Stock Mapper

In: Stock Market

9 Apr 2010

One of the best stock visualizations I’ve seen.  Designer Hermann Zachiegner and Two-N INC have created a really nifty interactive visualization of near-real-time stats for global stock markets. Play with the filters and sorting buttons to bring up different heatmaps and bar charts; roll-over popups give details, logos, and recent news items. (via)

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Interactive from the WSJ showing how banks reduce short term borrowing each quarter before releasing info to the public. Related article. (via)

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How he’s doing at the Master’s – hole by hole, compared to previous years:image

The Tiger economy:
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A little dated, but this interactive lets you compare statistics 1997-2008:
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Publishing Advice

In: Culture

8 Apr 2010

“Are You Absolutely, Positively, and Wholeheartedly Ready to Publish Your Novel?” by Anna Hurley (available as a poster). (via)

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Infidelity

In: Culture

8 Apr 2010

(via)

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IBM has coupled with Many Eyes to create a visualization warehouse of US Congressional legislation. It’s a pretty complicated tool, so definitely watch the “quick tour”.  Pick a search word and go exploring. You can explode just the relevant parts, view earlier versions, read the whole thing, and save them as favorites.

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Drawn to scale.

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Overtakes Germany.

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Lots of people appear to be concerned with the potential “swing” in the upcoming UK elections.

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BBC’s interactive “Swingometer”:
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Opinion polls (with nice interactive features):
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I don’t know who copied who, but the Guardian also has it’s own “swingometer” (move the dot on the little pie chart on the right to adjust swing amount) and interactive poll-chart.
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Designer Cameron Booth takes a crack at improving the iconic Washington DC Metro Map.  It also shows where the new Silver Line to Dulles airport will be constructed. The comments are worth a read if you’re a graphic designer.

washington_me

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The map displays unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcy, 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; click & hold to move around, point at a county for popup detail.

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Would have preferred to see this info in chart form. (via)

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