I have it visually in my head, but it feels overwhelming getting it into a website.
xyflow that the creator mentioned is probably the right call for pipeline DAGs though -- we use it internally for visualizing our scraping workflows and it was surprisingly painless to get running
There is a collection of a few more here: https://p.migdal.pl/interactive-machine-learning-list/
Added an entry for my data visualisation tool here: https://github.com/stared/interactive-machine-learning-list/....
Edit: found an updated link for seeing theory so I fixed it in the PR above. Feel free to cherry-pick if #24 is not relevant.
- S-TIER blogs are those that are animated, visual, interactive and absolutely blow your mind off
- A-TIER are highly informative and you ll learn something
- opinion blogs at the absolute bottom of the tier list because everyone everywhere ll always have an opinion about everything and my life is too short to be reading all that
- these are the S-TIER ones on my system
- https://ciechanow.ski/archives/
- https://mlu-explain.github.io/
- https://seeing-theory.brown.edu/index.html#firstPage
- https://www.lumafield.com/scan-of-the-month/health-wearables
- these are the BEST of the BEST, you ll be blown away opening each page is how good they are. i am thinking of creating a bookmark manager that uses my criteria above and runs across every damn blog link ever posted on HN to categorize them as S-TIER, A-TIER, opinion and so on
I also made a dozen of these a couple years ago, my two favorites:
- https://pair.withgoogle.com/explorables/fill-in-the-blank/
I wish more technical articles took this approach instead of starting with equations.
Not even to mention the fact that the animation is controlled by scrolling, which gives an intuitive control over play, pause, rewind, fast-forward, etc. Elegant and brilliant. (#2)
Stunningly good also in the sense that it advances the story so people don't just drool at the pretty animation and stop engaging. Thus putting the "dark arts" in the service of learning. (#3)
All three ideas warrant emulation in other contexts!
* Find it towards the bottom under the "Making predictions" heading.
https://www.youtube.com/c/joshstarmer https://statquest.org/