Data journalist and information designer David McCandless’s new Infographic highlighting the differences in earnings between the most popular online music stores.
(h/t businessinsider)
Data journalist and information designer David McCandless’s new Infographic highlighting the differences in earnings between the most popular online music stores.
(h/t businessinsider)
The folks over at SearchFactory have collated some of the oddest google searches around.
(h/t broadsheet)
The visualization below, from the Oxford Internet Institute, attempts to simplify the world’s network of submarine fiber-optic cables into a commonly understood subway map.
Each stop on the subway is a node (a place where data is sent and received like an Internet service provider) assigned to a country. The map is generated by taking node data from cablemap.info which“aims to provide a global overview of the network, and a general sense of how information traverses our planet,”.
A higher resolution image is available at geography.oii.ox.ac.uk.
(h/t slate.com)
Google has announced a new visualization page highlighting the latest trending topics in different colors and sizes. It provides information on real-time searches being executed on the site. Check out Google Trends.
(via mashable)
PBS’s Idea Channel on animated GIFs and their potential impact in the US 2012 election:
The animated GIF has had a long and fascinating history, but the GIF took a giant leap forward this year when it became part of the 2012 Presidential Election!!! This election season, GIFs of Obama, Romney, Biden and Ryan, populated not only Tumblr and Buzzfeed, but also media heavyweights like The Atlantic, Forbes, and The Wall Street Journal. It became the perfect vehicle to capture a reaction, a gaffe or hilarious election moment and stream it ad infinitum. Will the Graphics Interchange Format swing the election for Obama or Romney?
Music: Roglok
Ruslan Ekineev created what he calls “The Internet Map,” an interactive visualization charting 350,000 websites from 196 countries. Each website is represented as a “planet”, with size is determined by traffic, and color by national origin. Ekineev explains:
Every site is a circle on the map, and its size is determined by website traffic, the larger the amount of traffic, the bigger the circle. Users’ switching between websites forms links, and the stronger the link, the closer the websites tend to arrange themselves to each other.
A screengrab from the map below shows Ireland’s Internet Map, with the largest website being google.ie. No surprises there.
(via boingboing)