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Infographics spread to Suomen Kuvalehti with Tuomo Lappalainen. Wordcloud created with Tagxedo.

A wordcloud featuring "IPO". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

  

Image by www.scootergenius.com

A wordcloud featuring "#Me Too". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

I have been reviewing children's literature published in 2016 on GoodReads. Here's the most important words I have said thus far! I am not done!!! See more - www.goodreads.com/list/user_vote/5260727

Word cloud concept illustration of e-commerce electronic commerce glowing light effect

Hey, yogis: Open your heart, and fold your way into this Yoga Terminology Cloud t-shirt! Namaste.

 

Visit the Cloudwear Store to purchase or create a custom order.

A word cloud created from inital responses on what we shoudl fouc on fro the Covid-19 Pandemic - survey URL: survey.sogosurvey.com/r/CzsHQT

A key word cloud generated from archived tweets collected at Cambridge 2012: Innovation and Impact - Openly Collaborating to Enhance Education.

 

Common english words, cam12, oer and Twitter screen names have been excluded.

 

[The archive is available here docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AqGkLMU9sHmLdEoxQzFD... and the R Script to generate the data is at github.com/psychemedia/Twitter-Backchannel-Analysis/blob/...]

Ahead of the European Parliament elections in 2014, find out how the EU has provided assistance and disaster response through its humanitarian aid and civil protection department (ECHO).

 

All images are free to download, just credit: EC/ECHO

 

Using these infographics on social media? You can tag us through:

 

Twitter: @EU_ECHO

 

Facebook: European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

Google +: +European Union Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

ec.europa.eu/echo/files/core_achievements/solidarity_in_a...

 

This is a Word Cloud of the Song, "Amazing Grace." A word cloud (or weighted list in visual design) is a visual depiction of user-generated tags, or simply the word content of a site, typically used to describe the content of web sites. Tags are usually single words and are normally listed alphabetically, and the importance of each tag is shown with font size or color.[ Thus, it is possible to find a tag alphabetically and by popularity. The tags are usually hyperlinks that lead to a collection of items that are associated with a tag. Sometimes, further visual properties are manipulated, such as the font color, intensity, or weight. I created this one in Wordle.

Word cloud concept illustration of heroin drug glowing light effect

In the run-up to Obama's inauguration: a word cloud of Ronald Reagan's first inauguration speech (1861).

The bigger the word, the more times it was used.

An interactive version with the full speech text is here.

Word cloud of the Erskine Theological Seminary Mission Statement and Commitments (made with Wordle)

Ahead of the European Parliament elections in 2014, find out how the EU has provided assistance and disaster response through its humanitarian aid and civil protection department (ECHO).

 

All images are free to download, just credit: EC/ECHO

 

Using these infographics on social media? You can tag us through:

 

Twitter: @EU_ECHO

 

Facebook: European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

Google +: +European Union Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

ec.europa.eu/echo/files/core_achievements/solidarity_in_a...

 

A word cloud of all my tweets.

A wordcloud featuring "Black History Month". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Created at TagCrowd.com

 

Comparison of text clouds for two different U.S. State of the Union addresses. Bush in 2002 vs. Obama in 2011.

a list of the personal symbols and words that my blog audience shared

 

a sneak peek into my INSCRIBED:art journaling e-course!

www.treicdesigns.com/ecourses/newinscribed.html

Tweets tagged #ukoer between March 2010 and Dec 2011 were filtered for only those containing question marks '?' (excluding '?/ in urls) n.812 and processed in R using the wordcloud package (stopwords 'ukoer' and 'oer' were removed)

 

[Inspired by work by Tony Hirst and made possible with this example onertipaday.blogspot.com/2011/07/word-cloud-in-r.html]

A wordcloud featuring "Currency". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Hörgeräte, Hearing aids, audifonos

Barack Obama's inauguration speech as a word cloud: the bigger the word, the more times it was used.

 

An interactive version with the full speech text is here.

Word cloud concept illustration of migraine headache

Forum Bildung Digitalisierung e.V.

Autorin: Katja Anokhina

Lizenz: CC BY 4.0

 

Ort:

Fachtagung „Cloud in der Bildung“, Berlin

 

Alignment Lab @ London College of Communication exploring values & whatnot as it relates to careers, campaigns not to mention giving back.

 

Find the Storify here: storify.com/michaelambjorn/values-and-whatnot-an-alignmen... - and the slides here: www.slideshare.net/michael_ambjorn/2014-02-13-lcc-alignme...

From the Seventh State of the Nation Address of President Manuel L. Quezon delivered on January 31, 1941:

 

"Gentlemen of the National Assembly, these are fateful days in which we live. Vital forces are reshaping political and social institutions the world over. Fear and want are afflicting the human race. Men and women everywhere are scanning the future for security and a more promising life. In the midst of this great crisis, our duty is clear. By a solemn covenant with America, the advent of our national independence is assured. We must prepare for it; we must not procrastinate; we must not falter."

The Institute of Fundraising Yorkshire and North East Conference took place on 14 February 2014. A piggy-bank-shaped wordcloud was appropriate.

A wordcloud featuring "Ridesharing". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

   

Image by www.scootergenius.com

A wordcloud featuring "Mobility". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

I somehow just stumbled into a wealth of maps that integrate Twitter feeds

in some way. Each is a little different, all fascinating in their own way.

 

TweetMap: worldmap.harvard.edu/tweetmap/

 

Rich display of specific data about geo-located tweets, including the

tweet. Click on a blue dot for more information about that tweet.

 

[image: Inline image 7]

 

One Million Tweet Map: onemilliontweetmap.com/

 

Powered by Leaflet and Maptimize ("A geographical clustering engine for

online maps to display and analyse big geolocalized data.") with data from

Open Street Map. Allows you to zoom in to view local tweets.

 

[image: Inline image 6]

 

Tweepsmap: tweepsmap.com/

 

"Where are your Twitter followers located? Analyze your followers to

measure the effectiveness of your social media presence"

 

[image: Inline image 4]

 

Example:

[image: Inline image 5]

 

Trends Map: trendsmap.com/

 

"Trendsmap.com is a real-time mapping of Twitter trends across the world.

Click on a word to get started!"

 

Maps concepts and keywords as a wordcloud associated roughly with the

location where they are most common and frequent.

 

[image: Inline image 3]

 

TweetMap.it: tweetmap.it/

 

"This cartogram is a real-time, live map of the world. Each country

contracts and expands to proportionally represent the volume of tweets

sent."

 

[image: Inline image 2]

 

TweetPing: tweetping.net/

 

Real time display of tweets across the globe.

 

[image: Inline image 1]

Ahead of the European Parliament elections in 2014, find out how the EU has provided assistance and disaster response through its humanitarian aid and civil protection department (ECHO).

 

All images are free to download, just credit: EC/ECHO

 

Using these infographics on social media? You can tag us through:

 

Twitter: @EU_ECHO

 

Facebook: European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

Google +: +European Union Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection

 

ec.europa.eu/echo/files/core_achievements/solidarity_in_a...

 

A wordcloud featuring "Business". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

Theodor Seuss Geisel ( /ˈɡaɪzəl/; March 2, 1904 – September 24, 1991) was an American writer, poet, and cartoonist most widely known for his children's books written under the pen names Dr. Seuss, Theo LeSieg and, in one case, Rosetta Stone.

 

He published 46 children's books, which were often characterized by imaginative characters, rhyme, and frequent use of trisyllabic meter. His most celebrated books include the bestselling Green Eggs and Ham, The Cat in the Hat, One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish, Horton Hatches the Egg, Horton Hears a Who!, and How the Grinch Stole Christmas!. Numerous adaptations of his work have been created, including 11 television specials, four feature films, a Broadway musical and four television series. He won the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1958 for Horton Hatches the Egg and again in 1961 for And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.

 

Geisel also worked as an illustrator for advertising campaigns, most notably for Flit and Standard Oil, and as a political cartoonist for PM, a New York City newspaper. During World War II, he worked in an animation department of the U.S Army, where he wrote Design for Death, a film that later won the 1947 Academy Award for Documentary Feature.

 

Geisel's birthday, March 2, has been adopted as the annual date for National Read Across America Day, an initiative on reading created by the National Education Association.

Sport your flare for tumbling, balance, and all-around execution with a Gymnastics Terminology Cloud! The best part? No rips included with this wearable routine.

 

Visit the Cloudwear Store to purchase or create a custom order.

Wordle of what my thesis, December 3rd.

(Working on rough draft of first chapter)

I made this just for myself, using all the scribe notes from Project Bamboo Workshop 5, and it attracted a bit of a following. If people want one, let me know and I can post it publicly on Zazzle.

Project management concept in word tag cloud

A wordcloud featuring "e-Commerce". Would appreciate credit for use of this image in the form of a link:

 

Image by www.scootergenius.com

A black and white word cloud of an article on the Euro Debt Crisis.

 

To use, please credit/link to:

 

www.eurocrisisexplained.co.uk/

I took the sweet comments from the video I posted (Nalts) of the Charles Trippy and Alli Speed wedding, and generated this word cloud. :)

That abbreviation is already taken, I'm afraid...

Cheerful, fontiful, colorful, and mindless. Programs like this iPad app, TagCloud, take the words from any text you give it and jumble them together into a 2 dimensional pile or cloud. Not only is it "garbage in, garbage out", but also mostly "silver and gold in, garbage out". It cost 99 cents, the same as my cup of coffee this morning, and will probably hold my interest for about as long. One can construct much more varied and meaningful word clouds with typography-art apps like TypePlay and TypeDrawing, though of course putting words together consciously takes a lot more effort and time.

 

At first the texts I tried in TagCloud were a new short poem (by Billy Collins) and quotations from different writers. TagCloud reduced everything quickly to colorful little clouds of gibberish, more or less as advertised. The above nine variations are simply using same set of thesaurus words copied from under the headings of optimism and of pessimism. I haven't figured out why the app alway makes cheerful and euphoric biggest and puts them in the middle. Apparently the program isn't completely random in its word distribution. Probably the biggest difference is made by exactly what text or list of words is fed into the app as to how total the nonsense will be in the resulting word cloud. For lists of words maybe the order matters and how many times the same words appear.

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