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This is what happen when i turn the visualizer on in the iTunes on my Apple iBook G4 when listening to my great music.
Results of a sound visualization tool I'm working on that displays sound as color.
The source sounds come from a learn-english website, Antimoon.com. This sound sample has turned out to be a useful benchmark for testing, and it happens to show off the algorithm nicely too. You can hear the original sounds here:
www.antimoon.com/how/pronunc-soundsipa.htm.
The upper portion of each word is the high hissy sounds (approximately the "whispering range") converted to color. The bottom portion is the human vocal range. Since the original sound is just one guy speaking in relative monotone, the bottom portion is comparatively uniform.
I'm still looking for interesting sound samples for testing and demonstration. Please send them my way, if you have any.
Everyone will take their turn with several Unique stages including Fireworks, Paint, River, Gem Game and Ink. Tapping with light, medium and hard strokes produces on-screen effects ranging from a fireworks display to undersea bubbles. In special tap sequences, various sea animals will appear. (1 player) www.sega.com/letstap
TwitterGraph of Twitter user fatlildragon
generated by:
bradkellett.com/twitter_stats.html
As the software author describes it, a "totally ugly engine" - but once you start to think about the data that's out there - Twitter or otherwise - you start to think about all the ways this data could be visualized.
Can anybody recommend other engines peeps have written to viz network data?
Note that the graphs are labeled "Tweets per Day" and "Tweets per Hour" -- I think it really means "BY" not "PER" as in "40 of your Tweets came on Mondays" - not, your "average" Monday had 40 Tweets.
A few pix from the traveling hyperwall exhibit. Images provided by Winnie Humberson from NASA's Science Program Support Office. Many of visualizations on the hyperwall were provided by our partners at the Scientific Visualization Studio.
This is a visualization of the HTML tags that make up my site bitdepth.org.
Key to the coloured dots:
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags
It was created with the nifty bit of code that lets you view websites as graphs made by Sala.
Visualization of an email list. Each picture reprensents one Month. A Sediment is an author, the height
Visualization of an email list. Each picture reprensents one Month. A Sediment is an author, the height represents the length of teh body, each hair is a word. Answers are red lines.
Visualization of an email list. Each picture reprensents one Month. A Sediment is an author, the height represents the length of teh body, each hair is a word. Answers are red lines.
this is a poster, 40x20" designed for my visual systems class.
The system in this case is using the period of my photo-taking to circuitously describe an event without actually showing the photos of the event itself.
The top and bottom graphs are both the same information, just showed in different ways. All the graphics were generated in nodebox from the exif data in the 192 photos i took at the wine tasting. The pdf graphics were then copied into illustrator and colored if necessary.
there's a lot of things that need to be incorporated into this like tags and really cleaning up the typography. suggestions happily accepted.
Visualization of every keytweeter tweet since the beginning of the project. The horizontal axis is on the scale of a year, the vertical axis is over each day, starting with midnight at the top and moving on to noon in the middle. Some of this comes from Twitter directly and thus has a fixed timezone, while the most recent data comes from personal logs which compensates for my time zone.
Keytweeter will be complete at the end of this month.
Some of the biggest shifts come from switching time zones temporarily or staying up late working on projects. But you can also see a general downwards trend corresponding either to laziness or perhaps an unusually long circadian rhythm.
The data will be publicly available soon. Please contact me if you're interested in visualizing it.
Fixed long exposures of the iTunes visualizer fullscreen on Alma Monay (powerbook).
Playing: KT Tunstall
Julia Kaganskiy (@juliaxgulia) organizes Arts, Culture and Technology meetups in NYC. This event on 27th April 2010 was on Data Mining & Visualization: www.meetup.com/Arts-Culture-and-Technology/calendar/13144...
I mainly uploaded these to submit to the 'Backgrounds App' group for use for cell phone backgrounds on android devices.
if they aren't accepted, I'll be deleting them.
xox
We are making architectural visualization with LUMION & MAX
루미온과 맥스로 건축이미지를 제작합니다
문의 : major27a@gmail.com / strade.3D / DU-YEOL KIM(김두열)
#VirtualReality Makes Real Gains Across Africa -#vrcompanies #unity3d #360degreevideo #architect #interiordesigner
"T O P O L O G Y" is a meditation of the word visualized in three dimensions in a tangible form. The form is constructed with a Z-Corp CNC prototyping machine and isosurf. "T O P O L O G Y" is the first in a series of 3-D forms created from the orientation of the letters.
iPlant Collaborative members discuss an example shown on the TACC Visualization Wall.
Pictured (left to right): Brandon Theis, Steve Goff
I mainly uploaded these to submit to the 'Backgrounds App' group for use for cell phone backgrounds on android devices.
if they aren't accepted, I'll be deleting them.
xox
Every trace I've taken over the past few days, with width reflecting the impedance of the road to bicycle travel. It's interesting to note that the string of traffic lights on Westlake has a higher bicycle-impedance than riding uphill up Fremont Ave.
I haven't found a really good way to de-emphasize complete stops while still highlighting the impedance resultant from hills.
The zigzaggy bit at the bottom is the climb up 3rd through downtown, where the tall buildings render a GPS nearly unusable. Critics of odometry-based bus AVL take note!