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Showing posts with label data visualization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label data visualization. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Where did my tax dollars go?


And now the winners of Google's "Data Viz Challenge"! The Grand Prize went to Anil Kandangath for the visualization above. Here's a description of the competition from the site:

"Every year, Americans fill out income tax forms and make a payment to the IRS. It’s an important civic duty, but it is also a lot of money. Where does it all go? Using data provided by WhatWePayFor.com, we challenged artists, coders, and the general public to create data visualizations that would make it easier for U.S. citizens to understand how the government spends our tax money."

Try out Anil's winning entry and the rest of the competition here:

Google Data Visualization Competition Winners


Wednesday, September 29, 2010

What Twitter Learns from All Those Tweets

Twitter generates more than 12 terabytes of data a day – that's a lot of tweets. Their head of analytics talks about the kinds of insights they look for in this mountain of information.

Read more at Technology Review India:

What Twitter Learns from All Those Tweets

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Design Around the World: Metro Maps






Fascinating examples of information design, and how the same problem is solved in different parts of the world.

Design Around the World: Metro Maps | Webdesigner Depot

Hat tip: Chris Kaufman

Monday, February 1, 2010

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Where's Frodo?



Check out this wonderful set of infographics that show, over the course of each story, which characters are with each other. Very clever.

Charting the Course of Characters in Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, and more!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Visualizing Music Discovery


This site was listed as a 2009 top 50 website by Time Magazine, although it's been around since 2006; I stumbled onto it at VisualComplexity.com. It has a fun interface that encourages interaction and play.

Musicovery : interactive webRadio

Shared via AddThis

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Textual clock screensaver


This is a fun little screensaver that displays the time as words (in Helvetica! although this can be changed.)

Simon Heys » Word Clock

Shared via AddThis from Smashing Magazine's article, 10 Creative Ways to Display Time. Enjoy!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Emphasis of Scientific Disciplines in Different Countries


This is a data visualization (circa 2007) that illustrates and compares the emphasis of different areas of science by country. Be sure to zoom out; it takes some time to take in, but the differences are fascinating.

The Strengths of Nations

and another looking at which scientific areas produce the most patents:


The Scientific Paradigms that Support Patent Generation

and finally, an illustration of how scientific paradigms inter-relate:

How Scientific Paradigms Relate

Descriptions and discussion of these illustrations can be found here:

http://wbpaley.com/brad/mapOfScience/

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Monday, October 5, 2009

Many Eyes

I was reading over a presentation that included a map created using this IBM site, an online tool for creating information visualizations. Check it out:

Many Eyes

Shared via AddThis, hat tip to Erin Malone's social games research.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Nice mashup: GoPublic

This site is a mix of information from Facebook and Twitter all centered around Public Transportation. Great example of the power of bringing together different kinds of social media about one topic.

GoPublic

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Friday, October 2, 2009

Watching a book evolve: the preservation of favoured traces | ben fry

Darwin's best known work, "On the Origin of Species" saw major revisions over its sixth editions. This info-animation shows how this book changed across it's iterations. From the introduction by the author, Ben Fry:

"We often think of scientific ideas, such as Darwin's theory of evolution, as fixed notions that are accepted as finished. In fact, Darwin's On the Origin of Species evolved over the course of several editions he wrote, edited, and updated during his lifetime. The first English edition was approximately 150,000 words and the sixth is a much larger 190,000 words. In the changes are refinements and shifts in ideas whether increasing the weight of a statement, adding details, or even a change in the idea itself.

The second edition, for instance, adds a notable "by the Creator" to the closing paragraph, giving greater attribution to a higher power. In another example, the phrase "survival of the fittest" usually considered central to the theory and often attributed to Darwin instead came from British philosopher Herbert Spencer, and didn't appear until the fifth edition of the text. Using the six editions as a guide, we can see the unfolding and clarification of Darwin's ideas as he sought to further develop his theory during his lifetime."

the preservation of favoured traces | ben fry

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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Search, Trends and Google

Ok, I can admit I have a problem: I love usage data. It's fascinating to peek into the numbers behind a user experience and try to understand not just what users are doing, but why and how. More about data and AddThis later, but years ago at AOL I designed the original "Hot Searches" product that showed which search terms were rising and falling the fastest. From these humble beginnings grew two fun AOL programmed destinations, Hot Searches and AOL's year end Hot Searches retrospectives.

More recently, Google has integrated their Hot Trends data into search results, one more volley into the battle of real-time search:

Google Hot Trends Integrated Into Google Search via SearchEngineLand


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