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Data Is Beautiful is a hidden gem for gorgeous data visualizations

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Data Is Beautiful is a hidden gem for gorgeous data visualizations

Data visualization is one of the most delightful trends in media. It’s perfect for skimming and can turn a boring economic analysis into a work of art. Many practitioners are looking for inspiration in this quickly evolving field. A (relatively) new Reddit, DataIsBeautiful, aims to collect the best of the Web in a daily rounded up of gorgeous data visualizations.

Lately, this Reddit community has really picked up steam and is unearthing the best ways to visualization thought-provoking and topical stories.

History

This smoke trail of ship-log entries from the 18th and 19th century is a wonderful retelling of history through exploration. Notice the super-dark band between western Europe and New York, in what would become a pre-cursor to the transfer of power from Britain to the United States.

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Partisanship

Congress really is more polarized than ever before. The Economist did a nice network graph of senators’ votes from each party shows how the U.S. Congress slowly ebbed into partisan silos in the ’90s then just tore apart in the new century.

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Digital nightlife

While not as pretty, I really dig this technique of stacked colors over time to visualize how we increasingly rely on digital communications at night. That’s a lot of late-night email (and Tinder).

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Inequality

This graph of city real estate hits close to home. San Francisco is over $1,000 a square foot in some parts of my neighborhood, the Mission District. For the costs of a tin can in Silicon Valley, I could buy enough space in Detroit to host a football game.

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Budding Social Media Love

This nice graph shows the increasing flirtations of budding lovers on social media and the quick dip as they (most likely) move their relationship offline.

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Local Universities Feed Employers

Wired has a nice flow graph of how local universities feed the nation’s top technology companies. University of Washington provides an enormous chunk to  Microsoft, while Stanford feeds straight into Bay Area neighbor Google (click on the image for a large version).

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For more inspirations, check out DataIsBeautiful here.


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7hunderbird
3756 days ago
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@seemantk this is the story I meant to share, very interesting data visualizations.
American Fork, UT
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Google Disrupts the Nest (Comic)

8 Comments and 22 Shares

Joy of Tech 1949

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7hunderbird
3959 days ago
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So sad that this rings so true. I kinda don't want a nest, now big brother (aka google) gets the data.
American Fork, UT
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6 public comments
_jk
3960 days ago
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hehehe.
berlin, germany
jimwise
3960 days ago
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Heh.
smadin
3961 days ago
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Basically correct.
Boston
Courtney
3961 days ago
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It's true - I immediately stopped wanting a Nest. (And I REEEEEEALLY wanted a nest.) Now I kind of want an Ecobee?
Portland, OR
RedSonja
3961 days ago
My first thought was getting ads for new toasters and fire extinguishers.
chrisrosa
3962 days ago
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perfect commentary on the google>nest topic.
San Francisco, CA