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  • Vintage literary stature graphic from 1906

    March 16, 2011

    Topic

    Infographics  /  literature, old, Strand

    Greg Ross highlights an old school graphic from The Strand Magazine, published in 1906. Authors are sized by how much the public read his or her work at the time.

    The giant is Dickens, followed by Thackeray and the now largely forgotten Hall Caine. Lesser mortals, left to right, are Thomas Hardy, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Marie Corelli, Rudyard Kipling, Mary Augusta Ward, J.M. Barrie, Arthur Conan Doyle, Stanley Weyman, Robert Louis Stevenson, Walter Scott, Henry James, Charlotte Brontë, George Meredith, Anthony Trollope, Charles Kingsley, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Israel Zangwill, Charles Reade, and E.F. Benson.

    I’m guessing that the drawing is subjective, or did they have data on book sales back then?

    [Futility Closet | Thanks, Craig]

  • Code to make your own movie barcodes available

    March 16, 2011

    Topic

    Coding

    You know those compressed movie barcodes that we saw last week? Here’s a Python script by Benoît Romito to make your own. Run a .avi format movie through, and voila. Free gift idea: digitize some old home movies and make a personalized barcode for your family.

  • The Like Log Study: Buzzwords and engagement

    March 16, 2011

    Topic

    Statistics

    The Web is a game of pageviews, and outlets such as Twitter and Facebook are a way to rack up the counts. The more people who share your posts and articles, the more new people that visit your site. So what kind of articles are shared more often? How do people with interact with these articles? Yahoo! research scientist Yury Lifshits digs into Facebook likes for some ideas, using data collected from 45 sites, 100k+ articles, and 40 million reactions, between October 2010 and January 2011.
    Read More

  • Best of digital news design winners announced

    March 15, 2011

    Topic

    News

    The Society for News Design announced the winners of their annual digital competition. The New York Times, an obvious frontrunner, took home the Gold Award and Best in Show for their coverage of the Haiti Earthquake, as well as a bunch of other awards. USA Today and The Washington Post also earned some nods, but big congrats to the NYT graphics and multimedia desks.

  • Chinese provinces compared to countries

    March 15, 2011

    Topic

    Maps  /  China, comparison, GDP

    It’s easy to forget just how big some countries are. For example, China:

    China is now the world’s second-biggest economy, but some of its provinces by themselves would rank fairly high in the global league. Our map shows the nearest equivalent country. For example, Guangdong’s GDP (at market exchange rates) is almost as big as Indonesia’s; the output of both Jiangsu and Shandong exceeds Switzerland’s.

    Select among GDP, GDP per person, population, and exports. There’s a similar interactive for the United States.

    [The Economist via Strange Maps | Thanks, Elise]

  • Typographic world map and water colors

    March 14, 2011

    Topic

    Data Art  /  typography, world

    Typographic maps are all the rage these days. Instead of drawing well-defined boundary lines, you substitute words or names, and the landscape shows up on its own. Nancy McCabe’s maps, Charteis Graphein, are the latest addition to the genre. McCabe uses area names—oceans, countries, cities—for the letterpressed maps.
    Read More

  • Why sports statisticians should be more involved in games

    March 14, 2011

    Topic

    Statistics  /  analytics, baseball, basketball, sports

    Hot off the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, Sean Gregory argues for more “stats geeks” on the sidelines and in the huddle during the game.

    [S]itting next to your team’s manager, a scruffy baseball lifer, in the dugout is not just another scruffy baseball lifer, spitting tobacco. Instead, by his side is a guy with a Ph.D. in theoretical physics, a beautiful mind who can calculate complex probabilities, in real time, in his head. He can tell you the odds of so-and-so throwing such-and-such a pitch to so-and-so on such-and-such a count.

    It’s a fluffy article with not much on what the stat person would actually do, so you’ll have to imagine. Honestly, I hope sports statistics doesn’t come to that though. Unpredictability is what makes games so fun to watch.

    [Time via @amstatnews]

  • WeatherSpark for more graphs about the weather than you will ever need

    March 14, 2011

    Topic

    Apps  /  weather, WeatherSpark

    You know Matthew Ericson’s simple weather mashup? It shows only what you need to know for the day. WeatherSpark is the the opposite of that.
    Read More

  • Billionaires, apples, and other things

    March 12, 2011

    Topic

    Quicklinks

    The World’s Billionaires — Forbes publishes their annual list of the world’s richest people. Four of the top ten are from the US, but the richest man in the world is now Carols Slim Helu (and family) of Mexico.

    What if I had bought Apple stock instead? — Apple stock is at about $350 per share right now. If you had invested in Apple instead of buying that Apple PowerBook G3 250 in 1997, you’d have stock valued at $330,563.

    Interview with Jer Thorp — PopTech asks the New York Times data artist in residence some questions about his work and what’s in store for the future.

    Q&A with me — Visualizing asked me a few questions, and then I answered them.

  • Japanese quake and predicted tsunami wave heights

    March 11, 2011

    Topic

    Maps  /  earthquake, Japan

    The New York Times maps the reach of the 8.9-magnitude earthquake in Japan. The page will probably be updated as they find out more.

  • Animation: North and South Poles melting away

    March 11, 2011

    Topic

    Maps

    Adrian Meyer and Karl Rege of Zurich University of Applied Sciences visualize the melting poles, starting 21,000 years ago and advancing 1,000 years into the future.

    End summer sea ice is shown. The yellow line shows the actual shoreline. The future projection is based on the assumption of complete cessation of carbon dioxide emissions in 2100 (IPCC A2). Because world population is rather uncertain we froze to its current value.

    Check out the video below. Adding some speed could’ve made it more dramatic, but wow.
    Read More

  • History and origins of science fiction

    March 10, 2011

    Topic

    Data Art  /  scifi

    Artist Ward Shelley maps the history of science fiction in painstaking detail. See the way big version here. Accurate?

    [Boing Boing via @brianboyer]

  • Data-Driven Documents for visualization in the browser

    March 9, 2011

    Topic

    Software  /  bostock, interactive, JavaScript, programming

    As we know, browsers keep getting better, and it grows easier every day to visualize data native in the browser, when you used to have to use Flash. In the early goings, the JavaScript visualization libraries felt clunky to their Flash counterparts, but the roles are changing. There’s Protovis, Polymaps, and Processing.js that help you make full use of modern browsers’ functionality.

    Mike Bostock, who had a big hand in those first two, recently made Data-Driven Documents, or D3 for short, available to play with.
    Read More

  • Watching the growth of Costco warehouses

    March 9, 2011

    Topic

    Maps, Projects  /  Costco, featured, growth, interactive

    Costco is one of the best stores ever. It’s got everything you need in gigantic volumes and more, so you can imagine my delight when I stumbled on some store openings data I downloaded from Locations Complete a while back. Kind of the same feeling you get when you put on a jacket and find a twenty-dollar bill in the pocket.

    I of course had to put the data into a growth map to watch how one of my favorite stores has grown since its first one a few decades ago. It’s not as wild as the Wal-Mart growth, which has thousands of locations, but it’s still fun to watch. Wal-Mart started in Arkansas and then spread outwards. In contrast, Costco, which has just over 400 locations (in the US), has focused on the coasts and has just started opening locations more inland.
    Read More

  • Review: Beautiful Visualization – Looking at Data through the Eyes of Experts

    March 9, 2011

    Topic

    Reviews  /  essays, featured, O'Reilly

    I finally got a chance to take a closer look at O’Reilly’s most recent edition to their “Beautiful” series, Beautiful Visualization: Looking at Data through the Eyes of Experts, and it’s a good one. In case you’re not familiar, each book in the series is a collection of essays from people who work in the field. Essays range in topic, but they usually focus on a single project and discuss the steps it took to make said project. To be clear, Beautiful Visualization isn’t a how-to book, although you can learn a lot from the writings.
    Read More

  • Entire movies compressed into single barcodes

    March 7, 2011

    Topic

    Data Art  /  barcodes, movies

    Choice of color in a movie can say a lot about what’s going on in a scene. It sets the mood, changes the tone, indicates a change in point of view, so on and so forth, which is why moviebarcode is so fun to click through. The concept is simple. Take every frame in a movie and compress it into a sliver, and put them next to each other. Voilá. Movie barcode.
    Read More

  • Well-being of the nation mapped

    March 7, 2011

    Topic

    Maps  /  interactive, NYT, well-being

    Analyzing Facebook and Twitter updates to gauge happiness is all the rage these days, but Gallup has been doing it old school for the past three years. Every day, Gallup has called 1,000 randomly selected American adults and asked them a series of questions about their well-being such as, “Did you experience feelings of happiness during a lot of the day yesterday?” and “Do you smoke?”

    Matthew Bloch and Bill Marsh for the New York Times mapped the responses for the past calendar year. Use the browser to quickly compare well-being in your area and across the country.
    Read More

  • Test your Rock-Paper-Scissors strategy against the machine

    March 7, 2011

    Topic

    Statistics  /  AI, interactive, NYT, rock-paper-scissors

    We learned the strategy to win Rock-Paper-Scissors every time, but does it really work? For the New York Times, Gabriel Dance and Tom Jackson give you your chance:

    Computers mimic human reasoning by building on simple rules and statistical averages. Test your strategy against the computer in this rock-paper-scissors game illustrating basic artificial intelligence. Choose from two different modes: novice, where the computer learns to play from scratch, and veteran, where the computer pits over 200,000 rounds of previous experience against you.

    Be sure to play at least five rounds, and then click on the button to see what the computer is thinking. In veteran mode, the computer searches its database for sequences that match your last five moves and its last five moves and then tries to predict what you’ll throw next.

    Are you good enough to beat the basic artificial intelligence?

    [New York Times]

  • Best of FlowingData – February 2011

    March 6, 2011

    Topic

    Best of FlowingData

    February was a good month. We continue to inch closer towards the 50k-subscriber mark, and traffic-wise we’re nearing that coveted 1M pageviews in a single month. It hasn’t happened yet, but I think it’s going to happen soon, thanks much in part to all of you.

    In case you missed these, here are the most popular posts from the past couple of months:

    1. Hey Jude flowchart
    2. Map of scientific collaboration between researchers
    3. What your state is the worst at – United States of shame
    4. How Starbucks’ new Trenta compares to your stomach
    5. Map of North American English dialects and subdialects
    6. Where people swear in the United States
    7. A visual guide to eggs
    8. Charted guide to fancy drinks
    9. State of Wikipedia, 10 years later
    10. Map: United States of surnames

    Thanks again for reading and sharing. Every tweet and like helps FD reach a wider audience, so please keep doing it (or doing it more :).

  • Countdown to the end of Internet Explorer 6

    March 5, 2011

    Topic

    Maps  /  IE6, Microsoft

    If you’ve ever designed for the Web, you know what a pain it is to get your work to look right in Internet Explorer 6. It’s outdated, and it’s not standards compliant, so a design that looks good in Firefox, Chrome, or Safari might look horrible in IE6 (and subsequent versions for that matter). The good news is that Microsoft has started the countdown to the end with a map that shows IE6 browser share around the world. Twelve percent of the world still uses the browser as of February 2011, with a big chunk of that from China.

    [Internet Explorer Countdown | via @mericson]

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