HTML Music Visualiser using D3

I have always dream of a world where all interactive software would work via the browser. But we still have people clinging to their desktop and mobile apps like some weird guy who believes the best years were when he was still in high school in the 80’s. An all browser world will use one programming language and is platform independent. Mostly.. Apart from when it isn’t. While we have a lot of web stuff now, some components have remained firmly out of reach and one that I have often wanted to experiment with is audio. Enter the <audio> tag. Continue reading “HTML Music Visualiser using D3”

The Infographic Awakens

Since we are still in the grips of Star Wars frenzy (and the various problems in the world that need solving will still be there in tomorrow), Bloomberg created an infographic showing the use of the Force across all 7 Star Wars films. I like the adherence to the colour scheme and, since the data doesn’t actually matter, this if form over function that works well.

Colour Palettes for Data Visualizations

When creating a data visualisation, one the worst ways to encode the differences between values is to use changes in colour. Whether going from light to dark or changing between two colours, our brains are not particularly good at determining how big the difference is and for small differences, we may not notice it at all. Continue reading “Colour Palettes for Data Visualizations”

Climate Change in Six Easy Graphics

One of the key requirements for good data visualisation is that it supports the narrative of the issue being explained. It should support the story by helping the reader easily understand  the conclusions drawn from the data analysis. In some cases the data visualisation carries the story complete as in this article from BBC News: Six graphics that explain climate change

Isochronic World Map

I love old timey world maps. Cartographers have understood the science of data visualisation for a long time and some of these old hand drawn maps are truly incredible works of art. This map shows the average travel time (in days) from central London to another part of the world. 10-20 days to get from London to South Africa. Its the journey, not the destination man! Plus there was probably more leg room. Thanks to @BrianPinnock for the original link.