Paul Butler mined through some of the data held by the social networking firm on its 500m members.
The map above is the result of his attempts to visualise where people live relative to their Facebook friends. Each line connects cities with pairs of friends. The brighter the line, the more friends between those cities. After tweaking the graphic and data set it produced a "surprisingly detailed map of the world," he said in a blog post.
"Not only were continents visible, certain international borders were apparent as well," he wrote."What really struck me, though, was knowing that the lines didn't represent coasts or rivers or political borders, but real human relationships.
"However, large chunks of the world are missing, such as China and central Africa, which is the maps strength as it highlights the political influence in those countries/continents as Facebook, as too Google, have struggled to function there with rules and as so have a small presence.So anstract, love it.
Published on 2010/12/20 3:30 pm.
Filed under: Uncategorized Tags: cartography, Central Africa, Chunks, Coasts, Continents, Detailed Map Of The World, Facebook Friends, Google, Human Relationships, International Borders, map, Map Of The World, maps, Networking Firm, Pairs, Paul Butler, People, Political Borders, Political Influence, Rivers, Social network, Social Networking, Tweaking, world
A really useful tool to see who tweets about you. Quickly find relevant people to follow! Use Mentionmap to see Twitter conversations as a network and click any user to explore.
mention map tool by asterisq.com
I like it as its functional, they are in a concept map with elaborate media of
hyperlink attached to nodes to delve deeper, mine deeper into the relational tweeters. Not entirely about the visual appearance but more the activity of user and influence.
http://apps.asterisq.com/mentionmap/#user-visualthinkmap
There have been many twitter visualisations, some mentioned here:
http://www.chethstudios.net/2008/08/most-stunning-twitter-visualizations.html
Chris Harrison is well known to data visualiser but is worth a mention of visualising text.
http://www.chrisharrison.net/projects/visualization.html
Published on 2009/11/30 12:32 am.
Filed under: Uncategorized Tags: Chris Harrison, concept map, Conversations, html, Hyperlink, Map Tool, Online Communities, Programming, Related Articles, Social Networking, Tweet, Tweeters, Twitter, Visual Appearance, Visualization, Windows, World History