89 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
89 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Visualizing Laundry Usage
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layout: post
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redirect_from: "/blog/visualizing-laundry-usage/"
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---
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George Mason University uses a system called
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[eSuds](http://www.usatech.com/esuds/) to control the laundry machine
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transactions in the dorms. What makes eSuds really cool though, is that it
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keeps track of the status of every machine and displays it on a
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[website](http://gmu.esuds.net/) so students can check how full the machines
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are before making the trek down to the laundry rooms. The system emails each
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student when their laundry is finished as well.
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The only problem is that their user interface is pretty atrocious. I wrote up a
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[usability analysis](https://gist.github.com/thallada/5351114) of the site for
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my *SWE 205: Software Usability Analysis and Design* class, but most people
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agree it's a pretty painful interface to use ([just see for
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yourself](http://gmu.esuds.net/)). The thing is, most of the information that's
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on the website could be reduced to a few charts. I'm a big fan of simplifying
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data, so I thought: why not?
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I decided to create the visualizations with [pygal](http://pygal.org/), because
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the charts it spits out are absolutely gorgeous and well... it's in python,
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which made it easy for me to dive right in. I'll probably try out
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[d3js](http://d3js.org/) for my next visualization project though, it looks a
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whole lot more advanced.
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### Current laundry usage charts
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I created an [app](/laundry) in [Django](https://www.djangoproject.com/) to
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display current laundry machine usage charts for all of the laundry rooms on
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George Mason's campus. All of the data is scraped from the eSuds site using
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[Beautiful Soup](http://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/) and updated
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every time you refresh the page.
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<div style="text-align: center"><a href="/laundry" alt="See it in action"><img
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src="/img/blog/laundry_preview.png" /></a></div>
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The site will save which laundry room you select so when you come back you will
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immediately see the chart for your laundry room.
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You can see the code for this on my
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[GitHub](https://github.com/thallada/personalsite/) (look in the "laundry"
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folder).
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The point was to make this as dead simple and easy to use as possible. Do you
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think I succeeded?
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### Weekly laundry usage chart
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Knowing the *current* laundry machine usage is nice for saving a wasted trip
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down to the laundry room, but what if you wanted to plan ahead and do your
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laundry when you know other people are less likely to do laundry? That's why I
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recorded the laundry usage with a [cronjob](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron)
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every 15 minutes for an entire week: to get an idea of when there is a high
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probability of open machines.
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<embed type="image/svg+xml" src="/img/blog/record.svg">
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This one is a little interactive.
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As you can see, the laundry usage jumps around all over the place very quickly.
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This definitely provides evidence to some previous frustrations I've had when I
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had checked eSuds, saw that most machines were open, and arrived in the laundry
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room to suddenly find that no machines were open.
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**So when is the best time to do laundry?**
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After analyzing the data for a bit, I noticed that there still seemed to be
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quite a bit of usage around midnight and 1 AM, which, I suppose, would be
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expected of college students. However, after about 2 AM the laundry usage
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consistently teeters off until about 10 AM. So I guess there's no way around
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it; if you want to have the laundry room to yourself, you'll have to be the
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early bird.
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Also, I should note that this was during the week of spring break. I'm
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currently working on recording data over a few normal weeks and then compiling
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it into one average week in order to see the patterns more clearly. I'll post
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again once I've done that.
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This was a lot of fun and I expect to make more data visualizations in the
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future.
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**Let me know what you think!**
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EDIT: Check out the [comments on
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Reddit](http://www.reddit.com/r/gmu/comments/1c1ehg/i_dont_like_esuds/).
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