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POPSInfographic delight: Indianapolis Museum visualized Refreshing use of technology in the arts/social arena. The Indianapolis Museum uses an enterprise dashboard to visualize vital stats normally buried in paper. E.g. amount of energy consumed per day visits: online/offline, average duration, member/casual/students, etc. artworks: new acquisitions, on loan, most visited, etc. gardening activity: new blooms, H2O consumption, etc Loved the 3rd grader stat. :)
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POPSInteractive comparison of biofuels Summary & screenshots of Ntl Geographic's interactive module for comparing biofuel sources. Will it be corn, sugarcane, scum (algae) or nought? Ladies & gentlemen, place your bets!
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POPSMore titillating infographics: Product Space & Development of Nations Cool infographic showing material types, products, proximity of manufacture, world trade volumes of each. According to the brief, "proximity" here refers to the theory that a country's ability to manufacture a product (e.g. apples) depends on its ability to produce related ones (e.g. another fruit like pears). Part of information supporting the paper The Product Space Conditions the Development of Nations (Hidalgo, Klinger, Barabasi, Hausmann). There is also a page where you can download individual country maps. Via VisualComplexity .
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POPSTitillating infographics: 3rd World myths debunked Not not that kinda porn; get your minds out the gutter. ;) Just very engaging visualization of how far nations have evolved economically/socially/healthwise through the times, contrary to popular belief. For infographics/datagraphics lovers, such skilled presentation equates to good porn. :)
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POPSClipmarks representation by Dots Java-driven graphic representation of all information available on a website with dotted branches. Click on the link to see info-branches grow as Clipmarks site is mapped as example, then go to the homepage to try it with your own/any site too.
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POPS1911 era satire: Visual description of capitalism Funny visual description of capitalism apparently printed in 1911 by The Industrial Worker, "the voice of revolutionary labor" newspaper of the radical labor union Industrial Workers of the World (via Neatorama.com).