• Membership
  • Newsletter
  • Projects
  • Learning
  • About
  • Member Login
  • Keeping track of yourself

    March 2, 2012

    Topic

    Self-surveillance  /  Economist, quantified self

    The quantified self movement continues:

    This may sound creepy, but tens of thousands of patients around the world are already sharing information about symptoms and treatments for hundreds of conditions on websites such as PatientsLikeMe and CureTogether. This has yielded valuable results, such as the finding that patients who suffered from vertigo during migraines were four times more likely to have painful side effects when using a particular migraine drug. The growing number of self-tracking devices now reaching the market will increase the scope for large-scale data collection, enabling users to analyse their own readings and aggregate them with those of other people.

    Sure, it sounds nerdy and weird when you put it like that, but make it glow and call it fuel, and everyone goes nuts.

    [Economist]

  • Spotlight on movie profitability

    March 2, 2012

    Topic

    Infographics  /  movies, profit, ratings

    Movies are a curious business. There a variety of forces that encourage people to pay for a movie ticket with an ever-increasing cost, one of those being the aggregate ratings on Rotten Tomatoes, but it’s not uncommon for well-reviewed movies to profit small and poorly reviewed movies to profit big. Krisztina Szucs takes a look at this relationship between Rotten Tomatoes score and profit.
    Read More

  • Mobile phone digital traces

    March 1, 2012

    Topic

    Maps  /  mobile, video

    In collaboration with Lift and Near Future Laboratory, Interactive Things explores digital traces left by mobile phones in Ville Vivante. Lines and paths flow from place to place in Geneva, Switzerland, showing how the people move in and out of the city during a 24-hour period.

    It’s hard to say exactly what you’re seeing here because it does move so fast, and it probably means more if you live in or near Geneva, but speaking to the video itself, you have your highs and lows during the start and end of days. It then cycles through a handful of views, namely one that looks like wind blowing through and another where particles shoot up from the ground.

    There are also interactive views on the project site.

    Reminds me of David Wicks’ Drawing Water, which shows the flow of sources in the country.

    [Interactive Things via infosthetics]

  • Difference between weather and climate explained

    March 1, 2012

    Topic

    Infographics  /  trend, variation, video, weather

    The difference:

    In this animated short, the relationship between trend and variation are explained with an excellent analogy to a man walking his dog. There is much more variation in the path that the dog takes as compared with the man, but they are both headed the same way. Similarly, weather can be highly variable and climate means long term trends.

    I heard that a kitten dies every time a news anchor debunks global warming with an unexpected day of snow.

    [Spark]

  • Wind motion patterns animated

    February 29, 2012

    Topic

    Maps  /  animation, JavaScript, weather

    Nicolas Garcia Belmonte, author of the JavaScript InfoVis Toolkit, mapped 72 hours of weather data from 1,200 stations across the country.

    Gathering the data from the National Weather Service was pretty interesting, I didn’t know USA had so many weather stations! The visualization shows wind direction encoded in line angles, wind speed encoded in line lengths and disk radius, and temperature encoded in hue.

    Press play, and watch it glow. You can also easily switch between symbols: discs with lines, lines only, or filled circles.

    [Nicolas Garcia Belmonte via @janwillemtulp]

  • How to Hand Edit R Plots in Inkscape

    You can control graph elements with code as you output things from R, but sometimes it is easier to do it manually. Inkscape, an Open Source alternative to Adobe Illustrator, might be what you are looking for.

  • Really old maps online

    February 28, 2012

    Topic

    Maps  /  interactive, vintage

    Maps have been around for a long time, but you might not know it looking online. It can be hard to find them. Old Maps Online, a project by The Great Britain Historical GIS Project and Klokan Technologies GmbH, Switzerland, is a catalog of just that.

    You can browse and search old maps via the map interface by panning and zooming, along with a search bar and a slider for time. Search results then update in the right sidebar, which provides thumbnails and links to the full-size maps.

    If only an overlay like Historypin could be incorporated. That’d be something.

    [Old Maps Online via @jatorre]

  • Stephen Colbert on Target and predictive analytics

    February 27, 2012

    Topic

    Statistics  /  humor, marketing, Stephen Colbert

    “Target doesn’t just know when you’re buying sheets. They know what you’re doing in between them.”

    [Comedy Central via @alexlundry]

  • Page 291 of 392
  • <
  • 1
  • ...
  • 288
  • 289
  • 290
  • 291
  • 292
  • 293
  • ...
  • 392
  • >

Analyze, visualize, and communicate data usefully, beyond the defaults.

Become a member →

Recently for Members

May 8, 2025
When the data is not what it seems

May 1, 2025
Finding the Right Charts

April 24, 2025
Visualization Tools, Datasets, and Resources – April 2025 Roundup

April 17, 2025
Breaking Out of Chart Software Defaults

April 15, 2025
Line Chart with Decorative Neon Accents

Browse by Chart Type See All →

Pictogram Unit Chart Grid Map Line Map Area Chart Treemap Glyph Chart Mosaic Plot Scatter Plot Alluvial Diagram

Browse By Topic

  • Visualization

    Seeing data

  • Maps

    Seeing geographic data

  • Infographics

    Explaining data

  • Networks

    Connecting data

  • Statistics

    Analyzing data

  • Software

    Working with data

  • Sources

    Getting data

  • Design

    Making data readable

Get the Book

Visualize This: The FlowingData Guide to Design, Visualization, and Statistics

Available now.

Order: Amazon / Bookshop

Made by FlowingData

  • The Process

  • Data Underload

  • Chart Everything

  • Guides

  • Books

  • Shop

  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • RSS
Copyright © 2007-Present FlowingData. All rights reserved.