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elpunthabitatge
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trulia-inmubles usa-buscador inmobiliario-elpunthabitatge-buscador de inmuebles "population growth has boomed in the last few decades and this map shows how the city grew in clumps - all the new construction is within subdivisions. It's very interesting and my words don't do it justice."
"My inner — OK, outer — history geek is fascinated."
"Check out this amazing visualization of the Dallas/Fort Worth area, specifically Plano. It is certainely making searching for a house a whole lot more interesting."
"Don't miss one of the coolest displays of housing data there is, showing growth over the past 100 years."
"...while seemingly mundane, could give city planners an insight into the growth patterns of their cities. Match the growth with the major events in the region and a pattern could begin to present itself."
playing with this to see if I can simulate some of the patterns we're seeing in Hindsight
"Columns of text data have turned into a visible representation of which lots in a neighborhood have been improved."
"That's the main reason that I think we (Adobe) will be the leaders in RIA development for years to come. I explained it to new hires at sales training this way..."
"What is intriguing is getting an elderly person to view it and verifying the changes - from personal memory - to an area they have lived in for decades"
Dan Hill's thorough and flattering write-up of Eric's Postopolis talk. Lots of HIndsight snippets, and some interesting references for the 'data visualization is a medium' assertion.
"watching these things and marveling in their aesthetic qualities feels a bit like playing the fiddle while Rome burns ... But as it turns out, when you show people how much energy they're using, they tend to use less"
"a fine posting related to JAGIS (Journalism and GIS), this one regarding the challenge of generating change-over-time in urban areas."
Note to self: make sure the layout works at blog screenshot size next time!
Closer, closer!
Bubbling bits of Florida, to blog.
Another area where the geocoding (or our projection of it) seems weird, I wonder why.
"Mapping Akron shows distinct concentric rings sprouting up every couple of decades in the first half of the 20th century. It's fun."
"Enter nearly any location across the country, and the Web page animates an area's growth with colored bursts of light that change as the years pass."
"As usual, there's some problems with dirty data: the Gloucester timeline shows a huge building boom at 1900, but Gloucester is an old town (1606!)"