Author Archive

Anyone else think the recent “reforms” didn’t address the problem of many people’s credit cards, namely the usurious interest rates?  Spotted over at Ritzholtz.

image

I missed this back in march but just spotted a reference at Infographics. The NYT took 120 years of immigration data and threw it perfectly at a map – you can filter by country of origin, then move through time with the slider.

image

I don’t watch the show but if you’re a fan or just plain confused, here’s a well done interactive character org-chart:

image

Spotted on Infographics.

Map of each States’ unemployment benefits. Related article.

image

The FT has updated its interactive tables of investment banking activity. Lots of good data in here.

image

image

Excellent chart by the NYT plotting Michael Jackson’s top100 hits over the years, and comparing him to other top artists.

image
(thanks to FlowingData for spotting it)

Hehe

In: Housing Humor US Economy

26 Jun 2009

image

Have you taken the time to follow the detailed science behind the global warming debate? Me neither. But I’m starting to read the “Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States” report, which has a number of very effective data visualizations, in addition to laying out all the different climate change arguments. (Thanks to my friend Brad Johnson for pointing out the report.)

imageimage

imageimage

Below is a chart from the UNODC’s 2009 World Drug Report. I focus a lot on media sources and blogs, but a lot of great information visualization is being done by NGOs/thinks tanks/etc.

image

image

WSJ article on visible symptoms of many diseases. The accompanying graphic is aesthetically pleasing, but a little disappointing info wise.

image

Check out the list at WebdesignerDepot.com. (Thanks to Matthieu Cormier for the link)

image

and while we’re at it: 25+ Useful Infographics for Web Designers from the same blog. my two favorites below.

Different types of internet participants by age group:

image

Changing costs of living on the bleeding edge of technology:

image

Summary of EU and US reforms. The related article is a very good read on the subject.

image

NYT’s version of just the USA (hat-tip to Ritholtz). Related article.

image

A series of six figures (two shown below) on the composition of British Government Expenditure.

image 

image

Two part interactive toy from AP. The first one takes you on a cool animated walk through the 5 point Saffir-Simpson Hurricane scale, simulating the amount of damage along the way. The second maps out the path and category of every hurricane from 1851-2009.

image

image

ooops: Missed one, though it’s separate from the others… It includes a map of the empty homes in Florida (from foreclosures, amongst other causes) and animates the types of different types of damage a hurricane can cause (click along the top):

image