Tuesday 5 October 2010

5 Tools for Online Journalism, Exploration and Visualization - ReadWriteCloud

This post is part of our ReadWriteCloud channel, which is dedicated to covering virtualization and cloud computing. The channel is sponsored by Intel and VMware. Read their latest white paper: How to Build the Business Case for Virtualization.

Thumbnail image for Cirrus_clouds2.jpgIn our last post on data journalism, we ran across a number of tools that would be helpful for anyone who is interested in how to make sense of data.

The tools represent a renaissance in how we make sense of our information culture. They provide context and meaning to the often baffling world of big data.

This is a snapshot of what is available. We are relying on the work done by Paul Bradshaw, whose blog is an excellent source about the new world of data journalism.

Factual

Factual provides simple APIs for building Web and mobile apps. For instance, it provides data on local geographies. According to Factual, the datasets include businesses and points of interest (parks, airports, theaters, tourist attractions, etc.), and attributes include: name, address, phone, category and latitude/longitude."

Socrata

Socrata is one of a handful of companies and organizations that are shaping the open data movement in government. The company provides ways for federal, state and local governments to make data available online in a simple-to-use way.

sdp-screenshot-sol.jpg

Google Fusion Tables

Google Fusion Tables is a Google Labs project. It is a data management tool to host, manage, collaborate on, visualize, and publish data tables.

WikiEDData uses Google Fusion Table to map poverty levels in Washington state school districts:
"Yellow indicates the latest district poverty levels are below state average, orange means the levels are above state average, and red means that the poverty levels are 10 percentage points or more above state average. Clicking on a district will bring a link to the district along with the poverty data over time. "

povertymap.jpg

Yahoo! Pipes

Yahoo! Pipes is a tool that can make anyone a data plumber. You can aggregate feeds and mashup information from around the Web. This Pipe shows U.S. population by state.

OpenHeatMap

OpenHeatMap is another example of how to turn data into maps.

These are five tools that can be used for online journalism or any online research project. They show how ingrained data has become in our lives and why tools like these are so valuable in defining who we are and the stories we want to tell.


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  1. You forgot to mention Tableau Public. http://www.tableau software.com/public

     Posted by: Daniel Jewett Author Profile Page

    | October 2, 2010 6:41 PM



  • Tooting our own horn here: www.timeglider.com. Check out a timeline of the Valerie Plame fiasco: http://bit.ly/cvvFf

    Timeglider will soon have an open source jQuery plug-in so that media projects can be easily self-hosted, and other APIs for accessing time-oriented semanitic data.

    Posted by: Michael | October 3, 2010 9:01 AM



  • Thanks for the article, all of the tools seem to become my most used ones, as analyzing the raw data is of key importance to smart promotion campaigns.

    Posted by: dissertations | October 4, 2010 5:05 AM



  • Thanks for the article, all of the tools seem to become my most used ones, as analyzing the raw data is of key importance to smart promotion campaigns.

    Posted by: dissertations . | October 4, 2010 5:06 AM



  • You forgot http://thisislike.com – this online network manipulation and exploration tool is great to represent interconnected sets of data and navigate the information in a more associative and intuitive way.

    Posted by: Dmitry | October 4, 2010 7:59 AM



  • Good article and nice starting place. Other commenters have also added some good suggestions, but left off perhaps the most powerful site / tool of all. Infochimps (www.infochimps.org) is an INCREDIBLE online data market that can help just about anyone find, package and express the data they need. They have some awesome parters as well that enable easy integration and added value for the user.

    Posted by: Rick | October 4, 2010 8:27 AM



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