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 March: Facebook used R to analyze profile photo changes to create a map of same-sex marriage support in the USA: http://bit.ly/Yk77o8 Joe Rickert contrasts ransom sampling with fitting models directly to large data sets: http://bit.ly/Yk79wv A presentation by Carlos Somohano summarizes the history, skills and processes of data scientists (including use of R): http://bit.ly/Yk79wt Thomas Dinsmore introduces the new features in the forthcoming Revolution R Enterprise 6.2 http://bit.ly/Yk777L, including R 2.15.3 http://bit.ly/Yk79ws , stepwise regression for big data http://bit.ly/Yk79wu and other enhancements to the RevoScaleR package http://bit.ly/Yk79ww Rodrigo Zamith created an interactive website that uses ggplot2 to compare basketball teams: http://bit.ly/Yk777M . The code behind the application is also available: http://bit.ly/Yk777N An overview of the 170+ probability distributions available in R: http://bit.ly/Yk79wx The Metro Meeting Point web application uses R to find the optimal meeting point for three people riding the Paris M?tro: http://bit.ly/Yk777O Video replay of a webinar I gave on March 14 introducing Revolution R Enterprise: http://bit.ly/Yk79wy A perspective on teaching R and Data Science using massively-open online courses like those from Coursera: http://bit.ly/Yk777P The Washington Post reports on a map of worldwide email traffic created with R: http://bit.ly/Yk79wz I discuss the growth of R and Revolution Analytics over the last year in an interview with the Boulder BI Brain Trust: http://bit.ly/Yk79MM Quandl is a new package for R that gives access to free time series data: http://bit.ly/13RgWfJ A list of resources for data journalists using R: http://bit.ly/Yk777R A web-based application used R to track bookmaker's odds on the next Pope: http://bit.ly/Yk777Q News on new integrations between R and Hadoop from Revolution Analytics: http://bit.ly/Yk79MN R 2.15.3, released on March 1: http://bit.ly/Yk777T Some non-R stories in the past month included: a NoSQL music video (http://bit.ly/Yk79MO), a 200-year bubble sort simulation to find the best rowing crew (http://bit.ly/Yk777S), a Donkey Kong role-reversal (http://bit.ly/Yk777U), word-association with Google spreadsheets (http://bit.ly/Yk79MP), whether data can really speak for themselves (http://bit.ly/Yk777V), big data in video games (http://bit.ly/Yk79MQ), and why you should teach kids to code (http://bit.ly/Yk79MR). 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 (Seattle WA, USA) Twitter: @revodavid We're hiring! www.revolutionanalytics.com/careers