View allAll Photos Tagged dataviz
Increase your SALES with ZoomCharts!
ZoomCharts had an excellent time participating in the TechHub Rīga March Meetup on March 12, 2015, taking place at Kaļķu street 12/14, Rīga, LV-1050, Latvia.
ZoomCharts CEO and Co-Founder Janis Volbergs gave an engaging presentation on the startup path from idea, to market, to investment, and what it takes to build a product from the ground up and take it to a new level.
How did it all start?
A problem was spotted. There were no visualization libraries delivering truly interactive charts for touch enabled devices that were capable of working with big data.
And so the idea emerged. This was the right time to build such a library.
Why?
Because touch screen displays will become a $31.9 billion dollar market by 2018. Smart mobile sensor devices were used by 1.75 billion people in 2014. The Big Data market will grow exponentially (from $8.8 billion in 2013), to $48 billion in 2018. HTML5 adoption is wide enough and touch enabled devices are powerful enough to generate interactive visualizations.
The ingredients for a successful startup include:
1. A grand vision. ZoomCharts’ vision is to become the number one SDK for interactive chart development in web and mobile apps.
2. A realistic plan for execution and getting your vision implemented.
3. (Most importantly) A team, able to see the grand vision and execute the plan.
ZoomCharts started small, but focused. A vision was set, a core team of professionals was assembled, and a detailed business plan was derived, which led to a €200,000 seed investment.
The product was created in less than a year, and launched public downloads and a shop in March 2014.
In less than a year, the customer list grew to include companies such as TCI Business Capital, Hewlett Packard, D8 Corporation, Proteus Enterprise, Narus, SwissLife, Taykey, Derivitec, Sensors, Click & Pledge, Ryan Scientific, Inc., Booxs, Frostbyte Consulting, Image webdesign, Norbit, Helm, Zengo, Ense Group, RCS, Helbling, Loonloon, Fractalerts, Thinktecture, bitmama, KeeSystem, Trulia, Maxfone, and many more.
Increase your SALES with ZoomCharts!
ZoomCharts started with a €0 investment in dedicated marketing. A follow up investment of €500,000 raised in November 2014 enabled us to scale our team from 3 to 11, and get us moving forward fast.
Today, the ZoomCharts team has grown from 3 to 11, and has raised a total investment of €700,000. We’ve reached 40 paying customers, and growing, and there have been over 700 trials started, and growing.
Current challenges include brand building, marketing and sales, and incorporation into the US, including patents.
Despite the challenges, ZoomCharts is excited about the company’s future, which includes plans such as:
1. Raise €5-7 million to massively expand sales and marketing.
2. Expand the team to 40+ within the next two years.
3. Launch multiple SAAS solutions that would let a much wider audience take advantage of the benefits ZoomCharts provides.
We are proud to be part of ZoomCharts, and we are glad to hear that our customers love ZoomCharts as much as we do!
Check out ZoomCharts products:
Network Chart
Big network exploration
Increase your SALES with ZoomCharts!
Explore linked data sets. Highlight relevant data with dynamic filters and visual styles. Incremental data loading. Exploration with focus nodes.
Time Chart
Time navigation and exploration tool
Browse activity logs, select time ranges. Multiple data series and value axes. Switch between time units.
Pie Chart
Amazingly intuitive hierarchical data exploration
Get quick overview of your data and drill down when necessary. All in a single easy to use chart.
Facet Chart
Scrollable bar chart with drill-down
Compare values side by side and provide easy access to the long tail.
ZoomCharts
The world’s most interactive data visualization software
#zoomcharts #interactive #data #datavisualization #charts #graphs #bigdata #dataviz #TechHub #Riga #Latvia #March #meetup #JanisVolbergs #TCI #HewlettPackard #HP #D8 #ProteusEnterprise #Narus #SwissLife #Taykey #Derivitec #Sensors #Click&Pledge #RyanScientific #Booxs #Frostbyte #Imagewebdesign #Norbit #Helm #Zengo #EnseGroup #RCS #Helbling #Loonloon #Fractalerts #Thinktecture #bitmama #KeeSystem #Trulia #Maxfone
Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.
Visualizing the various features of the SwiftRiver distributed reputation and veracity functionality. The trust the local community has for Users 1 and 2 is displayed. The trust the global RiverID system has for Users 1 and 2 is also displayed. Thus, the trust Users 1 and 2 should have for each other is inferred.
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
Update: I explain in a blog post how you can create your visual CV with Excel only.
This is a visualisation of my CV, a graphical view of my data on LinkedIn. I added my practice of drawing, as well as my visual approach in my professional activities, which declined when I started my professional career (and with the first years of marriage ;-)
This data visualisation is inspired by Tobias Stalder on Twitter (@toeb18)
A detail of our Taxonomy of Team Names poster.
This infographic answers categorizes and classifies every professional team by its team name. Each classification is accompanied by beautiful vintage illustrations. To learn more about this poster and buy a print, visit the Infojocks website.
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
LHC Dash:
itunes.apple.com/hk/app/lhc-dash/id388880471?mt=8
Today, it seemed like everywhere I looked, people were geeking out
about the new "Particles" iPad app.
'The Particles' iPad App Is a Physics Geek's Dream:
mashable.com/2013/03/19/cern-the-particles-app/
The Particles, By Science Photo Library Ltd.
itunes.apple.com/app/the-particles/id601382793?mt=8&i...
There seemed to be a lot of agreement that it is a truly gorgeous app
(aesthetically and functionally) for which you don't need to have an
in-depth physics background to be able to learn quite a bit. There
also seemed to be a misunderstanding going around that it was from
CERN, and that somehow what you did with it supported CERN's efforts.
When I found out that it costs about $8 and is not associated with
CERN in any way, I was a little disappointed. I then went looking for
apps that really ARE from CERN. CERN does have a new one released last
week, but it is kind of boring unless you plan to visit. MapCERN is a
tool for visitors to find their way around the CERN campus. Useful,
but perhaps less than deeply engaging. CERN does have an engaging game
app, called LHSee, but it is only available for the Android platform,
and all I have right now is iOS devices. Then I found LHC Dash.
Now, LHC Dash has the potential to be REALLY fun, certainly engaging,
but ... I might not know enough to actually make the best use of it.
What it does is basically serve as a dashboard for watching outputs
from various research projects running around CERN in real time. It is
configurable, as this image shows. There are four screens in the
dashboard, each one with the potential to watch six experiments. One
of them kept coming up blank, but when I tapped the name of that
experiment, I was given a list from which to select something else to
replace that blank space. I could select and sort experiments kind of
like I organize my iPad screens, with related content all on the same
page.
LHC Dash is not a new app — the first mention I saw was from
@sciencegoddess back in 2011. It is still pretty geeky, though, even
if it isn't a game.
What I think of when I see it is ideas for how to use this concept for
other ideas. The idea of a dashboard is really nothing new, of
grabbing realtime data and monitoring it. While I hadn't thought of it
before, what I realized is that I would really like something like
this as a kind of quantified self dashboard, something where I could
configure panels to display and manage various inputs, data feeds,
device feeds, etc., and perhaps run cross-correlations between them.
Now, that could be phenomenally useful, especially if it was showing
MY data about me. Wouldn't every quantified selfer geek out about
that? Who knows - maybe there is already such a thing.
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.
Developed for GE's Healthymagination data visualization forum, we take a realtime look at the discussions happening on Twitter around the topic of breast cancer. Tweets from all over the world are aggregated in a single location, allowing visitors to quickly understand the current topics, trends, and stories.
Visitors can sort the tweets to reveal the top five most popular topics appearing in the last 1,500 tweets. Within each topic is listed the three most commonly used words. Through this sorting, visitors can easily get an understanding of the major discussion threads, as well as explore each related tweet in detail.
In addition to sorting tweets by topics, visitors can explore the most common news stories referenced in the tweets, explore the individuals who are tweeting the most, or log into Twitter directly and add to the discussion.
Explore:
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
For the August issue of Wired UK, I built a two-page infographic looking at some of the ways we can track human mobility from cellular phone data.
Speaking of things that came up at the dataviz meet.
You really want to zoom in on this to see the detail.
Data is from this MODIS subset. I’ve tried to filter out missing data and heavier clouds, but this is preliminary work yet.
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
Tablero resultante de una acción con 'Dialograma' organizada por Fundación Telefónica Lima (Perú) y el diario El Comercio con la participación de destacados gastrónomos peruanos. 20 de julio del 2016
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
A snapshot of the scoring chart, which details every goal and assist scored by the Penguins in the postseason.
This is a preview of a much larger infographic poster. To buy the print, or for more information: www.infojocks.com/store_pen.html
Laboratory animal stories are kept low key and rarely pierce through into mainstream media, which means the public are generally left in the dark about the number and types of animals affected, and for the majority of us, the treatments and products that are tested for our supposed benefit.
View full article at Next Generation Pharmaceutical EU
Graphic by T Farrant | Twitter @fallenblossom
For the August issue of Wired UK, I built a two-page infographic looking at some of the ways we can track human mobility from cellular phone data.
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Get it! Feel It! Know it! Viz it! DataViz Workshop, Miguel Cardoso/Pedro Almeida, 12 - 15 Out. 2011
CADA
Visualized here is what no one has seen before - a near realtime look at the email being processed by Yahoo! It showcases how spam is filtered and email is routed for more than 300 million mail users across the world.
One of the reasons that Yahoo! Mail is the No. 1 email service in America is that for every good email they deliver, they block 4 spam emails. That’s 20.5 billion spam messages a day that aren't slowing down the Internet.
The visualization also takes a look at the top subject line keywords in both good and spam email delivered for all regions, and provides a look at the processing that happens to every email before it's delivered.
Developed entirely in HTML5, it's compatible with all modern browsers and tablet devices. This is the first in a series of visualizations about Yahoo! technology.
Explore:
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...
Our GeoDataViz team have been virtually exploring and comparing the landscapes with OS data and created a poster to showcase Great Britain's 78 Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) and National Scenic Areas (NSAs).
Take a look at the blog: www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/blog/2020/07/using-data-to-explo...