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As much as I hate to draw more attention to anything this woman has to say, I thought some of you wonks might find this interesting in the run-up to this November.
To counterbalance the bad taste that left in my throat, I’ll give another shoutout to the WashPost’s overall Campaign tracker, which is excellent:
In: Environment/weather Graphic Design (general) Interactive Maps Science
4 Aug 2010A well designed and simple interactive of the 10 “great” whale species. It conveys images, scale, history, endangered status, and region all on one screen.
Some cool map overlays showing how little of the moon we actually explored on that one day. On a soccer and baseball field:

on a photo:
(via)
In: Environment/weather Graphic Design (bad) Interactive Maps Science
3 Aug 2010I think this project has been cursed by the data visualization gods. First, take a look at the Guardian’s interactive map below. There’s no legend to explain the colors, and the popups show a picture of just one animal (which they apparently included only because they happen to have a nice picture of it). The only information conveyed here at all is in the small bubbles at the bottom — which aren’t labeled and are presumably in percent of all marine life, but you can’t be sure because they don’t add up to 100%.
So I tracked down the original study, and their project map is actually worse! In addition to being quite possibly the most butt-ugly acronym ridden map I’ve ever seen, it has a bizarre infinity scrolling feature that allows you to view five earths at once.
But wait, there’s more: a huge interactive rotating globe that takes up 3/4s of the screen. See the tiny red dots on the map? – those are how you call up the related info that is squeezed into the small box on the left. There are other critiques, but I think I’ve picked on this poor project enough.
All of this is a shame, of course, because it looks like a very worthwhile project that has accomplished a lot of valuable work. Here is the Guardian’s related article, and the project’s press release.
Yields on top-rated, tax exempt US municipal bonds have dropped to near-record lows, allowing many local borrowers to access cheap financing in spite of their recent fiscal troubles. Following concerns over public finances in Europe, the $2,800bn market for “munis” has come into the spotlight after several years of budget deficits. Related articles.
This map displays unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies, or a composite “stress index”, by county. Easy to miss: in the upper right you can change the scale of the mapping (rates, m-t-m, y-t-y). To look at data over time, click on the “monthly rates” option and a historical slider will appear at the bottom. Double click on a region to zoom in. Updated 8/2/10.
In: Culture
2 Aug 2010I tried to track down the original, but only discovered that this analysis has been around for a while. Here’s another version.
There’s not a lot of surprising information here, but I’m posting it anyway to reward the graphic designer for including the horns and pitchfork in the “Credit Card Company” section, and the holdup man in the “Bank Branch”. Well done! (via)
An addictive collection of beautiful charts, graphs, maps, and interactive data visualization toys -- on topics from around the world.