人肉資訊視覺化 (1)
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admin (2840)
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創新使用者互動介面研究 (UIUI) (6)
3 days, 17 hours
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還蠻有創意的: via: information aesthetics 相關推薦 10 種 Social Network 視覺化的方式 Flare : data visualization toolkit for Actionscript 美國的反戰宣傳片 Processing 進化 Nexus: Facebook 人際關係視覺化
Visualization For A New Age (1)
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noreply@blogger.com (Thea) (38)
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Welcome To A New Day! (8)
4 days, 2 hours
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Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark, in the hopeless swamps of the approximate, the not-quite, the not-yet, the not-at-all. Do not let the hero in your soul perish in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but have never been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is yours...Ayn ...
Learning Processing Book Available; Beginners’ Guide to Coding for Visualists (6)
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Peter Kirn (92)
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Create Digital Motion (19)
5 days, 7 hours
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I believe that coding is an essential skill for people making live digital visuals. At the same time, there’s no question that learning to code has been a big obstacle for visually creative people — especially as they have plenty of other things on their mind. You need somewhere to start, and you need to make the learning curve manageable. Processing has been a great tool for doing that, but the point isn’t to learn ...
Open Data, Open Visualization and a new blog (1)
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Deepak Singh (23)
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business|bytes|genes|molecules (19)
1 week
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Image via Wikipedia I discovered a new blog today, FlowingData, at least I don’t recall having seen it before. The blog is all about the meaning of data. How did I find it? One of my Google alerts took me to a post on How Open Should Open Source Data Visualization Be. The part that I went straight to was the part on the three aspects of open source data visualization; Open Tools, Open Code, ...
How Open Should Open Source Data Visualization Be? | FlowingData (6)
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Nathan (65)
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FlowingData (58)
1 week, 1 day
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I used to ride my bike to school, and I always forgot my U-lock. Instead of riding back for it, I'd just stash my bike unlocked in between a cluster of bikes. I told my friend jokingly, "It'll be OK. 98% of people are good." One day I got out of class, and my bike was stolen. I was cleaning up some Actionscript in preparation for a tutorial post on how to make your own ...
2008 Beijing Olympic Interactive Features (3)
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Nathan (65)
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Simple Complexity (0)
1 week, 1 day
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I’ve been trying to keep up with some of the fascinating Olympic interactive features developed by the NYTimes. While visiting Cool Infographics today, Randy Krum pointed me to the NYTimes site where all their Olympic related interactive features have been compiled into one place. Take the time to dig into some of these and you start to get a better understanding of what it takes for these athletes to really be best in the world ...
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spavis said:
graphics, graphics everywhere; oh how they help me think
Cool Visualizations of the Week [Aug 29] (1)
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Chandoo (3)
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Pointy Haired Dilbert - Chandoo.org (3)
1 week, 1 day
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Once every week Pointy Haired Dilbert celebrates the art of chart making by sharing 4-5 of the best info-graphics featured in various web sites. Click here to see the charts featured earlier. How to does Love, Anger, Joy and other emotions look like? Have you ever wondered how your emotions look like? That is exactly what folks at Emotionally Vague have done. They have surveyed 250 people from 35 countries on what makes them emotional, ...
LastGraph visualizes your music history (1)
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Andrew Mager (0)
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The Web Life (0)
1 week, 2 days
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Last.fm keeps track of the songs you listen to, and gives you stats about recently played tracks, most played tracks, most played artists, and it’s social. LastGraph helps you analyze this data with beautiful visualizations. You can follow trends in your listening habits, and see which artists were popular at any given time. Easily identify when albums were released, or if other major events caused you to listen to an artist more or less. There ...
Media History Through Gartner Hype Cycle Graphs: 1995-2008 (10)
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noreply@blogger.com (Ilya Vedrashko) (24)
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Advertising Lab: future of advertising and advertising technology (56)
1 week, 2 days
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Gartner Hype Cycles are good for at least three things: identifying technologies that are still under the radar, taking a look back at stuff that was hyped up in the past but didn't go anywhere, and explaining to your parents what it is that you do as an emerging media strategist.Besides, they illustrate this wonderful quote from David Brooks's "Lord of the Meme" column in NYTimes: "In order to cement your status in the cultural ...
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тaмás said:
"In order to cement your status in the cultural elite, you want to be already sick of everything no one else has even heard of." LOL
Price and Penetration of Consumer Electronics (2)
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city bits (1)
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amerigo (0)
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hyperexperience (0)
1 week, 3 days
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Born out of the Rome Reborn project, CityEngine is a powerful tool for modeling entire cities in perfect detail. Because of its roots in art history the aims of the project are to render every building, not just the most important landmarks. Their digital model contains 200 monuments painstakingly modeled by art historians, and over 7,000 secondary buildings rendered parametrically. This ability to generate cities based on a shape grammar language is what makes the ...
5 Data Visualization Dissertations Worth a Look | FlowingData (2)
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Nathan (65)
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FlowingData (58)
1 week, 5 days
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It's coming to the end of the academic year, which means there are lots of graduate students frantically finishing up their dissertations, defending, and earning their degrees (yay!). Here are some tasty visualization dissertations, new and old, worth thumbing through. Information Visualization for the People by Mike Danziger, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Comparative Media Studies The Form of Facts and Figures by Christian Behrens, Potsdam University of Applied Sciences, Interface Design Practical Tools for Exploring ...
Information R/evolution (1)
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Jess Hemerly (0)
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IFTF's Future Now (2)
1 week, 5 days
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I came across this amazing video by Michael Wesch at Kansas State University today via Information Aesthetics. The description, from YouTube: This video explores the changes in the way we find, store, create, critique, and share information. This video was created as a conversation starter, and works especially well when brainstorming with people about the near future and the skills needed in order to harness, evaluate, and create information effectively.
Digg Rings (3)
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Josh Catone (442)
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ReadWriteWeb (3734)
2 weeks
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The wonderful Information Aesthetics blog points us to human-computer interaction student Chris Harrison's Digg Rings visualization. Digg Rings is the latest in a series of awesome visualization projects from Harrison, and it displays a year's worth of Digg data in an absolutely stunning manner. These are interactive visualizations like those from Digg Labs, but they're equally beautiful and would make one heck of a poster. Harrison used the Digg API to grab the top 10 ...
3D-XplorMath - 10.5.3.1 (1)
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X08 Toronto (1)
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Rajio (4)
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Ohmpage (4)
2 weeks, 1 day
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Last night was X08 in Toronto. Held at CiRCA, the event showcased software by Microsoft Game Studios as well as fourteen third party developers.These included Ubisoft, EA, Disney Interactive Studios, and a whole bunch of others. (more…)
Visualizing Restaurant Searching (4)
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Andrew (74)
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[Technorati] Tag results for visualization (1)
2 weeks, 1 day
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One of the simplest, most useful, and well executed applications on the iPhone is UrbanSpoon’s free restaurant finder. Open the application, it geolocates you, give the iPhone and shake and three Slot machine style selectors spin around and randomly choose a restaurant nearby. You can then even lock in specifics such as location, cuisine, or price range and shake to give more suggestions. However, what’s particularly neat about the application is that UrbanSpoon has been ...
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Robin said:
Cool. Think I'll get this app!
Twitter Spectrum (2)
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Mashup Awards (25)
2 weeks, 1 day
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Plot any two opposing terms and see related things people are talking about on Twitter spread across the spectrum between.
Maptoons (1)
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Rajio (4)
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Ohmpage (4)
2 weeks, 1 day
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Pecay over at BibliOdessy has collected a few examples of satirical maps from the first World War. They function as political cartoons diagramming both geographic conditions and sentiment regarding various regions. You don’t see many such maps produced anymore but their charm is undeniable as they anthropomorphise various countries giving them personality and character, illustrating how they all interact.