Lovely Geographies

Ed Cotton posits that geography is becoming cool again, and I’m not certain that I disagree.

We can now tell where a plane is mid flight, we know how many miles we ran and if we are clever, we can map those miles, we can see exactly where photographs were taken and our cars can be effortlessly guided to our destination by satellites.

A great point. As we immerse ourselves in both maps of our creation (think Flickr), maps we need (think GoogleMaps), and an overwhelming volume of data that can be plotted in near-real-time about just about everything, a greater understanding of both where it is that we operate, and where we are in context of the world around us seems equally inevitable and appealing.

Ask and Thou Shalt Receive

I posted on Twitter last night at 5:30 that I was ‘Anticipating tomorrows NYT Oscars Twitter visualization’.
Jeff Clark hit me up just a few hours later with a link to his own Twitter Oscar visualizer (nothing similar yet from the Times).
Built with Processing, Jeff’s visualizer is a good deal of fun. I’m particularly glad that [...]

Give a Student Some Data, Get a Free Pie

Ben Terrett, on his fantastic blog Noisy Decent Graphics, posts today about a project he’s working on with students at the London College of Communication.
His students were charged with creating data visualizations based upon a measurable component of their own lives – it’s a particularly relevant assignment at the moment, as such visualizations are seemingly [...]