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Full graphic. Every franchise history, over 5,000 data points.

 

To purchase a print, go here: shop.infojocks.com/products/nba-league-history

I spent the weekend printing a limited edition, silk-screened print for Random Number Multiples. This print, one of two to be included in the edition, is a stylized radial graph of word usage in the New York Times. My two prints will be included in an edition with two prints from Marius Watz.

 

Prints are editions of 50, and will be available exclusively through Random Number for $100 each. The online store launches the first week of February and there will be an exhibition showcasing both artists’ work on February 11 in Brooklyn. It will be a great opportunity to see the screen prints framed and in person if you’re in the NY area.

 

Pre-orders can be placed by contacting info@randomnumber.nu

One year into his administration, how does the US compare one year on from Bush.

 

Article link: www.usfst.com/news/obama-versus-bush/

This map shows data collected at night from 9pm to 6am.

 

I have been carrying a GPS tracker with me at all times, walking, busing, driving and flying. This image is generated solely from the GPS data. The color of the lines corresponds to the speed I was traveling. Frequently-traveled paths appear thicker because of how many overlapping tracks there are.

 

More information: aaronparecki.com/GPS_Visualization

An adjustable lasercut pie chart stencil allows for quick tagging of pertinent infographics. Complete information (including stencil patterns) at flong.com/blog.

Revista Época edição 648. Crédito: Marco Vergotti e Rodrigo Cunha

In June 2016, we extracted all the route data that had been captured in our digital outdoor leisure applications (OS Maps and its predecessors). We cleansed and analysed a decade’s worth of data to identify Great Britain’s most trodden paths. This map shows the activity around the Isle of Wight, The Solent, and Southampton Water.

A flow chart to find out which Dreamworks character you are. Created using as much of the animated Dreamworks films as possible, link to personally types.

  

Article: www.meettheboss.tv/articles/?contributorFullName=matt-but...

An overview of the evidence for the conviction of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi, who was convicted of bombing Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie. Was the conviction safe? See what you think.

 

THIS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS

 

It was originally intended as an infographic. But the information proved too dense & too detailed to form into a visual style.

 

I did my best but I think it's come out looking like something the NYT would've printed 7 years ago :((

 

I've combed through over 600 pages of fascinating legal documents to compile this. Your comments and corrections are appreciated.

 

As ever, reading this stuff challenged my preconceptions and ideas about the case. And made me appreciate the passionate struggle of the Lockerbie families for the truth.

 

sources:

 

The Scottish Court Lockerbie Verdict 2001 and Appeal Verdict 2002

www.scotcourts.gov.uk/library/lockerbie/index.asp

 

Private Eye / Paul Foot - "Lockerbie: The Flight From Justice"

(http://i-p-o.org/private-eye.htm) Really great work but pretty biased IMHO

 

Truth About Fatal Flight Downplayed by Leaders

Washington Post Article

news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1298&dat=19900112&...

  

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see more of my work at www.informationisbeautiful.net

  

Over two decades after the devastating Exxon Valdez oil spill off the coast of Alaska, significant quantities of oil can still be found covering the state's shores and beneath gravel beaches, a new study has discovered.

 

View full article at Oil and Gas US

 

Graphic by Tiffany Farrant

120 million US Census forms are scheduled to arrive in US households today as the government do a head count in order to help divvy up congressional seats and more than $400 billion in federal aid. But government officials, along with private-sector leaders, are keen to point out that the data will be used not only on a federal level, but locally as well. Shorter than previous Censuses, this decade's questionnaire will only include ten questions in an effort to boost lower-than-average mail participation ten years ago.

 

View full article at US Infrastructure

 

Graphic by Tiffany Farrant

I spent the weekend printing a limited edition, silk-screened print for Random Number Multiples. This print, one of two to be included in the edition, is a stylized radial graph of word usage in the New York Times. My two prints will be included in an edition with two prints from Marius Watz.

 

Prints are editions of 50, and will be available exclusively through Random Number for $100 each. The online store launches the first week of February and there will be an exhibition showcasing both artists’ work on February 11 in Brooklyn. It will be a great opportunity to see the screen prints framed and in person if you’re in the NY area.

 

Pre-orders can be placed by contacting info@randomnumber.nu

1 Dot = 10 Commuters

Purple = Subway

Blue = Commuter Rail

Green = Bus

Red = Auto

Yellow = Ferry

 

Made this map in 2012 so the data is a bit outdated (2006-08 American Community Survey): includes all commuter flows from each Public Use Microdata Area (PUMA) origin level to Manhattan work destinations.

 

Some observations:

--Transit is the lifeblood of New York City. Subway commutes are predominant from all boroughs of NYC with subway service to Manhattan, and from areas close to the PATH train. Very few origins have a high rate of commuting into Manhattan by car, except in areas with limited transit access into NYC, such as Rockland and Orange counties, eastern Suffolk, and northern Bergen.

 

--From the suburbs, MetroNorth / LIRR is the dominant mode of access into Manhattan from most of the closer suburbs in Westchester, Long Island, and Connecticut. In NJ, it's more of an even split between rail and bus commutes: NJT rail commutes are more common in Essex, Union, and Mercer with one-stop trips into NYC via Midtown Direct or Northeast Corridor, while bus commutes are more common in Bergen, Passaic, and Monmouth.

Graphic created to present the winners of malofiej 22.

I wrote a post about it in Visualoop

In June 2017, we extracted a years’ worth of route data that had been captured in OS Maps. We cleansed and analysed the data to identify Great Britain’s most trodden paths. This map shows the Peak District which contained 8 of the top 20 most popular 1km grid squares in Great Britain, proving its popularity as a tourist attraction.

The art of innovation is key for every business savvy company in the world, but it seems that few can claim to be quite so innovative as BMW Group DesignworksUSA. Last month crowned as the “#1 Most Innovative Company in Design” by Fast Company magazine.

 

Read article: www.meettheboss.tv/articles/?contributorFullName=adam-bur...

In June 2017, we analysed 5 years of OS Custom Made map orders. This map shows the sheet extents for all OS Explorer Map orders.

In June 2017, we analysed 5 years of OS Custom Made map orders. This map shows the density of orders aggregated into a hexagon grid. The darker colours represent more orders in that location. This technique gives a clear overview of the data at country level.

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.

I am building a small visualization tool to look at the similarities and differences between two articles published in October about head injuries and the NFL:

 

"Game Brain" by Jeanne Marie Laskas - Oct. 10, 2009

www.gq.com/sports/profiles/200909/nfl-players-brain-demen...

 

"Offensive Play" by Malcolm Gladwell - Oct. 19, 2009

www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/10/19/091019fa_fact_glad...

 

These are some early outputs from the system.

Finalmente me llegó el libro. (shop.gestalten.com/books.html) En septiembre el proyecto HMVTK hizo parte del libro Visual Storytelling -Inspiring a new visual language- . Este año quiero hacer un workshop con el mismo nombre.

North Atlantic Ocean. Sea surface temperature anomaly vs. hurricanes and tropical storms.

This is a near-final version, with a different colour scheme. Also, the layout on the page is not finalized. The application that I built allows the 'hair balls' of dots to be placed anywhere on the page.

 

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What does the DNA of a nation look like?

 

This is the question I wanted to explore with my visualization of data associated with the UK's National DNA Database, which I built for the July issue of Wired UK.

 

The final graphic is composed of more than 5 million dots - one for each profile stored in the NDNAD. This graphic was constructed using a custom-written software program that I wrote.

 

For more information, visit my blog - blog.blprnt.com

 

Built with Processing (http://www.processing.org)

This poster shows OS Open Greenspace data and routes from OS Maps for the Greater Manchester area.

I wanted somewhere roughly on the equator, and I’ve been reading a lot about the Great Lakes refugee crisis and the Congo Wars.

 

As explained here, red is cities, blue is lakes and rivers, and green is topological features like hills.

 

Data: Geonames.

Visualizing the various features of the SwiftRiver distributed reputation and veracity functionality.

 

Things like Time, Location, Activeness as well as Global and Local interaction, are all considered in scoring. Time (green) and Location (dark grey) are optional, for scenarios like a conflict or war. The content producer’s location, or proximity to ‘ground zero’ tells the system to factor this in to its score. Also the length of time that content is produced after the initial event may also tell us a lot. Things like ‘time’ and ‘location’ are optional because if your Swift instance is tracking something like a political scandal, time and proximity may not actually add any value to authority calculations.

 

Purple represents how active Users 1 and 2 are. In and of itself how much someone uses a Swift instance is irrelevants. It could mean that they are an eager member providing valuable assistance, or it could mean they are attempting a brute force attack on the system similar to the Figure 1 scenario. However, when coupled with other factors, frequency of interaction is considered and can positively or negatively weight the score for a user.

 

swift.ushahidi.com

Design e texto - Rafael Quick (eu)

Edição - Karin Hueck

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...

These are the issues of the Avengers (vols. 1-4) which feature more than 20 Avengers in an issue.

 

Party issues!

 

Made with Processing - processing.org

Ordnance Survey is a partner in the CityVerve project, offering a geospatial framework. We helped visualise various use cases. This is a frame from an animation that showed how you might analyse parking trends in a city using a dashboard view.

Timelapse video showing minute-by-minute all the points logged during each minute from October 2009 through June 2010. The map is centered on Portland, Oregon. Read more: aaron.pk/gps flickr.com/photos/aaronpk/sets/72157623306420643/

Ordnance Survey is a partner in the CityVerve project, offering a geospatial framework. As part of this project we surveyed and captured every street side asset in the Manchester corridor. This is a frame from an animation that summarises the data capture.

From the College Football Graphic History series. This full-color 24”x36” print narrates the tradition of Penn State Nittany Lions football through sophisticated design, thorough analysis, and fantastic illustrations.

 

For more information and to order (only $24.00), see it in our shop.

CO2, Temperature & Global Glacier Mass Change.

Global temperature change for the past 2019 years. Data source: PAGES2k & Berkeley Earth.

Plot of all of the colorists for the Avengers, from 1963 to 2011.

 

Built with processing.org

 

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Jer Thorp is an artist and educator from Vancouver, Canada, currently living in New York. Coming from a background in genetics, his digital art practice explores the many-folded boundaries between science, data, art, and culture. Recently, his work has been featured by The Guardian, Scientific American, The New Yorker, and Popular Science.

 

He is currently Data Artist in Residence at the New York Times, and is an adjunct Professor in New York University’s ITP program.

 

blog.blprnt.com

A new report has been released listing the 500 strongest brands globally. It proves that the best way to protect a business from major shocks is to build a successful brand - but what is the world's biggest brand?

 

Article: www.busmanagement.com/news/newsbuilding-a-successful-brand/

OS Open Zoomstack is our latest open data product, launched in January 2019 after a successful trial the previous Summer. Find out more about it at www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/business-and-government/products...

Um levantamento inédito sobre o tamanho do funcionalismo público revela por que o Estado Brasileiro funciona mal. Só cargos de confiança há 600 mil...

Revista Época 852 - Crédito: Marco Vergotti (infografia e design de matéria), Tiago Mali (infografia), Marcos Coronato e Aline Imércio (texto), Imagens ThinkStock

Ordnance Survey is a partner in the CityVerve project, offering a geospatial framework. We created a basemap in two different styles for our project partner Cisco. The maps were used for a series of interactive visualisations for a large format immersive wall. Shown here is the Night style with extruded OS MasterMap buildings.

beautiful website traffic map by designweenie.com

A plot of all of the editors of the Avengers from 1963-2011 and the relative number of their characters who were famale.

 

Built with processing.org

 

--

 

Jer Thorp is an artist and educator from Vancouver, Canada, currently living in New York. Coming from a background in genetics, his digital art practice explores the many-folded boundaries between science, data, art, and culture. Recently, his work has been featured by The Guardian, Scientific American, The New Yorker, and Popular Science.

 

He is currently Data Artist in Residence at the New York Times, and is an adjunct Professor in New York University’s ITP program.

 

blog.blprnt.com

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