posting graph

 posting graph  is a visualization of post publishing frequency which can be presented in various ways like a calendar heatmap or a sparkline, and also called contributions or a contribution graph by GitHub.

Aaron Parecki
on aaronparecki.com since 2016-09-27
 * https://aaronparecki.com/2016/09/27/1/p3k
 * https://aaronparecki.com/2016/12/27/10/sparklines

Jeremy Keith
on adactio.com since ????-??-??

gRegor Morrill
on gregorlove.com since 2016-08-25
 * https://gregorlove.com/2016/08/experimenting-with-a-github-style-posting/

Chris Aldrich
on boffosocko.com since late 2018 uses the ActivitySparks plugin for WordPress to display sparklines for "Daily activity over the prior 3 months" and "Monthly activity over 5 years" for both posting activity as well as commenting activity. On archive pages for categories, these sparkline graphs are updated to show the activity for only that category.
 * Category page example: https://boffosocko.com/category/indieweb/



Jamie Tanna
describes how he graphs his posts in Visualising My Posting Habits. His visualization can be seen on his post frequency page.

Joe Crawford
created a sparkline of his posting frequency
 * https://artlung.com/blog/2021/12/23/unknown-pleasures-as-blog-visualization/

capjamesg
shows a sparkline that illustrates his posting frequency on his website home page:
 * https://jamesg.blog

Below this, James shows a sparkline with his IndieWeb wiki contributions. This sparkline is generated using James' MediaWiki sparkline generator.



James shows sparklines for posting activity in every category on his blog. Example:
 * https://jamesg.blog/category/indieweb/



Archive.org
The Internet Archive has a circular user interface to represent posts and pages on an archived website which is generally organized by path names. Hovering over colored portions of their circle chart provides particular links for that site on the archive. While somewhat different presentations compared to sparklines and calendar heatmaps, this presents a lot of the same type of information and links. This incarnation also includes archive pages on a site as well as segments for tags and even URLs for individual comments for some sites. In this sense it's more like a visual version of a site map.
 * Example: http://web.archive.org/web/sitemap/https://www.boffosocko.com/