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On 7 September 2011 I attended the London R user group meeting. It was a very good turn out with about 50 attendees at the Shooting Star, a pub close to Liverpool Street Station. The session started at 18:00 with four presentations, followed by drinks sponsored by Mango Solutions. The slides of the presentation should be available on londonr.org soon.

The first presentation was given by Lisa Wainer from UCL Department of Security and Crime Science about crime data analysis using R. Lisa presented about a project with Merseyside police, where she had built software, in R with the gWidgets package, called the Hot Products Early Warning System, that is used to help understand and characterise the acquisitive crime problem in Merseyside on an ongoing basis, detecting emerging trends in hot products.

Chris Wood gave an insightful talk about his research on sediment biogeochemical modelling in the North Sea. His model uses a set differential equations with over 20 parameters. Chris is able to analyse and fit his model to data he gathered on an expedition in the North Sea using R, the deSolve package and having access to the super-computer at the University of Southampton. How cool is this?

Jean-Robert Avettand-Fenoel talked about the Rook package and how R and Rook has helped him to roll out new applications to his colleagues faster than using Excel, VBA and C++ or RExcel. Rook allows you to build web apps with R. The package is maintained by Jeffery Horner, who also brought us the brew package. The brew package allows you, in the combination with Rapache, to mix html and R code in the same file. This is quite similar to the approach taken by Sweave for LaTeX and R. However, Rook provides a way to run R web applications on your desktop with the new internal R web server named Rhttpd.

The final presentation was actually done by myself talking about the googleVis package and the recent developments in version 0.2.9:

