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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).
This is a scatter plot of vehicle schedule deviation plotted against time of day. Time of day is plotted on the horizontal axis with gray tick marks every hour. The slightly bolder gray line is noon. Schedule deviation is plotted on the Y axis, with three ticks, from top to bottom: five minutes late, on time, and five minutes early. There's a dense area right after noon - this doesn't represent any feature of King County Metro's schedules - it's just a region where I got two day's worth of readings. On average vehicles are about a minute late. They're rarely more than two minutes early, but it's not terribly uncommon for a vehicle to be up to twenty minutes late.
A look at mobile traffic trends by website type. Data comes from sites that SwellPath has engagements with. See the blog post that goes with it here: www.swellpath.com/2010/10/mobile-traffic-website-type-inf...
Obviously, I love this hobby, so these machines are an important part of how I identify myself.
I have taken the ZX-L all over the US, to Paris, France, and across the entirety of Costa Rica. At that point in my life, it was just a camera. I wish I had had the passion and interest in photography at that time. Can't imagine the kinds of wonderful pictures I could have made! C'est la vie.
timeline view of national airline shortest path tree, showing shortest path from Seattle to some point in Puerto Rico
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.
Obviously, I love this hobby, so these machines are an important part of how I identify myself.
I have taken the ZX-L all over the US, to Paris, France, and across the entirety of Costa Rica. At that point in my life, it was just a camera. I wish I had had the passion and interest in photography at that time. Can't imagine the kinds of wonderful pictures I could have made! C'est la vie.
This sculpture by Natalie Sutinen (born in 1972), can be seen in the art room at the Haninge Cultural Centre from today. The artwork has no name. It is made of wax, paper, books and feathers. Sutinen often works with wax dolls, and says that she wants to visualise death with her art.
This is a java applet produced using Processing that visualizes my personal friends network from Facebook. It clearly shows the different groups from schools that have attended over the years. The java applet looks a bit worse and runs slower than the standalone application, but it gives a pretty good idea of the project
TwitterGraph of Twitter user Molly_Ultra
generated by:
bradkellett.com/twitter_stats.html
As the software author describes it, a "totally ugly engine" - but once you start to think about the data that's out there - Twitter or otherwise - you start to think about all the ways this data could be visualized.
Can anybody recommend other engines peeps have written to viz network data?
Note that the graphs are labeled "Tweets per Day" and "Tweets per Hour" -- I think it really means "BY" not "PER" as in "40 of your Tweets came on Mondays" - not, your "average" Monday had 40 Tweets.
iPlant Collaborative members discuss an example shown on the TACC Visualization Wall.
Pictured (left to right): Brandon Theis, Steve Goff
1. Visual thinking workshop in Toronto, 2. Geneva workshop, 3. Geneva workshop
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
1. Visual thinking workshop in Toronto, 2. Geneva workshop, 3. Geneva workshop, 4. Geneva workshop, 5. Geneva workshop, 6. Visual thinking workshop in Toronto
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
In the build-up to the Olympics 2012 in London, MO.be published a dossier about the Olympic Games (in dutch). Part of this dossier is the Olympic Stream, a visualisation of all medals won in modern Olympics.
The medals won are represented chronologically, from the Games in Athens in 1896 on the left to the last Olympics in Beijing in 2008 on the right. The thickness of the ‘stream’ of the country indicates the number of medals won and colors indicate the contintent or region of a country. Country names are shown when hovering over the graph.
The graph was published in an article about the internationalization of the Olympics (Dutch) and on a seperate page dedicated to the graph (in Dutch and English).
Worldwide Visualization for a Breakthrough -
Please Join Us!
visualizedaily.com/action1-en.html
Transformation transformacja transformation transformace Transformation transzformáció преобразование transformación trasformazione 2012
www.flickr.com/photos/arjuna/sets/72157628371178639/with/...
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).
A work-in-progress.
Messing around with visualizing my social graph on facebook...
Just a proof of concept. It'll take a lot more to turn this into something useful.
Not sure what this is exactly at this moment.
Still trying to work around the seriously crippled excuse of an API that FB made avaiiable...
bi-weekly publication on politics, finance, social and cultural issues.
For the showcase of the project please visit Behance