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Visualisation of x-ray data from the center of our galaxy.
Cropped and scaled to be used as a wallpaper.
Since it's not originally mine, I don't want any credit for it. I just like to bring it to attention because I think it looks absolutely stunning and at least on my screen it feels as if it had some kind of 3D effect due to the partial blur.
2560px wallpaper:
img864.imageshack.us/i/opo0928d2560.jpg/
Source:
www.spacetelescope.org/images/opo0928d/
Credit:
NASA, CXC, D. Wang (University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA) and STScI
Copyright shouldn't be a problem (CC-by):
El problema de la tecnología en Latinoamérica.
Diagrama basado en Oficio de Cartógrafo, Tecnología: innovaciones culturales y usos culturales, Jesús Martín Barbero.
Red means a drug is the most harmful in that category, green that it is the least. Data from Nutt et al, 2007.
Visualisation by Dr Andy Pryke, The Data Mine Ltd
*Background*
In March 2007, a paper on the dangers of different drugs hit the news headlines. The paper was "Development of a rational scale to assess the harm of drugs of potential misuse" by David Nutt, Leslie A King, William Saulsbury, and Colin Blakemore.
The paper measured the harmfulness of 20 substances on 9 different measures.
I transformed the data into a simpler to understand form. In the visualisation below, Red means most "danger", yellow indicated less of a problem and green the least harm. The grey square for "intravenous use of alcohol" indicates that no score was given for this. I also re-arranged the rows and columns so that similar drugs appeared next to each other. You can trace these similarities in the tree on the left.
For example, the red and dark orange rows across the centre of the diagram clearly show how heroin and cocaine are ranked as particularly dangerous across the board. However, at the bottom of the diagram, tobacco is particularly bad in terms of long term (chronic) effects and healthcare costs but much less harmful in terms of it's social and intoxicant effects.
I plan to visualise data from the 2010 paper once I get hold of it - if you can help, please let me know.
We spent yesterday at the BBC RAD hackday and decided to visualise the radio listening data from Radio Pop - 1800 users with 24000 listen "events" from the start of September to now.
This shows everyone's listening. Each row represents a user, with time on the y-axis. Each pixel represents one hour of a day and it is coloured in if the user listened during that hour, the colour represents the radio network.
The curved line is because the users/rows are in order of registration, so those at the bottom joined Radio Pop later, and hence started listening later.
Download the full-res version and zoom in to see more detail. There are some interesting patterns of recurring listening and combinations of networks.
More info in this blog post
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. Chevron has the largest share of emissions for investor owned or state owned companies at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
Visualisation of emails received in a subfolder using the Java based Processing toolkit.
The long lines separate years, each row is a separate email address, the length of the green is the size of the email.
Email data exported from Outlook into Access then filtered into text doc for reading by Processing. Contact me if you want the script.
Inspired by Alasdair Rae (www.undertheraedar.com/2015/10/glowing-lines-in-qgis.html) I used this method to present tracklog. Brighter places show slower walking speed indicating more windthrows
Please cite as:
Blake, A., & Doherty, I. (2007). An instructional design course for clinical educators: First iteration design research reflections. Journal of Learning Design, 2(2), 83-104.
Available: www.jld.qut.edu.au/publications/vol2no2/documents/Blakean...
The air in any small room with dimensions 5.4 x 5.4 x 2.7 metres (17.5 x 17.5 x 9 feet) contains 9.4 litres (2.5 gallons) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
9.4 litres is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 10 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the metric version of this visualisation. A US version (calibrated to a 12 oz can) is also available.
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 10 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
heat map of OpenStreetMap tile usage for 25 May 2015.
Data copyright OpenStreetmap contributors (data from here).
Only shows tiles at zoom level 9... higher zoom levels (like 15-17) would give a better indication of possible editing activity.
Darker areas are more requested tiles. Done using deciles of the natural logarithm of number of tile requests
Used a short (<50 line) python script to convert the tile log (which is essentially a csv file) into another csv file with wkt for each tile's geometry added as a field. This was then brought into QGIS as a wkt delimited file. Simpler to do this than to mess around with creating shapefiles :)
Can see HOT humanitarian mapping hotspots in Nepal and the Phillipines.
There's a hotspot around (0,0), and an interesting great circle fragment over Russia, which might be someone panning on a globe?
Interesting to see that most of the inhabited parts of the world are being served
The air in any small room with dimensions 5.4 x 5.4 x 2.7 metres (17.5 x 17.5 x 9 feet) contains 9.4 litres (2.5 gallons) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
9.4 litres is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 5 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the metric version of this visualisation. A US version (calibrated to a 12 oz can) is also available.
Nice visualisation of my twitter group, and how they're connected. Great for illustrating the depth of the conversation, and striking how few companies are on there. It's almost exclusively individuals. Blog post here:
philwhitehouse.blogspot.com/2008/05/twittering-for-busine...
Having obtained a rather good and large dataset from the recently instated Greek geodata portal, i was looking for a way to quickly visualise its extent.
I admit to having in my mind those images you sometimes see at doctors practices, where, for example, they would have posters of the muscular or circulatory system, trying (a bit harder than i would feel comfortable with) to convince you of their...interests.
Fortunately, each road segment had a characterisation field attached to it so it was relatively easy to "paint" the highways thicker than smaller streets within populated areas.
The slight detail here is that the thickness of the "arteries" is decreased following a power-law...a little trick that was inspired by the circulatory network itself.
This image appears in this blog post (in Greek, you have been warned :-) ) which talks briefly about road safety in Greece....Yeah, sometimes the street is literally bloody...
The folks at the Medical Visualisation Network have set up offices in Second Life. Currently, it features some info boards, and some rather dramatically scaled pix of illustrations.
"...this Network presents a national focus for the development of new interactive visualisation techniques for teaching, training, surgical rehearsal and pre-operative planning. ..."
Looks like the right sort of folks coming into Second Life, hope it will be interesting!
Knoh Oh
Second Life Healthcare Tourist
john-norris.net
Graphics included:
Light Bulb: pixabay.com/en/bulb-light-lamp-idea-electricity-29050/
Brain: pixabay.com/en/brain-thought-biology-human-think-146578/
Grapes:
pixabay.com/en/grape-fruit-diagram-crosssection-41636/
Cloud:
pixabay.com/en/cloud-weather-meteorology-climate-303182/
Graph
pixabay.com/en/pie-chart-dimensional-circle-grey-27157/
Blackout Poetry
flickr photo by Cat Sidh flickr.com/photos/cat-sidh/21017454389 shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license
Infographic:
flickr photo by MrGuilt flickr.com/photos/bontempscharly/12882043833 shared under a Creative Commons (BY) license
Admirable dedication to the task by my local primary school. Vaccination stats, regularly updated… in crochet!
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. Chevron has the largest share of emissions for investor owned or state owned companies at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
The technology in the tutor's control console consists of a PC and Visualiser connected to an overhead projector. The trolley and tables in the room have wheels so that they are easily moved, making the space more flexible. The tables can be folded and easily stored.
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 10 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
The air in any small room with dimensions 5.4 x 5.4 x 2.7 metres (17.5 x 17.5 x 9 feet) contains 9.4 litres (2.5 gallons) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
9.4 litres is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 10 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the metric version of this visualisation. A US version (calibrated to a 12 oz can) is also available.
The pendant visualises EEG attention (red) and meditation (green) data and visualises it on this LED matrix in real time. Using a Mindwave Mobile, Bluetooth dongle and Shrimp microcontroller.
I've built this for use in excruciating social situations such at conferences, networking, bars, etc. I'm interested in extending our emotive state by displaying if we're paying attention to whom we're speaking to or if our thoughts / attention is drifting off to the canapes or our to-do list. It's a mischievous device, read more about it here rainycatz.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/eeg-data-visualising-p...
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. Chevron has the largest share of emissions for investor owned or state owned companies at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
Visualisation Hess. Tous droits réservés.
Genève TPG
Les premiers autobus électriques articulés Hess sont attendus en été 2025 pour une mise en service progressive sur la ligne 5 Genève Aéroport - Thônex Vallard Douane.
La livrée sur la visualisation n'est pas contractuelle.
On peut espérer que le constructeur est meilleur en production qu'en géographie: le véhicule est représenté sur un site tramway dans le sens opposé à sa destination.
33651
On the left You can see a photo of old town in Fenghuan County taken by chensiyuan in 2012. On the right you can see a 3d visualisation that was inspired by this photo. This scene (and more oriental scenes) is included in Evermotion Archexteriors vol. 17, available here: bit.ly/12b0nHY
By Wikipedia: "Fenghuang County is located in Xiangxi Prefecture, Hunan Province, People's Republic of China.
It has an exceptionally well-preserved ancient town that harbors unique ethnic languages, customs, arts as well as many distinctive architectural remains of Ming and Qing styles. The city is revered in Miao traditions and funeral rites and is the location of the Southern China Great Wall."
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 10 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.
The pendant visualises EEG attention (red) and meditation (green) data and visualises it on this LED matrix in real time. Using a Mindwave Mobile, Bluetooth dongle and Shrimp microcontroller.
I've built this for use in excruciating social situations such at conferences, networking, bars, etc. I'm interested in extending our emotive state by displaying if we're paying attention to whom we're speaking to or if our thoughts / attention is drifting off to the canapes or our to-do list. It's a mischievous device, read more about it here rainycatz.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/eeg-data-visualising-p...
My hard drive according to Disk Inventory X (http://www.derlien.com/). Strange how quickly it fills up. The software makes it quite easy to find out what occupies the space, but still I have to do the boring work of deleting stuff myself..
The air in any small room with dimensions 5.4 x 5.4 x 2.7 metres (17.5 x 17.5 x 9 feet) contains 9.4 litres (2.5 gallons) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
9.4 litres is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 5 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the metric version of this visualisation. A US version (calibrated to a 12 oz can) is also available.
The air in any small room with dimensions 5.4 x 5.4 x 2.7 metres (17.5 x 17.5 x 9 feet) contains 9.4 litres (2.5 gallons) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
9.4 litres is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. Chevron has the largest share of emissions for investor owned or state owned companies at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the metric version of this visualisation. A US version (calibrated to a 12 oz can) is also available.
..the pendant is now able to record EEG visualisations and play them back, for extra mayhem! More info here: rainycatz.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/eeg-data-visualising-p...
The air in any small room with dimensions 18 x 18 x 9 feet (5.6 x 5.6 x 2.7 metres) contains 2.7 gallons (10 litres) of man-made carbon dioxide. Some of that gas – equal to the volume of a soda can – is attributable to Chevron.
2.7 gallons is about half the volume of a drinking water bottle. There is that much carbon pollution in every small room.
63% of all carbon emissions between 1850 and 2010 are attributable to just 90 producers of fossil fuels and cement. The image shows the top 5 investor-owned or state-owned companies. Chevron has the largest share of emissions at 3.5% of all emissions ever. For details see: www.carbonmajors.org
The calculation for this visualisation assumes the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is 400 parts per million by volume. See: www.co2now.org for the current concentration.
This is the US version of this visualisation. A metric version (calibrated to a 330 ml can) is also available.