Announcements

February 9, 2012

FlowingData.com: Visualizing popularity of Yahoo homepage stories

We’re excited to say that our latest visualization is also being featured on FlowingData.com. Take a look:

Yahoo is not what it used to be, but many parts of it are still alive and well. In a follow-up to their email interactive, Yahoo, along with visualization firm Periscopicexplores the popularity of articles that appear on the Yahoo homepage. It’s a visualization that shows activity within the Content Optimization and Relevance Engine (C.O.R.E. for short).

The focus is on the center, which has the same layout as that of the stories on the Yahoo homepage. Story on top, and .... read on ›

Visualizing the Demographic Reach of Yahoo! Homepage Stories

Our latest data visualization is featured on Infosthetics.com.  Here’s an excerpt:

Yahoo! recently released a dedicated data visualization website [yahoo.com] to highlight their Content Optimization and Relevance Engine (C.O.R.E.), a service that aims to personalize the Yahoo! experience depending on a collection of demographic (e.g. gender and age) and geographic (e.g. cities) variables, in combination with personal interests (e.g. Finance, Sports, Health).

The visualization, developed by Periscopic, allows to explore the relevant content of their homepage according to a set of user-selected parameters, so that one can solve questions like: “What is the most popular story for females between 18 and .... read on ›

Featured on Mashable.com: Our Latest Data Visualization for Yahoo!

Our latest data visualization is featured on Mashable.com. Here’s an excerpt:

Yahoo has launched a new webpage that visualizes what’s happening on the web in near real time — and it’s totally beautiful.

The Content Optimization Relevance Engine (C.O.R.E.) HTML5 site hopes to show users the “behind the scenes” process Yahoo uses to match readers with content on their personalized homepage, using technology developed in a Yahoo research lab a few years ago. While Yahoo’s homepage used to be arranged by editors, it now uses an algorithm to match individual user preferences.

“We can provide users with insights through the .... read on ›

categories: Announcements,Launches

November 21, 2011

Our Kiosks at the Museum of Moving Image in New York City

We recently developed the software for two kiosks being used at the swankily newly renovated Museum of Moving Image in New York City. The first one teaches visitors about stop-motion animation and lets you create a short movie. The visitor uses visual assets provided at the stations, moving the elements slightly then capturing an individual frame. The resulting film can be played back and adjusted. The final film can then be emailed or uploaded directly to YouTube.

Our second kiosk, Flipbook Station, allows you to capture frames of video an turn them into a physical flipbook, emulating the .... read on ›

November 9, 2011

Introducing Politilines.com

As you know, we are fans (as well as purveyors) of data visualization. What you might not know is that we are also fans of politics, and our latest data visualization Politilines is a nice blending of the two.

After watching a few of the Republican Primary debates we were compelled to try to make sense of what everyone was actually saying.  To do this, we decided to take a look at the words that were most often spoken during the debate, and then map to them to both the major issues, as well as the candidates from which they .... read on ›

October 14, 2011

We’ll Be Speaking at the The 6th Portland Data Visualization Group – Wed, October 19th

We’ve been attending all of the Portland Data Visualization Group meetings, and the next one looks like it will be just as good as past events.  It’s going to be on Wednesday, October 19th from 6:30 – 8:30 at Collective Agency. Many more details here.

Great lineup of speakers, including Nate Bergey (where can we buy an ISS-Notify?), Kevin Lynagh, Charlie Loyd, Aaron Parecki, and Periscopic co-founder, Dino Citraro.

Special thanks to Second Story for sponsoring the event!

Looking forward to talking shop with like-minded  data-heads.

read on ›

Our Yahoo! Mail Visualization is featured on Infosthetics.com

Many thanks to Andrew at Infosthetics.com for posting about our latest data visualization. Here’s an excerpt from his post:

The Yahoo! Mail Visualization , designed by Periscopic, aims to show of the network processing power required to run a vast emailing service by revealing the streams of keywords that are sent around the globe in real-time.

The geo-located circles on the world map represent the activity and volume of processed emails, totaling to about 5.6 billion emails a day. Current and predicted email traffic is show at the bottom of the screen. A streamgraph shows the top 10 keywords .... read on ›

Our Yahoo! Mail Visualization is Featured on Flowingdata.com

We’re very excited that our latest data visualization is featured on flowingdata.com.  Here’s an excerpt:

Hundreds of thousands of emails are sent every second, and yet, you wouldn’t really know it because there aren’t public-facing streams like that of Twitter. Outside your own inbox, how much email is there exactly? Yahoo, in collaboration with information visualization firm Periscopic, shows you how much email they process in real-time with this interactive feature.

The initial view is a world map, and scaled bubbles represent how many emails were currently sent. Hover over continents for user geographic distribution and gigabytes sent.

There’s also .... read on ›

September 27, 2011

Impressions of Tech@State 2011: Connecting Technology With Opportunity

Last week I had an opportunity to attend Tech@State, a relatively unknown event outside the civic realm, hosted by the State Department. The keynote was given by Edward Tufte and his principles and ideas were parroted excitedly by attendees throughout the day. This would normally be fine, however, without a firm background in data literacy, these dictums can be misconstrued.

The sparkline concept was eagerly accepted within the crowd, but I heard people wanting to apply this visual technique to things that aren’t a series or temporal in nature. There were also people who wanted .... read on ›

categories: Events

My Thoughts on O’Reilly’s Strata Summit 2011: The Business of Data

I was fortunate enough to attend the Strata Summit in NYC last week. Loaded with insightful presentations by a number of experts and leaders in the world of data, I found myself captivated. This portion of the conference was all plenary sessions which meant you didn’t have to choose a track (and later regret choosing the wrong one). I greatly appreciated sitting in one room and experiencing the curated stream of speakers.

There were many great sessions, but I will limit this post to a few.

Marc Goodman of Future Crimes gave us a mad .... read on ›

categories: Events