“Examine Netflix rental patterns, neighborhood by neighborhood, in a dozen cities.” Truly fascinating interactive graphic. The Mad Men pattern is particularly interesting.
I love the attention to detail given to these infographics. The craft and time that went into creating them is so apparent. My assumption is it’s because people really thought they would be around for a long time. Unfortunately, it’s all to common for me to feel the stuff I’m working on is just going to be deleted pixels in a few years.
Norway just looks creepy.
I’m a bit late on this, but it’s yet another fantastic interactive graphic from the New York Times showing the water landing of flight 1549.
Finally.
Yep, the New York times map was by far the best. I love this collection though!
Intriguing interactive graphic showing how Obama won.
I love maps, and transmit maps are probably my favorite. And of transit maps, the London Underground is probably in my top 5. I haven’t found the time to watch this yet, but I’m looking forward to watching it when I finally do. From the 5 minutes I did watch, it looks fantastic.
Yet another great infographic from the NY Times illustrating who voted against the $700 billion financial bailout plan.
“People in Greece spend almost 13 times more money on clothing as they do on electronics. People living in Japan spend more on recreation than they do on clothing, electronics and household goods combined. Americans spend a lot of money on everything.” Does anyone know where I could get a feed of just the fantastic interactive graphics the New York Times puts out? I absolutely love this stuff.
I absolutely love this interactive graphic depicting the medal counts since the modern games inception in 1896. Big kudos for representing the different regions using color and a rough “map” via large circles. It’s great that you can quickly flip to just a straight numerical order too though.
Nice heat map of the most walkable neighborhoods in Seattle. Wallingford coming in at a respectable #10.
Taken by Stefan Hartwig
Downtown Kuz getting a little internet love.
Apparently Arizona’s got the cheap stuff.
“All of the streets in the lower 48 United States: an image of 26 million individual road segments.” Truly stunning infographic from Ben Fry.
Signed by Massimo Vignelli himself. Anyone have $299 lying around and feeling generous?
I stunning inforgraphic depicting the subprime mortgage crisis across the U.S.
Fantastic visualization of the landing site of Apollo 11. I particularly like the soccer field underlay that immediately gives you a sense of scale.
Now if only they had a Seattle or Portland one…