View allAll Photos Tagged Visualize
Screendumps of a Processing visualization using Miles Davies's "Bitches Brew" as input.
Source available here: mrben.co.uk/blog/2008/10/dancing-circles/
A visualization using Wordle of the paper "Lark: Coordinating Co-located Collaboration with Information Visualization" by Matthew Tobiasz, Petra Isenberg, and Sheelagh Carpendale, published in the conference proceedings of Information Visualization 2009.
Link to Wordle Visualization of Lark.
Looks even better on my massive monitor. For the record, this was while playing "The Lady in My Life" by Michael Jackson
Here's an (easter egg?) within the Neon Visualizer... usually always blurred out but here in much better detail. I've been playing with Neon way too much lately... it's the programmers arcade initials / alias.
See....
CeCee Clifford,
Model: Taylor Blystone,
Large Format {4x5},
Professor: Jack Barnosky,
Visualizations, Spring 2013
Visualize the culture of your organization with a Company Culture App. To know more, visit: www.wellevue.com.
2009 - the year in review.
Built from my Facebook statuses.
apps.facebook.com/my-year-in-status/show.php?u=729940403&...
The analysis of football teams as networks of individuals.
Connections between a player and the rest of the team according (here 2 levels). Position in the field are measures according the to area where each player receives the pass (centroid with weights). Size of the node represent the "betweenness" of each player. That is it represents how the ball-flow between other players depends on that particular player.
Data source: FIFA World Cup 2010
Data collected, analyzed and visualized with www.quadrigram.com
Looks even better on my massive monitor. For the record, this was while playing "The Lady in My Life" by Michael Jackson
CeCee Clifford,
Model: Mitchell Bartlett,
Pinhole Camera,
Professor: Jack Barnosky,
Visualizations, Spring 2013
3D view of the project that I'm working on at work. I'm studying and visualizing how our new freeway will go into the site.
Screendumps of a Processing visualization using Miles Davies's "Bitches Brew" as input.
Source available here: mrben.co.uk/blog/2008/10/dancing-circles/