , and the story has been reported in Forbes, eWeek and other media: http://bit.ly/KLbJY4 Pairach Piboonrungroj has compiled a list of 20 free R tutorials from around the world: http://bit.ly/KLbJY3 The annual Rmetrics financial engineering workshop takes place in Switzerland, June 24-28: http://bit.ly/KLbHzw An elegant solution to the pairs-of-squares sequence puzzle discussion from r-help, based on graph theory: http://bit.ly/KLbJY9 An example of using R to build a recommendation engine, and ranking the most popular movies from the million row movie dataset: http://bit.ly/KLbJY8 When is Big Data useful for statistical analysis? Norman Nie provides five examples in the Sybase Capital Markets Guide: http://bit.ly/KLbHzx Revolution Analytics' Spring webinar series is underway, with presentations on Big Data with R and Hadoop, integrating R with MS Office, spatial statistics with R, data mining with R and retail marketing analytics: http://bit.ly/KLbHzy The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration uses R to forecast river flooding events: http://bit.ly/KLbJYa R continues its growth in academia (as measured by Google Scholar citations); SPSS and SAS see steep declines: http://bit.ly/KLbJYb A fantastic animation of 18th-century sailing shop voyages, created with R: http://bit.ly/KLbHzz R and other open source tools used at the new US government agency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: http://bit.ly/KLbJYc An introduction to the new Julia language, and a comparison with R: http://bit.ly/KLbJYd SAP's HANA in-memory datastore provides integration with R: http://bit.ly/KLbJYe Saraj Gupta has written an in-depth article on how the internals of R's name lookup mechanism works: http://bit.ly/KLbHzA LityxIQ uses R functions glm, MASS, rpart, nnet and rjson for their online marketing analytics and optimization application: http://bit.ly/KLbJYf Google can graph 2-variable and 3-variable equations: http://bit.ly/KLbHzB Other non-R-related stories in the past month included: an animation of world ocean currents (http://bit.ly/KLbJYg), how English sounds to Italians (http://bit.ly/KLbJYh), creating the Pharoah's Serpent effect with mercury thiocynate (http://bit.ly/KLbJYi), and a unique performance of "Somebody that I Used to Know" (http://bit.ly/KLbJYj). There are new R user groups in Milan (http://bit.ly/Hylxtp) and 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)