Your graphs are interesting, even without interactivity or 3d. But more 
interesting still would be their (potential) evolution through time. If I 
understand the TX situation correctly, the "hoarding" behavior you mentioned 
was an accidental increase in load with which the traditional energy sources 
couldn't keep up ... less about bumping up the thermostat for a buffer and more 
about simple demand.

It would be interesting to see a dynamic graph of the load/demand.


On 2/16/21 7:58 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
> We did not get around to visualizing dynamic graph loading...   it is still 
> somewhat of a holy grail in the biz.

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