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    Fun With Data

    December 21, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  fun

    Here are some fun things to make with data in case you’re looking for a chart-ish distraction.

  • Scale of all the things, compared to you

    December 21, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Kurzgesagt, scale

    Kurzgesagt illustrates the scale of the tiniest of things and the biggest of things by zooming in and out, but unlike videos before, they focus on human scale by comparing everything against it at each step.

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_1Q0XB4X0Y” /]

    You’ve probably seen the Powers of Ten, which demonstrates the scale of things by zooming farther and farther away from the universe and then back in to the microscopic level.

    However, once people fall out of view, you lose a sense of magnitude. It’s just this is really big and that is really small. With focus on the individual, the Kurzgesagt rendition keeps the scale close as if you’re standing right next to it instead of traveling to an unreachable place.

  • Visual history of Yahoo Pipes

    December 20, 2023

    Topic

    Software  /  Glenn Fleishman, history, Yahoo

    For Retool, Glenn Fleishman looks back to a time when data on the internet flowed more freely and you were able to direct the streams with a click-and-drag tool called Pipes for Yahoo!

    With Pipes, any user could create entries for any number of data sources. While RSS was key, Pipes also let users grab other data and feed formats, like Atom, RDF (incorporated into RSS 2.0), and CSV (comma-separated values, a simple database and spreadsheet export format).

    Pipes gave visibility into internal Yahoo sites and services, particularly Flickr, and eventually supported Yahoo Query Language (YQL), a project designed for interoperable in-house and third-party scripting across all of the company’s offerings. With a little elbow grease, you could even retrieve a web page and filter it for specific data.

  • Excel World Championship

    December 19, 2023

    Topic

    Software  /  championship, Excel

    The Microsoft Excel World Championship 2023 wrapped a couple weeks ago, and the three-hour final that was streamed is available for your viewing pleasure.

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDGdPE_C9u8″ /]

    I know I should be focused on the clicking and dragging and the hot keys, but it’s all about the commentary for me. I watched in fascination, like watching competitive tag on ESPN8.

  • A hotter year, again

    December 18, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  climate, global warming, Reuters, temperature

    This year, 2023, was the hottest year on record. For Reuters, Gloria Dickie, Travis Hartman and Clare Trainor highlight the rising temperatures and the bad stuff that follows.

    This year’s added warming has been like pouring gasoline on a fire. Extremes became more extreme. Warmer ocean waters fed stronger storms. Heatwaves persisted for weeks instead of days. And wildfires, feeding on dry forests and high temperatures, burned out of control.

    An El Nino climate pattern, which emerged in the Eastern Pacific in June, is making things worse, scientists said. It’s boosting the warming caused by climate change, unleashing more catastrophic extremes.

    Temperature extremes are still worth highlighting, but there are only so many ways to show an increase over and over again. Maybe someone can make a global warming exhibit that starts at the temperature highs of the 1800s and very quickly increases temperature to current highs. Throw in some VR with storms and wildfires.

  • Data portrait of a life with long Covid

    December 15, 2023

    Topic

    Self-surveillance  /  coronavirus, Giorgia Lupi, long Covid, New York Times

    Giorgia Lupi, known for using data visualization to connect real life and numbers, has been dealing with long Covid for the past three years. In a visual guest essay for NYT Opinion, Lupi describes her experience of fear, pain, and hope using a spreadsheet and a diary of brush strokes.

    I thought that if I collected enough data, I would eventually figure out what was going wrong. But no matter how much data I collected or how many correlations I tried to draw, answers eluded me. Still, I couldn’t stop tracking. My spreadsheet was the only thing I could control in a life I no longer recognized.

    In 2015, Lupi worked on Dear Data, which focused on the little joys of life through visualization-based postcards. This moving piece uses a similar style but is on the opposite end of the emotional spectrum.

    Worth your time.

  • Members Only

    Relatable Units

    December 14, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  relative, units

    Numbers are challenging to understand for many (most?) people, so it can help to use units of measurement that are relatable to readers to reduce friction between data and clarity.

  • Data Underload  /  income, wealth

    Common Millionaire Household

    One million dollars is a lot of money, and for most people, it can seem so far out of reach it might as well be impossible. However, a lot of households have at least that in financial assets, which doesn’t count the value of non-financial assets like a house or car.

    Read More
  • Generative plants

    December 13, 2023

    Topic

    Data Art  /  generative, Max Richter, plants

    Generate your own plant with Max Richter’s interactive. Adjust leaf shape, density, and curvature. The plane updates in real-time in the browser.

  • World map of illustrated animals

    December 12, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  animals, Anton Thomas, illustration, New York Times

    During a three-year span, Anton Thomas illustrated a world map of 1,642 animals native to each region. It’s called Wild World. The New York Times highlighted the work:

    “We don’t see the latitude and longitude lines of maps,” he said. “We see the world, in our heads, through icons.”

    For Mr. Thomas, this equates to a kind of “emotional geography,” where features with greater emotional heft — the New York City skyline, say, or the Golden Gate Bridge — may take up more space.

    “There are animals the sizes of mountain ranges on my map,” he said. “But you know what? The African lion should tower over Kilimanjaro, if we’re drawing an emotional map.”

    Prints for Wild World, among other illustrated maps, are available in Thomas’ shop.

  • Cost of assisted living where you are

    December 11, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  assisted living, cost, Washington Post

    Assisted living can be expensive. For The Washington Post, Bonnie Berkowitz, Lauren Tierney, and Chris Alcantara show the variation in cost by state:

    Two-thirds of Americans will need some type of long-term care as they get older, according to federal data, but the price, whether for in-home services, assisted living or a nursing home, can easily cost more per year than the average American makes. Medicare and other health insurers pay little, if any, of the bill.

  • High concentration of intrastate pipelines in Texas

    December 11, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Bloomberg, energy, Texas

    By keeping gas pipelines within the state, companies can avoid federal regulations. This is perhaps good for profits, but it is less of a positive for consumers when the energy companies can increase rates more freely. For Bloomberg, Rachel Adams-Heard, Naureen Malik, and Jeremy C.F. Lin have the maps and charts to show what this means in Texas, which has the most intrastate pipeline in the country.

  • Data Underload  /  income, work, young

    Young Money

    Income tends to increase with age, because more work experience and education tends to lead to higher paying jobs. However, young people can also earn higher incomes. Using data from the most recent 2022 American Community Survey, let’s see what those people studied and what they do for a living.

    Read More
  • Members Only

    Figuring Out How a Visualization Was Made

    December 7, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  components, steps

    One of the best ways to learn how to visualize data is to recreate a chart, but sometimes it’s unclear how that chart got made. What tool was used? What are the steps to make the chart with your own tools?

  • Life in the Gaza Strip

    December 7, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  Gaza, life, New York Times

    The New York Times put together an image of what life is like in Gaza right now: bombing, death, food and water shortage, and limited medical supplies. A 3-D basemap of the Gaza Strip sets the foundation of the story and layers of individual stories and overall destruction display on top.

  • Steps for getting started with data visualization

    December 6, 2023

    Topic

    Visualization  /  Datawrapper, getting started, learning, Lisa Charlotte Muth

    Getting started with data visualization can be tricky because of all the resources and tools available these days. Approaches also change with what you want to visualize data for. For Datawrapper, Lisa Chartlotte Muth outlines how to take your first steps.

    The main theme is to make more charts.

    See also: getting started with visualization after getting started with visualization.

  • A wide view of visualization with ‘The Art of Insight’

    December 5, 2023

    Topic

    Design  /  Alberto Cairo, book

    The Art of Insight, by Alberto Cairo, highlights how designers approach visualization with a wide view.

    In the narrowest view of data visualization, you use charts to pull quick, quantitative information from dashboards and reports. Take a few steps back and you get exploratory data analysis and then storytelling. Keep going and you get a fluid-like approach to visualization that gives more attention to beauty, emotion, and qualitative insights that are difficult to measure. The Art of Insight, the final book in Cairo’s three-book series, focuses on the more fluid approach.

    As a slow reader, I read this surprisingly quick. I enjoyed reading and thinking about the less mechanical side of visualizing data.

  • ER visits for Christmas decoration injuries

    December 4, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  Christmas, emergency room, USAFacts

    A lot of Christmas lights went up this past week. I hope you weren’t one of the thousands who ended up in the emergency room. USAFacts shows the ramp up after Thanksgiving and the mini-spikes after. [Thanks, Amber]

  • Inflation high, cost of living no good

    December 1, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Bloomberg, cost, inflation

    Usually inflation is more of a slow thing that you don’t notice so much until you think back to the time when a burger was only a dollar. Prices increased much faster over the past few years though. For Bloomberg, Reade Pickert and Jennah Haque zoom in on the everyday items that are noticeably more expensive. Basically everything.

    I just wrapped up travel in a high cost of living area. The sticker shock on a simple grocery bill was brutal.

  • Members Only

    Visualization Tools, Resources, and Datasets – November 2023 Roundup

    November 30, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  roundup

    Here’s the good stuff for the month.

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