Free Data Visualization Software | Tableau Public

Tableau Public est un service gratuit un peu dans l'esprit de la solution BIME de business intelligence proposée par la société montpelliéraine WeAreCloud. En effet l'outil de Tableau Public permet de manipuler des données graphiquement et ainsi transformer de basiques tableaux excel en outil de décision. | source : www.tableausoftware.com

Recommandé parVincent Truffy le 07/09/10 10:02 | permalien

BBC - Dimensions - Index

Dimensions takes important places, events and things, and overlays them onto a map of where you are.

Type in your postcode or a place name to get started. | source : howbigreally.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 23/08/10 13:57 | permalien

The Evolution of Privacy on Facebook

The data for this chart was derived from my interpretation of the Facebook Terms of Service over the years, along with my personal memories of the default privacy settings for different classes of personal data. The population sizes are statistics from Google, the Facebook Data Team, and wild guesses based on what seemed reasonable to me.

I welcome data corrections, so please leave a comment below if you have better numbers to share. | source : mattmckeon.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 23/08/10 10:27 | permalien

The Coalition's first 100 days on Twitter from @tweetminster http://bit.ly/9Voob6

RT @stevebridger: RT @hadleybeeman The Coalition's first 100 days on Twitter from @tweetminster http://bit.ly/9Voob6 | source : tweetminster.co.uk

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 19/08/10 08:26 | permalien

The 4 Big Myths of Profile Pictures « OkTrends

In terms of getting new messages, the MySpace shot is the single most effective photo type for women. We at first thought this was just because, typically, you can kind of see down the girl’s shirt with the camera at that angle—indeed, that seems to be the point of shot in the first place—so we excluded all cleavage-showing shots from the pool and ran the numbers again. No change: it’s still the best shot; better, in fact, than straight-up boob pics (more on those later). | source : blog.okcupid.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 18/08/10 10:24 | permalien

Snake Oil? The scientific evidence for health supplements

Missed this in Jan - awesome bubble chart on supplements: http://bit.ly/b1KVjZ | source : www.informationisbeautiful.net

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 18/08/10 10:10 | permalien

Budget 2010: Information is Beautiful live blogs George Osborne's speech | News | guardian.co.uk

Information is Beautiful is 'live-vizzing'. That is, curating a constantly updated visualisation of the announcements and their impact on the £156 billion deficit. Refresh the page to see the figures put into visual context. And to see how close we really are to plugging the black hole in the nation's finances. | source : www.guardian.co.uk

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 18/08/10 06:13 | permalien

Visualizing Economics — Making the "Invisible Hand" Visible

Visualizing Economics was created by Catherine Mulbrandon. Here you can view graphs and charts about the United States and world economies. I am available for freelance projects. | source : www.visualizingeconomics.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 02/08/10 11:09 | permalien

Home - TimeFlow - GitHub

TimeFlow Analytical Timeline is a visualization tool for temporal data. The current release is “alpha” software—a very early version that may have bugs and glitches.


The tool helps you analyze temporal data with five different displays:
Timeline View: plots events over time on a scrollable, horizontal timeline
Calendar View: plots events by day, month, and year in calendar format
Bar Chart View: a flexible, aggregate view of data points. It allows users to aggregate data by any header in the data set.
Table View: a straightforward table view of all data points
List View: a simple list of events shown on the timeline, complete with description and metadata about each data point | source : wiki.github.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 31/07/10 17:56 | permalien

Google Earth : Avian Flu

See the time-enabled maps, created by Nature reporter Declan Butler, showing the spread of human cases and outbreaks of infection in animals over time since 2003. Install Google Earth 4.0 to view these maps correctly � please note that earlier GE versions are not supported. Then use this new link to download the updated time-enabled maps. | source : www.nature.com

Recommandé parPaul Bradshaw le 29/07/10 15:47 | permalien