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You might be familiar with Buza's amazing twitter visualizations from a few months ago. He recently invited me to test a system he has been putting together to let anyone generate the same kind of images based on their own web data.

 

The system works as follows: First, the user crawls the web and prepares some data ahead of time (images, graph structures, etc). Using a python script, the user feeds the data to an OpenGL context that is running an instance of the Bullet physics engine. Live interaction with the visualized data can happen there in a manner similar to E15,. When a desired view is produced or found, the system can generate a Sunflow scene file, that can be later used to render an image similar to the one featured here.

 

I haven't done much, just grabbed some data I harvested a while ago from openstudio and the tiny icon factory, and threw it in there to see how it looks. I hope to help Buza tweak some bugs and reach some design decisions while experimenting with Sunflow and rendering some coolness in the process.

a map of all the tags in my delicious listing. you can make your own here: meeech.github.com/delicious.html

Group members from the breakout group on Visualization at Queen's University (venue of MSR Vision 2020).

Background galaxy photo is M66 located in the constellation Leo taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and blended with another galaxy M31 also taken by Hubble. The woman meditating photo is a royalty free photo purchased from a stock photo website and then extensively reworked in Photoshop.

From Isotype Revisited project (http://www.isotyperevisited.org) at the University of Reading. Reproduced with permission.

Essentially, to assemble something with a lining, you have to think of the object as if it is being assembled through a black hole: Everything inside out, and upside down, and backwards.

 

Then you sew it all together, turn it right side out, and hope you didn't screw up.

I read about this beautiful visualization site on this blog to which I was referred by @billives. The blog post describes it as "a tag based visualization using planetary constellations to playfully browse Flickr images with little related tags orbiting the center of the tag galaxy."

 

Check it out for yourself and see your tags in motion!

This close up shot of the statue's face taken at this angle makes it feel extremely close to the viewer and gives the depth factor that makes it seem further away from the ground then it actually is.

If you don't want your dashboards to be just another piece of art with little information, read on to learn about the data gurus' 7 data visualisation best practises. Dashboards have become ingrained in our daily routines. Data scientists are always trying to come up with new ways to make numerical and quantitative data more interesting and understandable. Unfortunately, a substantial number of images stand out as poor instances of data visualisation.

New Google Analytics "visualize" view, plus GapMinder feature

I'm so addicted to watching this.

Electronic Arts museum, Basel, Switzerland

Interactive Visualizations in the immersive fulldome environment

 

360° Fulldome.Laboratory at the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam;

incom.org/projekt/2289

 

FOTO:

Yvonne Dickopf | www.dickopf.org

Visualization: Studio216

Architect: NBBJ Architects

Location: Moscow, Idaho

This close up shot of the statue's face places the object near one of the thirds of the frame and emphasizes the power and awe of whatever it is that the statue is looking at.

Using Wordle.net I created this word cloud visualization of Tiger Woods' press conference on February 19, 2010

Golden WestLake

 

Project information

 

Location: 151 Thuy Khue Street, Tay Ho, Hanoi

Type: Apartments

Investor: Flamingo Hong Hac Dailai Resort JSC

Total area: 2ha

Building start date: 31/12/2005

Building finish date: 31/12/2007

 

Product by E5:

- Ariel visualization.

- Exterior visualizations

- Interior visualizations

- 5 minutes introducing film.

The 3D project completed in november 2007.

Early test with column major placement. Built with Processing.

After three hours in bed, I woke up with a bad sore throat. So I was nearly speechless - the whole day.

Tour & Taxis: last installation for Revolve's 2014 photo exhibition "The Rise of Renewables"

The former state of my infamously-decorated 1991 Pontiac Grand Am. When i bought the big, orange "Visualize Grilled Cheese" sticker at the 1997 HORDE festival, I did so because I thought it was completely random, stupendous and hysterical. but since then, I've broadened my horizons a bit. Now, I believe it's a direct response to another, equally anonymous bumper sticker, which reads "Visualize Whirled Peas."

Visualization: Studio216

Architect: NBBJ Architects

Location: Moscow, Idaho

This is an example of the processing done by my music visualizer for iTunes on the Mac

 

more at www.fraktus.com/exo/exo_flickr.php

 

Or download it at fraktus.com/exo/eXo_12.dmg

 

The picture processed is downloaded automaticaly from the Flickr web site and is not mine, so it's a collective piece of art :-)

 

This one is more absract. There is a procedural texture in the background with several transparent cubes having different sizes and displaying a Flickr picture. It's creating surprising textures!

by #IFVPmember Misha Mercer

paul.dubuc.org/category/computers-software/

 

The ESV Blog has an interesting visualization of the textual relationship between people mentioned in the same chapter of the New Testament. It was done using IBM’s Many Eyes data visualization tool. Check out those links for more information

First Hacks/Hackers Meetup held at Atherton Studio at HPR. Great presentations by Ben Trevino, Jared Kuroiwa and Misa Maruyama.

No wonder I can't get a date. I can't ever meet anybody new.

Visualizing Patterns and Trends in Scientific Literature – What’s next? Chaomei Chen Many of us are interested in visualizing patterns and trends in scientific literature. It can be very exciting and revealing as well as challenging and frustrating. More often than not, a visualized ‘big picture’ of a scientific field invites more questions and more specific needs. Some may want to see more details; others may prefer a birds-eye view. There are quite a few unanswered questions. I’d like to line up a couple of them here. First of all, given any visualization of scientific literature, who would be able to understand what it is about? If there is such a thing as a typical viewer, what would be the viewer’s knowledge structure? The intended audience of the graphical message carried by the Pioneer spacecraft was aliens who would have competent knowledge of physics, at least as the way we understand it. If designers do not spell out their intent, where are the clues?

 

informationvisualization.typepad.com/sigvis/2005/02/visua...

visualization fundamentals

testing it out.

arghh hate the lagging,

anyone knows a better screen cap software?

Fixed long exposures of the iTunes visualizer fullscreen on Alma Monay (powerbook).

 

Playing: KT Tunstall

Interior project and visualizations of a catalog house KM

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