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The beauty of data visualization | David McCandless
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- Опубликовано: 22 авг 2010
- www.ted.com David McCandless turns complex data sets (like worldwide military spending, media buzz, Facebook status updates) into beautiful, simple diagrams that tease out unseen patterns and connections. Good design, he suggests, is the best way to navigate information glut -- and it may just change the way we see the world.
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com/translate. Watch a highlight reel of the Top 10 TEDTalks at www.ted.com/index.php/talks/top10
A very thought-provoking talk that fits nicely with my current courses on problem-solving through comm tech and philosophy of tech in education. McCandless' discussion on visualization and on 'data as the new soil' reminded me a lot of Marshall McLuhan's notions of how the literate culture (the age of writing) is dominated by the eye (also reinforced by the coloured visualization of 9:20) and of his concepts of 'rootedness' and the need to examine the soil from which we are growing as human beings (i.e., how has technology changed the soil makeup? how does that affect our senses and ways of understanding?). I agree that I, too, find myself longing for large chunks of written text to be converted (compressed) into an image/diagram and am relieved when this happens. I think this longing goes hand-in-hand with the speediness of vision.
Apresentação maravilhosa, fiquei apaixonada pelo designer de informações. Uma ferramenta importante para a gestão de negócios. Parabéns.
I think TED is the most fun and can know very amazing interesting informations if we see and watch during left over times. This video was so inspire me by using data in many ways~!
Great video!!
exquisite craftsmanship,stunning design,and unparalleled quality,will never be obsolete!!
great rolex ad!
the data from the commercial is beautiful
Great talk about how to turn complex data sets into beautiful, simple diagrams that tease out hidden patterns and connections and even may change the way we see the world. It also provides some interesting real world examples with some unexpected insights.
That's a brilliant design. It's so obvious that you have to wonder why it's not been in use for years. It would be great if there was a search engine which collated all the information and shown it as a graphic comparison.
This talk would have made my exclusive favorites list a number of different ways. His closing remarks alone bring a new kind of stunning realization about global warming and (more specifically) carbon emissions... The Iceland volcano put out less than we do every day with airline flights alone. Shocking.
Excellent stuff, really gets you thinking.
that rolex ad is class
Does anyone know what the name of the first graph he shows is? The one with the rectangles of relative size based on data values? I'm trying to find a already built mechanism for graphing my data in this way but I don't know what to search for?
@MrDemonshalo Fair play. I'm not entirely sure that it necessarily needs to be incorporated into every bit of data. If it were only used in news, I'm sure it would raise the impact given to certain fact and figures. Just seeing the difference in carbon emissions by the Icelandic volcano and the grounding of planes was quite the eye opener for me.
"Let the dataset change your mindset."
Nice one!
"When you're lost in information, an information map is kinda useful." Indeed.
Very enlightening.
GOOD!
6:19 Peak times for break ups. Makes sense.
First off, why is the right red and the left blue? And where can i see these infogrpahics? they look very intriguing.
"A clearing in an information Jungle" - interesting!
@ShallowBeThyGames
I've actually tried to make a statistics website that uses a model like that instead of just relying on the X Y model where variables are static and non comparable.
The problem was that there is too much data out there and sorting everything out in the right order takes a huge amount of time and effort, which is why I had to shut it down. Yet still I believe that we will need a software like that in the near future to be able to visualize data and come to new conclusions
@DrQuijano it depends whether your from Uk or USA doesn't it. Information is beautiful do versions for each.
what are the programs he uses? and where to get them? does anyone know??
@Santi2c So where's it come from in the first place?
i scrolled down here before the commercial started and i was like "what the hell did he just watch?"
That was an epic Rolex commercial at the end O.o
at 2:35 he says "douche"... the appropriate sound effect.
where can i find all these graphs and apps?!
@arhabersham easy. pay slip + bank statement + excel spreadsheet + graph maker
Does the Rolex add remind anyone else of Zoolander - "water is the essence of wetness, wetness is the essence of beauty"
I love data visualisations BTW - makes me wanna be a data analyst!
3:15 - interesting to the context of past panics in the media are much the same today as in the past 20 years - pandemics and stinging insects!
yeah not sure what everyone was panicking about with this coronavirus thing
I have his book!
@arhabersham use mint.com dude! it was an eye opener for me
at 11:00 Thank you.
Program ends at 18:14
@takigan I respect a watch that is more badass than me.
(That's not very much, but still. It's very hard for a watch.)
I had a breakup two weeks before Christmas. Turns out to be a popular time. Who knew.
@takigan i would thank rolex for making ted possible
LOL at the breakup peak on april fools.
"its over"
"OH GOOD ONE HAHA!"
"..... no seriously."
There's your data boys. If your girl is planning a trip for spring break without you.. dump her lol
fantastic
I think data visualisation is the new wave that will transform the way we look at the world. Foursquare tells you where you hang out, Sniftag tells you who your dog is seeing and augmented reality adds another layer to reality. What comes after that could be scary: setting standards and automatic adjustments. Coming home and your intelligent house putting up a Michael Bolton song because you seem "stressed".
@TheLiberalSoup saw that too
I was schooled in a Private Christian school that watch recorded classrooms on tape and we had supervisers, but my point is that I grew up watching television to learn and same with cable television as a child. Im a History / Discover / Science channel lover.
I laughed when I saw 'April Fool's Day'. Hahaha
Interesting
@ChrisAFM Effective visualizations tell the story of the data. He just makes a pretty picture that is very hard to figure out what is going on. Hence the bad name I discuss.
Please read Dambisa Moyo's book : Dead Aid
data means knowledge ... and knowledge, as everyone knows, is power. But I'd never thought I'd say data equals beauty.
the rolex ad stole Edward Scissorhand's soundtrack!!!!
@lordmetroid No, he actually showed that the amount that US citizens give to charity dwarfs their foriegn aid budget. That's what he meant when he used the word 'generous'. Of course there are all kinds of charities, some of which aren't really very charitable.
@WeatherManToBe - Do you not know that words like "trillion" and "billion" have different meanings, depending on your country? Trillion, for the record, may mean either 10^18, or 10^12.
Makes me want to be a data nerd (meant in the nicest way)
Zornwil, he specifically said, "This is the landscape for violent video games". Not, "This is the landscape for media driven fear". Point? The media only discussed 1 subject, terrorism.
Therefore, there WOULD be a gap in data representing the, "landscape for violent video games".
My co-workers didn't understand that part either.
@arhabersham isn't this what Mint.com is working towards?
He has some pretty pictures.
@DrQuijano I'm with cykolink - though USA has it the other way, in most other countries red is for the left and (maybe) blue on the right. Orange for the more socialized/unionized left, (red and) black for the fascists, green for the environmental, etc.
@warlockjd Interesting you say that, can you enlighten me on your opinion?
Oh the angle view of the cameraman underneath the speaker is just awful. Everything else very interesting !
I am here for the Rolex commercial.
At 14:26 - Plants, where is WEED?
Btw, why is Green tea both above and below the line?
Fuaaaark TED ROCKS
@TheSpiritOfTheTimes I assume you mean "Carbon neutral volcano" or when he said "douche"
@WeatherManToBe yeah, but he wanted to keep the same units for better comparason. That's the whole point of this lecturesd: presenting data properly. Don't compare apples with oranges.
@ChrisAFM Read Stepehen Few's blog, Perceptual Edge for more. Do a google search for "perceptualedge, David McCandless. He has a 1 page review of this presentation and is more eloquent than I
@ShallowBeThyGames
That certainly will be the case. I was for instance thinking of taking all the data the cia.gov website has through a simple script and then make countries like China & US comparable on all possible scales like x = age, Y = child-mortality, Color = total inhabitant per country and regular Text for additional variable comparison =)
How main question is, how many people would actually use such a service?
pleasantly surprised that the word 'douche' is now an appropriate sound effect
finally, no more sitting 12000 feet deep underwater and not knowing what time it is!
The military budget is $1T, not 600 billion according to a peer reviewed study in 2009.
I don't know where he got his bandwidth figures of computer devices at 09:25, but they're all vastly off the mark.
It shows:
1250 MB/s - same bandwidth as a computer network
125 MB/s - USB key
12.5 MB/s - hard disk
A computer network is a rather vague description, but 1000 Mbit/s (125 MB/s) is the fastest consumer level network card speed.
USB 2.0 is limited to 60MB/s. Most USB keys transfer at a max of ~30 MB/s.
A hard disk transfers at up to ~150 MB/s.
Where did he get these numbers?
@happysplodie He's British, our 'Left' is socialist hence Red. Our 'Right' is conservative (also with a upper case C) hence Blue.
So. In essence, this guy grabs things from info threads on 4chan and posts it around? :P
nice one : )
Whenever a british person says 'master' I think of Jedis.
@JoesephKatana Go to his website, find the spreadsheet he used. The study he cites has significant flaws. Even if it wasn't flawed, it was only set up to show that it wasn't harmful; meaning you cannot conclude a positive effect from it.
@WeatherManToBe What's easier to visualize and compare?
1 trillion and 20 billion?
or 1,000 billion and 20 billion.
I agree, that context is very important, but who chooses what's important? I think images are easier to believe, but they contain also way better possibilities of suggesting things that aren't, - even more dangerous than really wrong data, because they might be correct, and still portray and transmit the wrong idea! Think about this for a second. I'd be careful with over rating, and being overly happy with visualised data!
Why would that matter?
Isn't this a science... Infography? If it ain't, it should be.
And it should be used everywhere.
eh
where
Nice, Rolex. So if I ever decide to go Scuba Diving in a deep-sea trench, I can rest assured that my Rolex watch will remain perfectly intact and functional, even if I no longer am.
It is too bad that visuals were not displayed for longer periods of time. It is like saying there is a beautiful painting in the room, but look at me talk about it. Otherwise, the topic was super interesting.
I can visualize things quite neatly as well if I Ignore major things and create my own universe of information without a clear set of criteria other than as I like. The "fears" thing is a primary example, it's a bit of nonsense ot talk about "here's fears the media reports" and ignore 9/11 and terrorism and say "ah, that created a gap!" Even though that's not the point, it's the visualizations, problem is that how do you visualize the more complex reality he ignores?
what did he mean by saying Data is the new soil? anybody?
Sure, but I'll let Stephen Few speak: " In McCandless’ case, the stories that they usually tell, if communicated in words alone, would require only a short sentence or two. They make a simple statement in a way that looks lighthearted and fun. As such, they invite viewers to accept the message superficially, not to explore or contemplate deeply. This is not the true realm of analytics."
I disagree about the military numbers. What's important in a military is how much damage it can do to other nations, not how much money is available to be spent, or how many people AREN'T in it. When you get down to it, a military only represents and acts on the orders of its government (if that) and is not accountable to the people at all.
Rolex Deepsea.I bet Aquaman has one.
@Origen305 Ironically all this proves is that visual data can be jsut as easily manipulated as text data.
@funnyj i want to know too
@mikeyman211 HAS IT GOT YOUR ATTENTION NOW
We need websites, lots and lots of websites.
Here... come, look here look at our sophisticated line of watches that all speakers here at TED personally endorse and wear. You DO wanna be part of the smart, witty and progressive crowd that you know that we are, don't you? Of course you DOOOO! ;) Come join us... welcome, visa mastercard accepted. You know you want to...
is it just me or does this guy sound like Noel Fielding
Why did David McCandless develop the Billion dollar o gram?
Profiteering = where the money comes from in the first place
@WeatherManToBe Of course he knows, I'm sure he did it on purpose.
We are all in debt to the carbon sinks, it used to be the carbon banks. But the internet search engines don't reflect that phrase the same anymore, adapted metaphors i guesses.
nice talk, but the ad in the end destroyed it totally for me :( thumb down...
@odouroushouseant plausible theory
Volcanoes & aeroplanes makes me think more of carbon off setting than neutrality.
Information design my bum.. one of the first principles you learn is to avoid using reddish hues with green ones as color codes, because there are people out there who are COLOR BLIND!