View allAll Photos Tagged Infographic,

infographic about pigeons taking over the world.

Playing around with an infographic of 'My Art Tools'..

Many people ask me advice about their portfolio and CV and I always tell them to be creative to stand out of the crowd. This doesn't apply to all kind of jobs, but when you're talking about creative jobs, there are simply no rules on how to present yourself.

 

Don't mention the name of your kindergarden school, don't mention you've been working at McDonalds during summer break. Believe me, nobody cares. And if your future employer does care, then he'll select you on the wrong criteria. You don't want to work for such a company.

 

So get creative and make something awesome from your portfolio. Take the above portfolio as an example. Michael doesn't show any of its works and still he succeeds in showing off his talent. Not only he can create great graphics, he also proves to be able to turn 'boring' facts and figures into something exciting. Well done Michael!

 

Check out Michael's blog:

theportfolio.ofmichaelanderson.com/portfolio/resume-infog...

 

Oh yeah, and also check out my portfolio:

www.barclaey.com

Now available as a print!

 

Hey, it's another infographic. Here's everything you've ever wanted to know about the Doctor, but were afraid to ask.

 

Once I'd finished drawing cartoon renditions of all eleven Doctors, I was trying to think of something else I could do with them. Suddenly the idea of an infographic sprung to mind. Armed with my moderate knowledge of Who-lore and trivia, I started typing up relevant factoids and arranging the Doctors on the page. Obviously you'll have to view the original size to read most of it.

 

I think this is the first time in my life I've ever drawn the TARDIS. It was surprisingly hard! It seems like it would be simple; after all it's just a blue box with some windows, but it was actually quite complicated, what with all of those little details and recessed panels and whatnot (and yes, it's been pointed out that I have the wrong number of window panes. I've fixed that on the revised version).

 

There's another Doctor Who infographic over here.

 

This piece took quite a while to finish. I worked on it a little at a time over several days. There was a lot of moving around of elements and much text editing to get everything to fit in an efficient manner. Hopefully there aren't too many glaring errors in the information.

 

I've had the grid system drilled into my head since design school, and normally I'm a devoted disciple of it. This time I said nuts to grids and just sort of let the design happen organically. I kind of liked it. I may start ditching the grid more often.

 

Laid out entirely in InDesign. All the Doctors were drawn in InDesign as well.

 

UPDATE: My little infographic just passed 150,000 views!!! Thank Kew, Internet!!!

 

UPDATE: Be sure and check out the REVISED AND UPDATED VERSION. All the mistakes that appear here have been corrected.

 

There's another infographic featuring the Doctor's enemies here.

 

Want to see more? Check out my new blog! All the cool kids are doing it!

I'm also on Twitter for some reason.

An infographic I made today based on the religious teachings survey conducted by ReligiousTolerance.org ( www.religioustolerance.org/sex_chur.htm )

 

I'm pretty happy this is getting some attention (1000+ views? woohoo) - if you're interested, I have some other infographics on flickr. I am also available for freelance work- shoot me an email at ejfox@ejfox.com

 

-- Update --

 

So this has gotten dugg and tweeted and all sorts of promoted and I am infinitely grateful and surprised. This was one of my first infographics (either first or second) and was really just a practice. As I've been told quite a bit, this source sucks. If anyone would like to supply me with an updated source, including more religions, better citations, all of that, I would be happy to redesign the chart.

 

I appreciate all of the criticism and appreciation.

 

For the record, I'm an athiest.

Infographic showing mathematic prediction for the World Cup.

 

Published in Wired UK, June 2010 Issue.

 

Data devised by Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski

 

Some photos of the printed article: sectiondesign.co.uk/the-world-cup-predicted-wired-uk

Illustrations and infographics for the annual report of the Bayerische Staatsforsten, Germany.

It's all about Bavarian Forestry.

 

zoom in!

We're Here: Maps

 

348/366

Exactly four years ago, at 4 a.m. on February 24, 2022, troops of the Russian Federation began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. For me, that morning was marked by the sounds of explosions in the city, which woke me from sleep. They were cruise and ballistic missiles that, according to military doctrine, the Russians were using to destroy Ukrainian air defense facilities and anything else they considered necessary to eliminate.

 

When I went to the window, I saw a road packed with cars, completely gridlocked: people were trying to leave for the West. Later that day, more missiles flew over Kyiv, along with fighter jets, and more explosions could be heard.

 

Today I came across this infographic. It shows the positions of Russian and Ukrainian troops over the entire four years of the war in dynamics. I had to speed up the video to fit into the three-minute limit for videos available to free Flickr users.

 

On this map, several turning points of the war can be seen: the rapid advance of Russian troops in the first days, followed by several months of active defense by the Ukrainian Armed Forces and their transition to a counteroffensive along the entire front, which had slowed down by November 2022. It slowed down because Western partners of Ukraine (primarily due to a decision by the Biden administration) sharply reduced military aid supplies to the Ukrainian army. According to later media reports, the reason for this pause was a reluctance to inflict a crushing defeat on Russia on the ground, due to fears that Putin might resort to using nuclear weapons.

 

As a result, the front line was stabilized. At the same time, Russia began massive missile strikes against infrastructure targets across the entire territory of Ukraine, which continue to this day. Over the four years, more than 13,000 missiles of various types have been launched at Ukraine, as well as more than 142,000 drones.

 

The next critical point was the summer offensive of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in 2023. As we now know from numerous analytical reports and from a recent interview with former Commander-in-Chief of the Ukrainian army, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, this counteroffensive was a political rather than a military decision. It was poorly prepared and, from the outset, doomed to fail. I will not go into details—you can look them up yourself if you wish.

 

From that moment on, the front line began to move westward very slowly but steadily, and the Ukrainian army has been forced to retreat.

 

This trend continues to this day. The casualty figures for both sides shown in this infographic are debatable—I do not know where they come from. I believe the total losses of both warring countries (killed, wounded, maimed, missing, captured, etc.) amount to hundreds of thousands, and may have already exceeded one million for each side.

 

No one will tell you the true numbers, neither during the war nor after it ends. It is a political issue, and no one is willing to openly acknowledge their own losses. To this day, we still do not know the exact number of casualties suffered by the USSR during the Second World War.

 

It would also make sense to add several more infographics: a demographic one (showing how much the population of both countries has decreased) and an economic one (illustrating economic indicators and the destruction of economic potential). Without this data, any understanding of the deadlock the war has reached would be incomplete.

 

For me, one thing is clear: if Western partners decided in 2022 that a military defeat of Russia was not in their interest and instead chose a strategy of exhausting Russia—both economically and militarily—then that strategy has not succeeded. And continuing this approach now, by providing Ukraine with assistance amounting to roughly 30% of what it needs to effectively continue the war, is a path toward exhausting Ukraine itself, potentially leading to the collapse of the state.

 

In this war, either our partners need to fully commit, or they should stop deceiving and tormenting the Ukrainian people.

 

Recently, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte visited Kyiv and, looking into the eyes of a service dog, said he saw in it a readiness to die for Ukraine. In Rutte’s words, I saw yet another mockery. He did not bring us tanks, planes, missiles — nothing. He came to interact with a service dog.

 

We are not dogs. We are people—living human beings.We do not want to die heroically in an endless, drawn-out, and hopeless war for us, as happened to the people of Paraguay in the 19th century. We want to live.

This makes me sick. Original graphic with sources is at the Center for American Progress.

 

I also linked this in a diary I wrote at The Great Orange Satan, if you feel like recommending it.

The SpaceX Crew Dragon is launched on a Falcon 9 rocket and brings four astronauts to the International Space Station. Launching from Cape Canaveral at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, USA, the spacecraft is the third type to bring ESA astronauts to space.

 

This infographic shows the final steps to liftoff.

 

Credits: ESA

What is data visualization? An infographic about data visualization.

Eat Healthy

 

Join the 2014 National Women's Health Week celebration. Learn more about how you can be a well woman. Spread the word through your networks. Join or organize women's health Meetups.

 

Get more information

 

What is a well-woman visit?

When is National Women's Checkup Day?

Why is it important for women to participate in this effort?

How can you participate in this important event?

Visit WomensHealth.gov.

 

Get involved !

 

Get the National Women’s Health Week Social media toolkit.

Join or plan a Meetup.

 

More Infographics

 

National Women's Health Week Infographics.

Our posts tagged infographics.

" Potential health effects include adverse effects on development of male reproductive system :

 

* Infertility.

* Decreased sperm count.

* Undescended testes.

* Malformation of the penis. "

 

Continue reading on mindthestore.saferchemicals.org/phthalates.html, a national coalition of parents, health advocates, enviros, cancer survivors and 450 organizations working to protect American families - @SaferChemicals. See more infographics

 

All our posts about BPA - Endocrine Disruptors - Pesticides - Phthalates - Men's Health

Wersja a3 do ściągnięcia z dropboxa (pdf) db.tt/oz1xUNEq . Jeżeli wydrukujesz to machnij fotkę i podeślij.

Learn more about how astronauts prepare to go out for a spacewalk, the tools they use when outside the Space Station, and how they return.

 

Follow ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli during his VITA mission via paolonespoli.esa.int and the VITA mission blog.

An infographic I put together showing the level of funds that has caused the shutdown of SETI, compared to many other more expensive things. Here is a link to the original posting

 

And the homepage:

www.microcosmologist.com

Infographic of my current sketchbook.

Engage in Safe Behaviours

 

Join the 2014 National Women's Health Week celebration. Learn more about how you can be a well woman. Spread the word through your networks. Join or organize women's health Meetups.

 

Get more information

 

What is a well-woman visit?

When is National Women's Checkup Day?

Why is it important for women to participate in this effort?

How can you participate in this important event?

Visit WomensHealth.gov.

 

Get involved !

 

Get the National Women’s Health Week Social media toolkit.

Join or plan a Meetup.

 

More Infographics

 

National Women's Health Week Infographics.

Our posts tagged infographics.

This infographic - to download here - was developed to highlight some key figures from the World Cancer Report.

 

Sources: World Cancer Day 2014 resources.

 

All our posts tagged cancer, infographics, World Cancer Day 2014.

This infographic - to download here - was developed to highlight some key figures from the World Cancer Report.

Sign Now the declaration for a cancer free world !

 

Sources: World Cancer Day 2014 resources.

 

All our posts tagged cancer, infographics, World Cancer Day 2014.

Schedule Your Well-Woman Visit

 

Join the 2014 National Women's Health Week celebration. Learn more about how you can be a well woman. Spread the word through your networks. Join or organize women's health Meetups.

 

Get more information

 

What is a well-woman visit?

When is National Women's Checkup Day?

Why is it important for women to participate in this effort?

How can you participate in this important event?

Visit WomensHealth.gov.

 

Get involved !

 

Get the National Women’s Health Week Social media toolkit.

Join or plan a Meetup.

 

More Infographics

 

National Women's Health Week Infographics.

Our posts tagged infographics.

Sources: The FDA Says…, Natural News, Mar 18 2013

 

All our posts about AEDs, BPA, BPS, Drugs, EDCs, the FDA, pesticides, SSRIs. See more infographics.

Learn more about how astronauts prepare to go out for a spacewalk, the tools they use when outside the Space Station, and how they return.

 

Follow ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli during his VITA mission via paolonespoli.esa.int and the VITA mission blog.

This infographic outlines things I've learned about creativity. I'd love feedback.

 

tumblr | website | twitter | dribbble

Pay Attention to Your Mental Health

 

Join the 2014 National Women's Health Week celebration. Learn more about how you can be a well woman. Spread the word through your networks. Join or organize women's health Meetups.

 

Get more information

 

What is a well-woman visit?

When is National Women's Checkup Day?

Why is it important for women to participate in this effort?

How can you participate in this important event?

Visit WomensHealth.gov.

 

Get involved !

 

Get the National Women’s Health Week Social media toolkit.

Join or plan a Meetup.

 

More Infographics

 

National Women's Health Week Infographics.

Our posts tagged infographics.

This infographic was commissioned by Courrier Japon Magazine in Tokyo and is based on the article "The iPad Changes Everything" originally published by Fortune Magazine. It illustrates the introduction of the iPad and how many devices in different markets are now finding themselves in direction competion to the power of the iPad and the Apps Store. All data was researched by myself, and the graphic was later split onto two pages to better fit the flow of the article.

 

It was published in the July 2010 Issue.

Growing Burden in LMICs vs Countries with Plans

This infographic - to download here - was developed to highlight some key figures from the World Cancer Report.

Sign Now the declaration for a cancer free world !

 

Sources: World Cancer Day 2014 resources.

 

All our posts tagged cancer, infographics, World Cancer Day 2014.

Infographic about taste wine, glass wine, etc.

 

© Adolfo Arranz/South China Morning Post

Studies have shown that a person's genes can cause an increased risk in breast and ovarian cancer. This infographic shows the chromosomal mutations and the risk they can pose.

According to the National Cancer Institute, studies have shown that inherited mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes account for 5-10 percent of all breast cancers and 15 percent of all ovarian cancers. While genetic testing is encouraged only for those who have a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, education and awareness are important to early detection and treatment.

How can a better understanding of the cause of these genetic mutations help further the cause of finding a cure for cancer?

 

Sources:

* Infographic: Understanding the inherited risk of breast and ovarian cancer, gbtribune, section/212/article/73688

 

More Information:

* Features of Inherited Cancer, Stanford Medicine, geneticsAndCancer/inherited

* BRCA1 and BRCA2: Cancer Risk and Genetic Testing, NCI, factsheet/Risk/BRCA

* Hereditary Breast Ovarian Cancer Syndrome (BRCA1 / BRCA2), Stanford Medicine, geneticsAndCancer/types/herbocs

In weightlessness, astronauts’ bodies lose muscle and bone density, eyes change, fluids shift to the brain and more – our bodies adapted to life on Earth and are not designed for spaceflight. Finding ways to stay healthy in orbit is a large part of human spaceflight research. The more test subjects the better, but sending people into space is expensive and hard.

 

Dry-immersion baths are used to recreate aspects of living in weightlessness on Earth. Similar to bath tubs, containers hold study participants in suspension for many days.

 

The studies benefit from placing less pressure on the body as volunteers are supported and suspended evenly in the tub, a condition that mimics the floating astronauts experience on the International Space Station.

 

The results from this type of research does not only benefit astronauts but has implications for people on Earth who are bedridden for long periods of time for example.

 

Credits: ESA

college assignment I made with three other friends for the design of information class.

 

theme:

"35 years of the Design course of UFPR"

 

(click full size for a better view)

Infographic on Star Trek trivia.

Please full view!

Infographic about my design skills

Learn about European and international spacewalks in numbers.

 

Credit: ESA

Infographic in this month's Metropolis displaying the distribution of LEED certified projects throughout the country and world.

* The United States Congress designated January as Cervical Health Awareness Month.

 

* Image sources Prevent Cancer Foundation blog, infographic and PDF.

 

* Watch @DES_Journal CervicalCancer and HPV slideshow presentation.

 

* Our posts tagged cervical cancer, pap tests, screening. See more infographics.

Our concept was to design a packaging using nutritional facts about the food product. For the milk carton, we used the four sides to inform about the caloric ratio, nutrience balance completeness, ingredients and amount per serving.

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80