The Week In Data
First up this week, our Swiss colleagues over at datavisualisation.ch have had the tgood sense to upload the one and only, genuine Swiss Army knife of data journalism. Just like the famous red knife,...
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We start this week with a dataset. Not necessarily astonishing or eye-melting, but awfully useful. This CSV file contains 24 MB of GPS coordinates for 36,000 French communes (API Google Maps and...
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Let’s get straight into it this week with a data visualisation focusing on the parliamentary elections in France, the second round of which took place this past Sunday. It comes from one of the OECD’s...
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To start this week’s selection, we suggest you take a look at three very successful information visualisation projects. The first is the work of Power2Switch, a Chicago startup that has come up with a...
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Let’s start this latest episode of The Week In Data in diplomatic fashion. Last week AFP launched a new interactive application The E-Diplomacy Hub — Twitter and Foreign Policy: Digital Democracy in...
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To begin this 28th edition of The Week In Data we’re going “back to basics”, with three interactive data visualisation applications that caught our eye during the past week. Half a century of work...
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Once won’t hurt – this week we’ll start off more on the LOL side of things, and end up getting a bit more serious. I sing, you sing, we all dataviz Launched by Florent Maurin, Dalalalataviz captures...
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Let’s get off to a good start this week with the Wall Street Journal, who are now regularly producing interactive applications, catching up with leaders in the field such as the Guardian and The New...
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We begin our weekly data digest with an innovation dreamt up by Radio France and brought to fruition by FaberNovel. Console Twitter is a platform that allows the user to monitor the total Twitter...
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The writer Jack Kerouac hammered out his famous novel On the Road in three weeks using a typewriter and a 35 metre long roll of taped-together sheets of tracing paper. The book’s origins gave Stefanie...
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