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Attempt to visualize some of the most famous sorting algorithm.
Heapsort with 100 values, randomly shuffled
Work in progress...more to come
I get dizzy when I look at this prototype. It was never built. Mostly part of a Usability exercise to determine how much information we could visualize on the map by using more complex artifacts.
We decided to move on a different direction, but technologically speaking we had all the elements needed to produce these visualizations. This was the beauty of working on flash... no restrictions on how complex the visuals were.
It reminds me of those "infoporn" charts that you find in some magazines.
iPlant Collaborative members discuss which examples to shown next on the TACC Visualization Wall.
Pictured (left to right): Nirav Merchant, Damian Gessler
Satellite: Sentinel-2.
Visualization RGB: bands 4 (red), 3 (green), 2 (blue). True color.
La imagen tiene 58 km de ancho (aprox.)
El lago Mono (del inglés: Mono Lake) es un lago estadounidense grande y poco profundo, de soda salina que se localiza en el condado de Mono, en el estado de California, a pocos kilómetros de la frontera con Nevada. Se formó hace al menos 760 000 años atrás como lago terminal de una cuenca endorreica (que no tiene salida al mar). La ausencia de emisarios provoca el alto nivel de sales que se acumulan en el lago. Estas sales también hacen que el agua del lago sea alcalina. Tiene además altos niveles de arsénico. (es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lago_Mono)
Located at the eastern edge of California, between the arid Great Basin and the snowy Sierra Nevada, Mono Lake is an ancient saline lake that covers over 70 square miles and supports a unique and productive ecosystem. The lake has trillions of brine shrimp and alkali flies, millions of birds, and freshwater tributary streams. Along the lakeshore, scenic limestone formations known as tufa towers rise from the water’s surface.
Humans have called the Mono Basin home for thousands of years. The Kutzadika’a Paiute are this land’s native people and original stewards. In the mid-1800s prospectors and pioneers arrived to make a living from the bedrock and soil. The battle to save Mono Lake from excessive water diversions to Los Angeles began in the last century and continues on. (www.monolake.org/learn/aboutmonolake/)
This close up allows the statue plenty of nose room for his gaze upward because of the statue's position in the lower right hand corner of the frame.
First tour to see amazing work by Erik and the TLC2 crew. 3-D visualization used in teaching and traing in health education
Sorting through data from the WNYC Map Your Moves Data Visualization Challenge.
beta.wnyc.org/shows/bl/blogs/scrapbook/2010/jul/22/map-yo...
An interactive map showing how polling predicted certain 2010 Congressional Election races to finish as well an extra information about some races. It was built in 7 days.
www.businessweek.com/magazine/2010-elections-and-the-econ...