Watching web goings-on live with visualizations
I have a fascination with the "live" sites where you can visualize what's going on across an entire site such as Twitter, Flickr, Digg, or Del.icio.us. It appears to be mostly for entertainment value, although I'm sure that researchers and journalists have these toolkits in their toolbelt when they need a fresh take on a story. I find it also sparks creative ideas or sends you along paths you never would have found otherwise.
Here are some of my favorites to watch. Check out the screenshots for a preview of what awaits behind the link. The map-based visualizations are enabled by Google Maps geo-developers, and they recently had a conferenced named "Where 2.0" (great name).
- Twittervision - I managed
to capture one from Austin, TX, while I too was hiding from the
thunderstorms that were coming through. Since there's often a rate of over
20 Twitters in the time period that this algorithm uses, I only tried a few
times to capture one of my own twits. This is the 3D version with a glowing
globe that spins around and then marks each twit. Very cool.
- Flickrvision - This is the
classic view of the flat world map. This particular picture is of a
chipmunk and I apologize for the poor screenshot quality but the layout
that I'm confined to won't like even this size of graphics, so I encourage
you to click the Flickrvision
link and see it for yourself.
- LiveMarks - This
visualization lets you watch the bookmarks as they're being added by all
users of del.icio.us. One of the neatest
visualizations that I believe was popularized by del.icio.us is tag clouds.
- Digg's API contest winners for
visualizations - This screen shows Digg Charts, which isn't nearly as
fun as the winner, Digg City, but it looks so much like a dashboard I had
to include it. BSM Dashboard offers views not of popular stories but of
high
priority
- These aren't "live" viewers, but TouchGraph offers neat visualizations
of connections between objects, such as books or movies on Amazon, or
connections between "web 2.0" or major retailer's websites via Google's
related links database.
Wow, I think we need these types of visualizations for all the connections that BMC's products have because we have done so many integrations to get the BSM story just right. I suppose Topology Discovery has the closest match to these types of visualizations.
I'd better tear my eyes off of TwitterVision long enough to post this entry... what visualizations help you with your job lately?
| Slashdot It! |
_____
tags:


