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For a big poster about web statistics.

Guide book from the Soviet Pavilion at the 1967 World's Fair.

 

You can see more pictures and text at my blog:

grainedit.com

the second attached volume, is a photographic index of the 360 people, accordion-folds out flat so the viewer can see each person next to the graphics.

Exterior signs extend the same toy-like, plug-and-play design vocabulary outside the building and provide continuity of the wayfinding experience for visitors. As with interior signs, colors and materials were carefully coordinated with the building architecture.

SML Pro Blog: Project Rebirth / 2004 / SML

 

Project Rebirth (www.ProjectRebirth.org)

Chronicling the Rebirth of Ground Zero in New York City

 

Screens (11 Total)

+ 1. Home

+ 2. Timeline: Camera C: View Cone

+ 3. Timeline: Camera C: Information

+ 4. Timeline: Today: 2004-11-17

+ 5. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Documentary

+ 6. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Journal

+ 7. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Journal Detail

+ 8. The Film: Project Journal

+ 9. The Film: Cameras

+ 10. The Rebuild about Ground Zero

+ 11. About Us: News & Press

 

Awards

+ Design Interact Site of the Week: 2004-12-20

+ Graphis Interactive Annual 3, 2005

+ One Show Interactive 2005 Merit Award

+ Web Marketing Association's WebAwards 2005: Best Non-Profit Website

 

IconNicholson Team (IconNicholson / LBi International)

+ Claudia Chow (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Katharine English (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Leslie Freeman (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Larry Burks (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Miles Kafka (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Paul Wood (Google)

+ Robert Fisher

+ See-ming Lee (Blog / Flickr / Google / LinkedIn)

+ Tim Murtaugh (Flickr / Google / LinkedIn)

 

Design Interact: Web Site of the Week (www.designinteract.com/sow/122004/)

 

Week of December 20: Project Rebirth Web Site

 

Project Rebirth is an online chronicle of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site. As immediate and compelling as a physical visit, this project gives people the opportunity to observe and share in the progress of the reconstruction.

 

Newly released at the time the team was considering technical specifications, thisProject Rebirth Web site site uses the FlashMX development environment to full effect. Functioning as a portal to extensive content, the beauty of this Web site lies in its ability to be current and historical. With a visual design that appropriately takes a back seat to the content, it records ideas, images and interviews in their original context while also allowing for their evolution.

 

Primary content consists of a series of video images (presented in a timeline format) captured by six, 35mm time-lapse cameras positioned by Project Rebirth around the World Trade Center site. They shoot one frame every five minutes—and will continue to do so for ten years. The images enable the viewing of the rebuild as it occurs on any date; in seconds, visitors can see the footage of a single day. There are also interviews with reconstruction overseers, journals by filmmakers and video of major milestones in the redevelopment efforts.

 

Project Rebirth Web siteThe key challenge for the developers was to create an interface that would incorporate what would ultimately be ten years of film footage, that didn’t inundate visitors and yet communicated the passage of substantial amounts of time. Their solution is an interactive, XML-driven timeline that delivers fluid viewing of time-lapse footage. It provides an appropriate time-based metaphor that also does a nice job of integrating video, audio, imagery and text-based content into a single interface. The time-based experience allows access to any moment in time and provides the ability to navigate the Web site by date and/or event. Our one complaint: The link from the home page, to this main feature, looks far too much like header art. We would have liked to see billing more in line with its importance.

 

This collaborative effort between Project Rebirth and IconNicholson began in the summer of 2003 and the site launched in September 2004. On average, visitors are staying on the site 19 minutes, which is significant in comparison to Internet-wide stays at sites with similar content. Interestingly, international users comprise 30% of all visitors.

 

Robert Fisher, creative director

Claudia Chow, art director

See-ming Lee, timeline art director/developer

Larry Burks, information architect

Miles Kafka, CGI programmer/engineer

Tim Murtaugh, HTML developer

Leslie Freeman, producer

Katharine English, Project Rebirth, general manager

Paul Wood, Project Rebirth, technical producer

IconNicholson, site design and development

 

Web site: www.projectrebirth.org

Web site: www.iconnicholson.com

 

©2004 Coyne & Blanchard, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

SML Copyright Notice

©2007 See-ming Lee / SML Flickr / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Author(s):

Yarden Livnat, Jim Agutter, Shaun Moon, Stefano Foresti

Institution:

University of Utah

Year:

2005

URL:

www.sci.utah.edu/publications/yarden05/VisAware.pdf

------------------ ---------------

Project Description:

Presented at the Infovis 2005 Conference in Minneapolis, MN (USA), VisAware reveals a novel visual correlation paradigm that takes advantage of human perceptive and cognitive facilities in order to enhance users' situational awareness and support decision-making.

 

The first image reflects VisAware used in a Biowatch scenario where its structure classifies agents in colored sections around a ring. It shows the different categories of biological agents and the different types of chemical agents (i.e. blistering and nerve agents). With the map in the middle, it is easy to correlate the presence of agents to the sensor that detected it. The correlating line has a variable width that shows the probability of the agent under analysis; the thicker the line the greater the probability of an actual attack.

 

The second image shows VisAlert, a visualization method for network intrusion detection. The authors based their approach on representing the network alerts as connections between two domains. These two domains are a one dimensional domain representing the node attribute, and a two-dimensional domain representing the time and type attributes. A network alert instance, in this scheme, is thus a straight line from a point in the type-time domain to a point in the node domain. They choose to separate the node attribute from the type and time as nodes provide a more or less static set of objects that can be used as visualization anchors for the transient alert instances.

View of an interior staircase at Museu del Disseny. The handsome new building, opened in 2014, combines collections from former textile & fashion, graphic arts, industrial design and information design museums.

 

By representing destination areas using simple alpha-numeric “targets,” this wayfinding system for a large pediatric hospital minimizes the use of unfamiliar medical jargon on signs—something that, our research showed, induce anxiety and stress in parents and children. To find out what target to seek, visitors look up their destinations on digital directories located throughout the facility.

 

The use of alpha-numeric destination codes is a well-established navigation model used in public transit systems and airports. By adapting it to a hospital environment, the designers to provide users with a familiar navigation model, while greatly simplifying sign messages.

Lightsaber fight!

M.Sc. project

 

Poster | 700x1000 mm

 

The diagram shows the auditory informations paths, from the external world to the highest information elaboration structures in the human brain.

I have made this information graphic to show the transitions between baked dishes.

 

I am very fascinated by these connection and transitions; that for example a crumble is a tart without pastry :)

 

Take a look closer:

www.flickr.com/photos/madame_ulani/6309619783/o

Wingler, H. The Bauhaus : Weimar, Dessau, Berlin, Chicago. Cambridge, Mas. : MIT Press, 1978.

Instagram blog - One Infographic a Day

Interaktives Gestalten/Konzeptuelles Gestalten

WS 2007/2008

 

Im Garten der Information

Gestalten mit „processing“

  

Florian Jenett (processing)

Prof. Philipp Pape

Prof. Anna-Lisa Schönecker

 

Informationen aus Datenquellen werden mit Hilfe von processing in lebendige Visualisierung umgesetzt, die dem Betrachter einen erlebbaren Zugang zu diesen Daten bietet bzw. neue Verknüpfungen erkennbar macht.

 

Studienarbeiten von:

 

Gernot Baars

Alex Balzien

Daniel Becker

Helena Fischer

Marcel Fleischmann

Nils Holland-Cunz

Stefanie Jellen

Susanne Kehrer

Sabrina Koehler

Nora Korn

Martha Richter

Kristina Klinkmüller

Christopher Adjei

     

Interaktives Gestalten/Konzeptuelles Gestalten

WS 2007/2008

 

Im Garten der Information

Gestalten mit „processing“

  

Florian Jenett (processing)

Prof. Philipp Pape

Prof. Anna-Lisa Schönecker

 

Informationen aus Datenquellen werden mit Hilfe von processing in lebendige Visualisierung umgesetzt, die dem Betrachter einen erlebbaren Zugang zu diesen Daten bietet bzw. neue Verknüpfungen erkennbar macht.

 

Studienarbeiten von:

 

Gernot Baars

Alex Balzien

Daniel Becker

Helena Fischer

Marcel Fleischmann

Nils Holland-Cunz

Stefanie Jellen

Susanne Kehrer

Sabrina Koehler

Nora Korn

Martha Richter

Kristina Klinkmüller

Christopher Adjei

    

Arctic express "Murmansk-Dudinka" - the basic information of the ship, and even a little more!

This assignment, led by Brian Lucid at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, involves the design and production of a printed diagram that clearly and understandably conveys the organization and structure of a complex musical composition.

Yamal — a peninsula in the north of Western Siberia, the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug of Russia. The length of the peninsula 700 km long and up to 240 km. Washed by the Kara Sea.

SML Pro Blog: Project Rebirth / 2004 / SML

 

Project Rebirth (www.ProjectRebirth.org)

Chronicling the Rebirth of Ground Zero in New York City

 

Screens (11 Total)

+ 1. Home

+ 2. Timeline: Camera C: View Cone

+ 3. Timeline: Camera C: Information

+ 4. Timeline: Today: 2004-11-17

+ 5. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Documentary

+ 6. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Journal

+ 7. Timeline: Project Journal: 2003-11-23: Event: Opening of the PATH Train: Journal Detail

+ 8. The Film: Project Journal

+ 9. The Film: Cameras

+ 10. The Rebuild about Ground Zero

+ 11. About Us: News & Press

 

Awards

+ Design Interact Site of the Week: 2004-12-20

+ Graphis Interactive Annual 3, 2005

+ One Show Interactive 2005 Merit Award

+ Web Marketing Association's WebAwards 2005: Best Non-Profit Website

 

IconNicholson Team (IconNicholson / LBi International)

+ Claudia Chow (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Katharine English (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Leslie Freeman (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Larry Burks (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Miles Kafka (Google / LinkedIn)

+ Paul Wood (Google)

+ Robert Fisher

+ See-ming Lee (Blog / Flickr / Google / LinkedIn)

+ Tim Murtaugh (Flickr / Google / LinkedIn)

 

Design Interact: Web Site of the Week (www.designinteract.com/sow/122004/)

 

Week of December 20: Project Rebirth Web Site

 

Project Rebirth is an online chronicle of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site. As immediate and compelling as a physical visit, this project gives people the opportunity to observe and share in the progress of the reconstruction.

 

Newly released at the time the team was considering technical specifications, thisProject Rebirth Web site site uses the FlashMX development environment to full effect. Functioning as a portal to extensive content, the beauty of this Web site lies in its ability to be current and historical. With a visual design that appropriately takes a back seat to the content, it records ideas, images and interviews in their original context while also allowing for their evolution.

 

Primary content consists of a series of video images (presented in a timeline format) captured by six, 35mm time-lapse cameras positioned by Project Rebirth around the World Trade Center site. They shoot one frame every five minutes—and will continue to do so for ten years. The images enable the viewing of the rebuild as it occurs on any date; in seconds, visitors can see the footage of a single day. There are also interviews with reconstruction overseers, journals by filmmakers and video of major milestones in the redevelopment efforts.

 

Project Rebirth Web siteThe key challenge for the developers was to create an interface that would incorporate what would ultimately be ten years of film footage, that didn’t inundate visitors and yet communicated the passage of substantial amounts of time. Their solution is an interactive, XML-driven timeline that delivers fluid viewing of time-lapse footage. It provides an appropriate time-based metaphor that also does a nice job of integrating video, audio, imagery and text-based content into a single interface. The time-based experience allows access to any moment in time and provides the ability to navigate the Web site by date and/or event. Our one complaint: The link from the home page, to this main feature, looks far too much like header art. We would have liked to see billing more in line with its importance.

 

This collaborative effort between Project Rebirth and IconNicholson began in the summer of 2003 and the site launched in September 2004. On average, visitors are staying on the site 19 minutes, which is significant in comparison to Internet-wide stays at sites with similar content. Interestingly, international users comprise 30% of all visitors.

 

Robert Fisher, creative director

Claudia Chow, art director

See-ming Lee, timeline art director/developer

Larry Burks, information architect

Miles Kafka, CGI programmer/engineer

Tim Murtaugh, HTML developer

Leslie Freeman, producer

Katharine English, Project Rebirth, general manager

Paul Wood, Project Rebirth, technical producer

IconNicholson, site design and development

 

Web site: www.projectrebirth.org

Web site: www.iconnicholson.com

 

©2004 Coyne & Blanchard, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

SML Copyright Notice

©2007 See-ming Lee / SML Flickr / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

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