View allAll Photos Tagged visualization
First sketch of the uberinfographic. Using the basic classification and using many of the actual visualizations.
Viva apartments visualizations created for Adele Bates' interior design project in Brighton.
Software used: 3ds Max, Corona and Photoshop
Analytixlabs is the one of the best analytics training institute offers data visualization and tableau training course online. This course is very easy to learn and also includes different practical examples ranging from simple reporting analytics to interactive dashborads with storylining. Know more at www.analytixlabs.co.in/tableau-training-course-online
Horizontal axis: distance. Ticks at 40 meters. Vertical axis: time. Ticks at 1 minute. I'm not sure which trip this is - I rummaged around the database until I found a route that clumped like this. It happens in about 1 out of 10 recorded trips. You can see at several points along the trip there are what appear to be traffic signals that change at the same time every day, on about a 1 minute period.
Jeffrey M. Drazen, Editor-in-Chief, New England Journal of Medicine, USA, Juliana Chan, Professor of Medicine and Therapeutics, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, David Cook, Chief Clinical and Operating Officer, Jiahui Health, People’s Republic of China, Richard Nieman, Global Medical Officer; Senior Vice-President, Teva Pharmaceutical, USA and Mike Moradi, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Sensulin, USA; Young Global Leader capture during the Session: "Visualizing Disease" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary
There are differences in the services we commonly lump together as Social Networking. A fuller description of this graphic is here: bit.ly/Kp1BFw
This is a slightly simplified version of the graphic I'm using in some presentations.
Kiva has quite a few API and SQL interfaces for grabbing data and visualizing it. Actually makes the whole process all the more interactive.
Photo of a Man on Sunset Drive: 1914, 2008
by: Richard Blanco
And so it began: the earth torn, split open
by a dirt road cutting through palmettos
and wild tamarind trees defending the land
against the sun. Beside the road, a shack
leaning into the wind, on the wooden porch,
crates of avocados and limes, white chickens
pecking at the floor boards, and a man
under the shadow of his straw hat, staring
into the camera in 1914. He doesn't know
within a lifetime the unclaimed land behind
him will be cleared of scrub and sawgrass,
the soil will be turned, made to give back
what the farmers wish, their lonely houses
will stand acres apart from one another,
jailed behind the boughs of their orchards.
He'll never buy sugar at the general store,
mail love letters at the post office, or take
a train at the depot of the town that will rise
out of hundred-million years of coral rock
on promises of paradise. He'll never ride
a Model-T puttering down the dirt road
that will be paved over, stretch farther and
farther west into the horizon, reaching for
the setting sun after which it will be named.
He can't even begin to imagine the shadows
of buildings rising taller than the palm trees,
the street lights glowing like counterfeit stars
dotting the sky above the road, the thousands
who will take the road everyday, who'll also
call this place home less than a hundred years
after the photograph of him hanging today
in City Hall as testament. He'll never meet
me, the engineer hired to transform the road
again, bring back tree shadows and birdsongs,
build another promise of another paradise
meant to last another forever. He'll never see
me, the poet standing before him, trying
to read his mind across time, wondering if
he was thinking what I'm today, both of us
looking down the road that will stretch on
for years after I too disappear into a photo.
Modeled in 3d max, rendered in vray, and finished in photoshop
Hope you enjoyed our rendering.
© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.
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red areas are higher wait times; circle diameter is wait time (logarithmic)... rushing to get this done...
Juliana Chan, Professor of Medicine and Therapeutics, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR capture during the Session: "Visualizing Disease" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary
Kiss, Kick Boxer, Kalashnikov, Kikiriki - images sent to my project www.flickr.com/groups/abc-visualized - 1. el bes, 2. IMG_1584, 3. Suri, 4. Kikirikiii!
Emily, my girlfriend's horse necklace on my computer with an iTunes visualization on the screen. The necklace is made from an old record, probably something awesome, like Zip Zap Rap. If you look closely you can see the grooves in the horse.
Visualization of Flickr geotagged photos, uploaded between 2007 to 2015 and geotagged with the highest accuracy (street-level). I generated a number of different visualizations. Some are more artistic in style while others are designed more informative.
This type of visualization has been done years before (check out Eric Fischer's maps). Maybe the statistics going on on the lower-right corner provide some additional information not available so far.
Here is an animated version of this map
Created as part of my research project (maps.alexanderdunkel.com).
The Health Planning Council of Northeast Florida is proud to introduce an easy-to-use interactive mapping tool for health analysts, grant writers, researchers, statisticians, epidemiologists, data managers and GIS experts to disseminate and compare health indicators and healthcare utilization statistics. InstantAtlas outputs, termed ‘dynamic reports’, are commonly produced to complement static reports to give readers the opportunity to explore the data behind the reports. It also provides a tool for monitoring the performance of health resources and presenting survey results.
Visualization of Flickr geotagged photos, uploaded between 2007 to 2015 and geotagged with the highest accuracy (street-level). I generated a number of different visualizations. Some are more artistic in style while others are designed more informative.
This type of visualization has been done years before (check out Eric Fischer's maps). Maybe the statistics going on on the lower-right corner provide some additional information not available so far.
Created as part of my research project (maps.alexanderdunkel.com).
Mariette DiChristina, Editor-in-Chief, Scientific American, USA, Hiroe Miyake, Associate Professor, University of Tokyo, Japan, Ayumi Arai, Project Researcher, Centre for Spatial Information Science, University of Tokyo, Japan and Ryosuke Shibasaki, Professor, Centre for Spatial Information Science, University of Tokyo, Japan capture during the Session "Big Data Visualization: A New Era in Mapping with the University of Tokyo" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2019 in Dalian, People's Republic of China, July 3, 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary