NY TIMES GRAPHICS

April 16th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

Some DDD work published in the New York Times

BACK IN THE DAY

April 16th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

Early work at the Associated Press

WHAT THEY KNEW AND WHEN

April 13th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

The Washington Post graphic tracks one aspect of the Iraq War’s campaign of misinformation.

JUST IN CASE . . .

April 11th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

you ever find yourself trapped inside an oceanbound capsule after falling fom the sky, or rather in a large bottle of Johnny Black after deadline.

Warming World

April 10th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

A series of graphics discussing climate change issues from early ’05

Thomas P.M. Barnett’s view of the world

April 3rd, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

A handsome Eckert projected World Map depicts the locations of US military actions since 1990, drawing a correlation between these areas and socio-economic development. Mr. Barnett draws a ring around the US interventions and calls it “The Non-Integrating Gap”, and refers the rest of the world as the “Functioning Core”. Maybe its a bit of a stretch. At least for an infographic, it seems a bit editorialized.

Cool Cartograms

March 29th, 2006 by rcmorris

A collection of colorful cartograms that will change your worldview …

Information Posters

March 26th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

History Shots creates well reported and beautifully designed infographics

UNDERSTANDING USA

March 22nd, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

Richard Saul Wurman’s classic book, “Information Anxiety” was a great introduction to theories of simplifying information,visual and otherwise.

In a more recent project, “Understanding USA” , Wurman enlists the help of several infographic designers and has been kind enough to release the entire volume on the web in Flash.

Logarithmic map

March 22nd, 2006 by nrapp

Speaking about logarithm, check out the universe map using a logarithmic scale (Princeton University):

Why to use logarithmic scales and with what software?

March 22nd, 2006 by nrapp

A logarithmic chart can be useful when you want to display data with big difference in numeric values in a chart. In the example I attached, with and without the logarithmic scale, you can see that the reader, with the regular view, cannot identify values and difference with a reasonable degree of accuracy until 1993. Using the logarithmic scale improve the resolution of the individual data points.
The chart I’m showing is Oracle, and they almost went bankruptcy in 1990. You will not see that in the linear chart.
Of course, the biggest problem is that as a whole, it will not give a correct idea of the performance of a stock (to stay with the same example). And readers are not used to this kind of charts.
I think it is OK to use it, in exceptional occasions that justify it, and as long as we make sure to highlight the fact we are using this system. And maybe it would be good to use the usual one (linear) as a small reference chart in the same graphic.
If one of you guys want to try it, you would have to use Deltagraph.

Examples

XPLANE

March 14th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

The folks over at Xplane are masters of process oriented illustrated infographics

ANTARCTIC ICE SHELVES

March 14th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

The PI may be up for sale, but their permalinks still work. Reporting and rendering by yours truly

Antarctic Ice Shelves

THEBAN MAPPING PROJECT

March 14th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

Cartography and research: Theban Mapping Project

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DISASTERS

March 12th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

The NGS site Forces of Nature is thoroughly reported and well rendered. And it gives you an idea of what might have happen when shit pops-off.

GIS for Journalists tutorials using ArcView, GMT,

March 12th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

From time to time at DDD infographic, we’ll be posting links to flash tutorials and and other urls to increase awareness and understanding of Geographic Information Systems techniques in relationship to journalism.

TWO FOR THE ROAD

March 12th, 2006 by ◊°◊°◊

MCGILL
Maramushi’s incredible Newsmap is both beautiful and useful.

The Name Wizard is a fluid interactive graphic displaying the popularity of names in the U.S. since the 1800′s