Edinburgh Creative Map

edinburgh%252520map%252520info%252520cropped Edinburgh Creative Map

Edinburgh is the latest creative map to be rendered, vism.ag/edinburgh. Mapped in collaboration with creative-edinburgh.com launching Thursday 3rd November, 6 - 8pm at The Cube, 47 Leith Street, Edinburgh, EH1 3AT.

 



 



Identified as one of the 9 creative 'hotspots' in the UK by Nesta, this location has some great places on offer. From Edinburgh printmakers studio, Analogue Books, The Fruitmarket Gallery @fruitmarket to round the corner Stills photography gallery, there appears to be a lot of bustling creativity that the platform of creative-edinburgh.com @CreativeEdin will be sure to promote and keep you abreast of its output both nationally and internationally.



Creative Maps share knowledge of creative facilities in the world, or more specifically Edinburgh's area to help you in your creative and innovative endeavors.

Be it Galleries, Museums, Theaters, Bookshops, Arts Centers, Magazines, Studios, Design Companies, Craft Shops

 

Nearby on Thursday 3rd November, go check it out 6 - 8pm at The Cube, 47 Leith Street, Edinburgh, EH1 3AT



 

Check out the interactive map to see all the locations on Edinburgh's Creative Map vism.ag/edinburgh



 

Know any places in Edinburgh that aren't mapped? Sign up and add your own through vism.ag/sharegems



 

More info: @CreativeEdin



 



10 Recent Visual Inspirations

daaa8eb5b824b254b6d3c443ca3a16c4 10 Recent Visual Inspirations

Some of these are really good, clever and interesting. The what makes good info design by David Mccandless at informationisbeautiful.net controversial venn diagram usage which as I mentioned is good for a beginner. 

What Makes Good Information Design v 1.0

  I posted some curiousities here: http://visualthinkmap.ning.com/forum/topics/what-makes-an-information  or you can read more at my paper http://visualisationmagazine.com/blogvisualthinkmap/2009/11/how-do-visualisations-enhnce-the-communication-of-data.html    some great humorous visual of people entering an Sphincter which makes me think of Patch Adams with Robin Williams howdi gynos and people depicting fleas on a picture of a dog.  

guerrilla_marketing

  reminds me off,    

frontline

  These are two good datavis examples I have seen.   

The Rise Of China

 

uk met global warming map

  Found thesis.armina.info/ , usually finds great examples of data vis. this was a contents page to student magaine of their work.   

komma5_06

  banksy, think it was http://blogof.francescomugnai.com/ great collection. I liked this subtle humour.   

banksy_genius

  Again humour, think it was Claude Aschenbrenner at serialmapper.com, flow chart to define your career title.  

can you draw

  this did the blog rounds, info aesthetics, cool infographics, flowing data I think. it reminded me of Minards carte figuartive, Tuftes best statistical graphic ever.   

In the LotR map, up and down correspond LOOSELY to northwest and southeast respectively.

  follow my image bookmarks, http://vi.sualize.us/visualthinkmap/   Recieve these automatically through my twitter; http://twitter.com/visualthinkmap

Infographic Typography

dba101ccd361ff3836cc41437a730a6c Infographic Typography

In 1989 Erik and Joan Spiekermann signed contracts with leading type foundries, packed their small office with floppy disks full of fonts, and started taking phone orders.

   

FontShop became the first independent retailer of digital type. Twenty years later we’re still stocking the best fonts (though the number has grown and the medium has changed) and still answering phones.  

Its a great clean, clear and bold infographic sectioning off different infographic styles. Really beautiful, I'm always wanting to connect the beauty and functionality of type with information graphics. Reminds me of Nicholas Feltrons work self-mapping.html (update: from armina.thesis blog, it is by N.Feltron)

  See also: NB: Studio - london-kerning.html   from: http://www.fontshop.com/20years/   found: http://www.datavisualization.ch/showcases/typography-meets-infographics

How do visualisations enhance the communication of data?

6588811966236de963ce84e2efc14c17 How do visualisations enhance the communication of data?

Finished my essay into how graphic design can enhance communication in data visualisation & information graphics:   visualisationmagazine.com/dissertation.htm     "graphic design ‘sorts and differentiates, it informs, it helps to shape how we feel, see the world’" (Newark, 2002, p. 6)   I look into areas such as (please note these intermix with each other):   a. Mind and Vision b. Communication c. Perception and Reality d. Semiotics e. Graphics   Within this paper I explore the creative and innovative design techniques for mapping information to aid thinking, understanding, comprehension and reasoning. I summarized the key points into guidelines for the at-a-glance findings.     "it may be possible to utilise symmetry and geometry to aid vision when perceiving a visualisation to understand data" (Wood and Keller, 1996, p 256)  

 

 

 

 

This consideration of the way the map designer represents the world is not just associated with that of geographic cartograms but also with the way the designer visualises complex data.   "if the designer retained 100% truth, they would no longer be mapping, representing aspects of geographic space, it would be entirely realisitic, the territory"  

 

 

Read more: visualisationmagazine.com/dissertation.htm.  

 

 

 

  Please discuss, comment, criticize, debate, enjoy!    Guidelines for when designing visualisations | Opinion? Discuss, share here in Forum | See Dissertation Proposal

 

I am pleased as this means I have passed my MA Contemporary Arts Practice at York St John University investigating data visualisation, graphic design, information mapping. Read more background about me. Dont worry, I will still be blogging, collating and compiling the magazines.   See more projects developed from my studies:   visualisation magazine.com

 

 

visualisationmagazine.com/blogvisualthinkmap  

 

 

 

visualthinkmap.ning.com 

   Follow me on these services:   © Copyright Chris Watson / Visual Think Map 2009. All rights reserved.

30 Free Useful Websites for Online Promotion

360c6f8d4453c0a6fc71d996637a8515 30 Free Useful Websites for Online Promotion

This visualisation was made to help inform and advertise on how easily and effectively you can use the web 2.0 tools to build an online presence through free sites, feeds, embed and monitor progress/stats.

 

 

There are more that I have started to use and need to integrate at some point (they were just embeddable widgets).

 

feedburner.com google’s feed aggregator, splice in Del.ici.ous links or amazon and ping your blog posts to different services   postrank.com blogpost ranking widget, show readers your popular posts   technorati.com blogpost organiser/aggregator pinging and rating among your categories of blogs.   facebook.com share & connect   hostpapa.com (not free, but cheap and can host many sites) I share a friends web hosting   uk2.net (not free, but cheap and easy to integrate with hostpapa) bought an yearly domain .com £8.99   linkedin.com professional networking, set up your own groups   vi.sualize.us (update: vi.sualiZe.us - not with an s)  visual social bookmarking toolbar   delicious.com social bookmarking toolbar   blogger.com google’s blogging platform   flickr.com share photos/artwork with groups and friends   visualisationmagazine.com my website for my data visualisation magazine free to see online (using issuu, search it in my blog posts)   chriswatsondesign.viviti.com   my homepage of activities, viviti lets you build a basic website to promote if you dont have your own host or dont want to learn html etc.

issuu.com 
 
share books with an online viewer either public or private (still embeddable, private is little more awkward to implement, see 
   
 
      http://visualthinkmap.blogspot.com/2009/10/self-publishing-visualisation.html)   twitterfeed.com share feeds auto on twitter, your blog, your del.ici.ous, vi.sualise.us, flickr (anywhere with a feed)   twitter.com microblogging 150 word updates   getsatisfaction.com free online customer services, embeddable widgets and brandable with your own header etc.   ning.com create a social network and add pictures, website links, blog posts, videos, linked to flickr, you tube.... very good. add html data.   createspace.com free online publishing tools, books, cds, video   affiliate-program.amazon.com earn money through product placement  

sharethis.com share posts/links anywhere, such s twitter all those services, whatever you use, tumblur, stumble upon its listed.

 

addthis.com share posts/links anywhere as like share this.  

addtoany.com share posts/links anywhere as like share this.   geekchart.com show where you share, more novelty but interesting nonetheless for visitors wanting to know where to follow you best.  

feedjit.com 
 
show where your traffic comes from in the world.
   
 
    clustrmaps.com show where your traffic comes from in the world.   sitemeter.com site visitor stats   goingup.com (not signed up yet, but looks good) earn money through stats   popuri.us   site rank stats, where are you on google page rank, alexa, yahoo back links etc. e-zeeinternet.com   free embeddable counter, no subscribing/details needed. just your url of where its going.

this was a great post, many that i need to have a look at and probably use,

desizntech.info/2009/10/22-really-useful-online-tools-for-web-designers-and-bloggers/   If you know of any more really useful and excellent sites/services that are free on the web please let me know. ADDITION: http://www.ubervu.com/    widget free to track stats of where your site - link goes accross the web  

Design

 

 

It was quite a challenge, I wanted to avoid the amount of edge crossings with the lines. This isn't that easy as you can imagine to avoid the amount of edge crossings, if there are too many like in the diagram below it can reduce the readability mentioned upon by Lau & Vande Moere.pdf, pg 1 (infosthetics.com) and referred too as Good Continuity in the Gestalt Laws of Perception for effective visual communication in Cartographic Design: Theoretical and Practical Perspectives, from John Wiley & Sons Inc. 

  

 

So I had to re-arrange the different sites quite a few times as it is quite easy to make them all integrate, such as rss/atom feeds directly being fed to different sites, or being able to embed items into blogger, websites etc. As you would expect from today's web 2.0, you want them all spidering each other and linked and easily integratable with each other it generates a lot of lines (not that easy to distinguish which sites can link, embed with each other). I thought about using colour to differentiate between embed links and rss links.

 

I think there are 13 edge crossings (making it look like spaghetti and hard to follow, causing conflicts and burdening cognitive load and reducing readability and ease of engagement as you interact with it, inevitably giving up with it, 'oh **** that!'). That 13 is a high number, trust me it could have been worse, but i try to get round that by giving a perception of depth and differentiating line quality so that they arent the same and the eye can still maintain good continuation, as Gestalt say, for the reader and the designs readbalility (think there is a test that scores the readability of text, see Hrant Paparazin 'Improving the tool' in Graphic Design and Reading: exploring an un-easy relationship by gunnar swansson.

 

 

 

I help when they come to going along the differentiated dashed line from Visualisation Magazine or Flickr that I added a depth too by also adding rigid straight lines contrasting the flowing curved solid lines (lots of contrasts to differentiate).

 

I also straightened the lines making them parallel such as to the left hand side of Blogger (orange b), Or underneath Blogger connecting to Ning. Helps with the Common Fate (Gestalt) and again easier to follow the individual lines. Simliar to TeleGeography with their parallel lines springing from countries.  

 

Below are links to Picassa. Please observe image copyrights to their owners. Use these to have ago your self at creating a web 2.0

 

     

Graphic Presentation Book by W. Cope Brinton

ec8cdfa97b37e8e92308d3b2af8d783d Graphic Presentation Book by W. Cope Brinton













Some pages from Willard Cope Brinton's second book
(1939). The whole book can be downloaded (in a worse resolution) for free from www.archive.org/details/graphicpresentat00brinrich


This is is just like http://telegeography.com/products/map_traffic/index.php
Global Internet Traffic Map 2008


set on Flickr from Prof.
Michael Stoll


http://tinyurl.com/mgy2bv








(~526 pg) Read
Online


(32 MB) PDF

(26 MB) B/W
PDF


(660 KB) Full
Text


(20 MB) DjVu



All Files: HTTP


the whole book can be downloaded here

http://tinyurl.com/czkjj6


found at armina's brilliant blog. http://thesis.armina.info/node/147

Plane Survival

3682749730 fb19f983cc m Plane Survival


Reduce Your Odds Of Dying In A Plane Crash
Originally uploaded by mkandlez

http://www.flickr.com/photos/25541021@N00/3682749730/

Really good, clean, clear and informative work. A round-up and mash-up of data on fatal plane accidents. Cross-referencing the data (unscientifically) reveals the statistically most dangerous flights to take.

by month
by airline
by plane type
by country
by seat


Visit here for more visualisations and infographics
www.informationisbeautiful.net/

=======================================================

Inspired by data from The Guardian Datablog

My data here:
spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0Aqe2P9sYhZ2ncjhyM3llRENj...

Very hi-res editable PDF (2.8MB) here:
www.visualizedthebook.com/images/pre_flight_check.pdf

What makes an information graphic beautiful?

http://tinyurl.com/databeauty

note, i have yet to get my hands on Beautiful Data book nor (shamefully as a graphic designer) have i had chance to read Data Flow, although a friend was trying to get a hold of it for me. I managed to read Tufte's Beautiful Evidence book.

I read Brad Paleys comments in Creative Review Mar 08 that he thought it came from 'the accurate and comfortable representation of data' (centaur publications)

I have read Vande Moere and Lau's examinings of aesthetics in data visaulisation with their measures determining a circular sunburst style to be most beautiful.

Is it symmetry, balance in design?
Colour Harmony?
Simplicity?
Font Style?

please share your thoughts/readings. quote for the books above if you have read them, please, review the books if you read them and post here. I am finally getting round to writing up my research for my thesis. Your thoughts will be greatly appreciated.

Yuri Engelhardt’s critical review of Edward Tufte’s Beautiful Evidencehttp://yuriweb.com/tufte/

Lau A. and Vande Moere A. (2007), “Towards a Model of Information Aesthetic Visualization”, IEEE International Conference on Information Visualisation (IV’07), IEEE, Zurich , Switzerland, pp. 87-92.http://web.arch.usyd.edu.au/~andrew/publications/iv07.pdf

Cawthon N. and Vande Moere A. (2007), “The Effect of Aesthetic on the Usability of Data Visualization”, IEEE International Conference on Information Visualisation (IV’07), IEEE, Zurich , Switzerland, pp. 637-648http://web.arch.usyd.edu.au/~andrew/publications/iv07b.pdf

quite the hoard at http://web.arch.usyd.edu.au/~andrew/

http://www.informationesthetics.org/node/28
http://www.informationesthetics.org/node/27

Bizarre Infographic

In UK and on BBC three there is a program called bizarre ER, I saw these great informative little infographic animations with a soupson of humour & blood.

Manuel Lima | Visual Complexity Interview



Manuel Lima Visual Complexity from digup.tv on Vimeo.


Manuel's website has no doubt been an inspiration all in data visualisation and information graphics.

Manuel Lima is an interaction designer, information architect and design researcher. He currently works as a Senior User Experience Designer at Nokia's NextGen Software & Services in London. Manuel is also a frequent speaker in conferences and festivals around the world, on the topic of Information Visualization, in particular the visualization of complex networks. About

Visual Complexity VisualComplexity.com intends to be a unified resource space for anyone interested in the visualization of complex networks. The project's main goal is to leverage a critical understanding of different visualization methods, across a series of disciplines from Biology to Social Networks, and, to be a space that inspires, motivates and enlightens any person doing research on this field.

see also: Blogviz. mapping the dynamics of information. manuel lima

was only 22days ago it was posted. not overly posting, well his site and interview deserve the publicity even if it doesnt need it.