/page/2
amnhnyc:

This beautiful Atlas moth emerged from its cocoon on Wednesday! Come see it this weekend in The Butterfly Conservatory. 

amnhnyc:

This beautiful Atlas moth emerged from its cocoon on Wednesday! Come see it this weekend in The Butterfly Conservatory

Just the right shade of pink = so satisfying (Taken with instagram)

Just the right shade of pink = so satisfying (Taken with instagram)

devallday:

The Whitney’s Sunrise/Sunset project consists of a series of commissioned internet based works that exist within the axis constraints of Earth’s orbit: New York City’s sunrise and sunset.  Besides the entire website’s background transitioning from white to black each day representing this shift in time (white for day, black for night), each project is designated a net presence between ten to thirty seconds—that is, within this brief timeframe, each work gets to take over the entire Whitney site once only at sunrise and once at sunset; the exact times for each determined day to day by the weather among other environmental fluctuations.Sunrise/Sunset is part of Whitney’s Artport—an online gallery space demonstrating the institution’s own internet awareness.  First launched in 2002, Artport attempts to engage and archive internet and new media based practices through the commissioning of works specific to whitney.org as well as documenting all Whitney based net/new media exhibitions.  Currently, Artport is featuring commissions from Ursula Endlicher and Scott Snibe.Light and Dark Networks is a ten second piece from Endlicher that continues the artist’s interest in ‘data performances’.  The morning encounter involves a spider web that is blown into multiple directions of the website based on current New York weather and CO2 levels.  At sunset, an image of the mycelium of a mushroom grows or shrinks based on the temperature of the city while also responding to humidity levels which generates videos of the artist, costumed and reenacting the mushroom’s physical reactive changes.  Endlicher draws attention to the way information and data inform and affect the physical, as well as how the physical can inform quantification itself.

devallday:

The Whitney’s Sunrise/Sunset project consists of a series of commissioned internet based works that exist within the axis constraints of Earth’s orbit: New York City’s sunrise and sunset.  Besides the entire website’s background transitioning from white to black each day representing this shift in time (white for day, black for night), each project is designated a net presence between ten to thirty seconds—that is, within this brief timeframe, each work gets to take over the entire Whitney site once only at sunrise and once at sunset; the exact times for each determined day to day by the weather among other environmental fluctuations.

Sunrise/Sunset is part of Whitney’s Artport—an online gallery space demonstrating the institution’s own internet awareness.  First launched in 2002, Artport attempts to engage and archive internet and new media based practices through the commissioning of works specific to whitney.org as well as documenting all Whitney based net/new media exhibitions.  Currently, Artport is featuring commissions from Ursula Endlicher and Scott Snibe.

Light and Dark Networks is a ten second piece from Endlicher that continues the artist’s interest in ‘data performances’.  The morning encounter involves a spider web that is blown into multiple directions of the website based on current New York weather and CO2 levels.  At sunset, an image of the mycelium of a mushroom grows or shrinks based on the temperature of the city while also responding to humidity levels which generates videos of the artist, costumed and reenacting the mushroom’s physical reactive changes.  Endlicher draws attention to the way information and data inform and affect the physical, as well as how the physical can inform quantification itself.

Dan K's Blog: The Amazing Shrinking Student to Teacher Ratio | Fun With R

dfkoz:

After hearing about R for years, I decided to go out and give it a try. And, with a solution in search of a problem, I set out to find some interesting data to use. After spending a few minutes on data.gov, I ended up on the National Center for Education Statistics website, and chose the…

foodspotting:

Meet Foodspotting 3
After much hard work and many late nights, we’re proud to unveil Foodspotting 3 for iPhone and Android, as well as the debut of our Blackberry app this week! Check out our redesigned app and download it today.

foodspotting:

Meet Foodspotting 3

After much hard work and many late nights, we’re proud to unveil Foodspotting 3 for iPhone and Android, as well as the debut of our Blackberry app this week! Check out our redesigned app and download it today.

Submission: NYC Restaurant Density by Cuisine Type

nycopendata:

Check out these these maps created by dfkoz using the NYC OpenData “Restaurant Inspection Results” dataset:

To cap off a recent series of posts on New York restaurants (see What’s the Safest Food in New York City? and Heatmap of Restaurants in New York City), I put together heatmaps of restaurant density by cuisine type.

Only one comment before we get started: I have no idea how the DOHMH categorizes restaurants. There are, for example, categories for Chinese, Japanese, Chinese/Japanese, and Asian. With that said, here we go:

American

Asian

Bakery

Caribbean

Chicken

Chinese

Deli

Hamburgers

Indian

Italian

Japanese

Jewish/Kosher

Korean

Latin

Mexican

Pizza

Spanish

Thai

Once again, some thanks are in order. Restaurant addresses and cuisines came from NYC OpenData’s Restaurant Inspection Results. Geocoding the raw addresses was done with Excel/VBA (don’t judge) and Yahoo! PlaceFinder. The heatmaps were generated with the Google Maps API and a JS heatmap library from Patrick Wied.

That’s it for restaurants. For the next few posts, I’m going to turn to a different data set altogether. Suggestions welcome.

staff:

Tumblr Insights: Election 2012 Report

With the U.S. presidential campaign already off to a roaring start, news from the Republican primary contests has been a major topic across Tumblr. As we near another crescendo in Florida, we were curious how the campaign—from the numerous debates and rallies, to election ads and gaffes—has played out so far in terms of the type and quantity of attention received by each candidate on Tumblr.

The first graph shows how frequently each candidate’s name appeared in posts. The second shows other tags most frequently associated with each candidate. We’re most impressed with the viral power of one creative concept blog: When Rick Perry’s Unpopular Opinions sprang up as a parody of one of Perry’s campaign videos, he easily became the most blogged candidate overnight.

Our Insights team will be bringing you more data as the campaigns progress!

gtwetwt

(Source: google.com)

amnhnyc:

This beautiful Atlas moth emerged from its cocoon on Wednesday! Come see it this weekend in The Butterfly Conservatory. 

amnhnyc:

This beautiful Atlas moth emerged from its cocoon on Wednesday! Come see it this weekend in The Butterfly Conservatory

Just the right shade of pink = so satisfying (Taken with instagram)

Just the right shade of pink = so satisfying (Taken with instagram)

devallday:

The Whitney’s Sunrise/Sunset project consists of a series of commissioned internet based works that exist within the axis constraints of Earth’s orbit: New York City’s sunrise and sunset.  Besides the entire website’s background transitioning from white to black each day representing this shift in time (white for day, black for night), each project is designated a net presence between ten to thirty seconds—that is, within this brief timeframe, each work gets to take over the entire Whitney site once only at sunrise and once at sunset; the exact times for each determined day to day by the weather among other environmental fluctuations.Sunrise/Sunset is part of Whitney’s Artport—an online gallery space demonstrating the institution’s own internet awareness.  First launched in 2002, Artport attempts to engage and archive internet and new media based practices through the commissioning of works specific to whitney.org as well as documenting all Whitney based net/new media exhibitions.  Currently, Artport is featuring commissions from Ursula Endlicher and Scott Snibe.Light and Dark Networks is a ten second piece from Endlicher that continues the artist’s interest in ‘data performances’.  The morning encounter involves a spider web that is blown into multiple directions of the website based on current New York weather and CO2 levels.  At sunset, an image of the mycelium of a mushroom grows or shrinks based on the temperature of the city while also responding to humidity levels which generates videos of the artist, costumed and reenacting the mushroom’s physical reactive changes.  Endlicher draws attention to the way information and data inform and affect the physical, as well as how the physical can inform quantification itself.

devallday:

The Whitney’s Sunrise/Sunset project consists of a series of commissioned internet based works that exist within the axis constraints of Earth’s orbit: New York City’s sunrise and sunset.  Besides the entire website’s background transitioning from white to black each day representing this shift in time (white for day, black for night), each project is designated a net presence between ten to thirty seconds—that is, within this brief timeframe, each work gets to take over the entire Whitney site once only at sunrise and once at sunset; the exact times for each determined day to day by the weather among other environmental fluctuations.

Sunrise/Sunset is part of Whitney’s Artport—an online gallery space demonstrating the institution’s own internet awareness.  First launched in 2002, Artport attempts to engage and archive internet and new media based practices through the commissioning of works specific to whitney.org as well as documenting all Whitney based net/new media exhibitions.  Currently, Artport is featuring commissions from Ursula Endlicher and Scott Snibe.

Light and Dark Networks is a ten second piece from Endlicher that continues the artist’s interest in ‘data performances’.  The morning encounter involves a spider web that is blown into multiple directions of the website based on current New York weather and CO2 levels.  At sunset, an image of the mycelium of a mushroom grows or shrinks based on the temperature of the city while also responding to humidity levels which generates videos of the artist, costumed and reenacting the mushroom’s physical reactive changes.  Endlicher draws attention to the way information and data inform and affect the physical, as well as how the physical can inform quantification itself.

(via arismty)

(Source: weheartit.com, via observando)

Dan K's Blog: The Amazing Shrinking Student to Teacher Ratio | Fun With R

dfkoz:

After hearing about R for years, I decided to go out and give it a try. And, with a solution in search of a problem, I set out to find some interesting data to use. After spending a few minutes on data.gov, I ended up on the National Center for Education Statistics website, and chose the…

foodspotting:

Meet Foodspotting 3
After much hard work and many late nights, we’re proud to unveil Foodspotting 3 for iPhone and Android, as well as the debut of our Blackberry app this week! Check out our redesigned app and download it today.

foodspotting:

Meet Foodspotting 3

After much hard work and many late nights, we’re proud to unveil Foodspotting 3 for iPhone and Android, as well as the debut of our Blackberry app this week! Check out our redesigned app and download it today.

Submission: NYC Restaurant Density by Cuisine Type

nycopendata:

Check out these these maps created by dfkoz using the NYC OpenData “Restaurant Inspection Results” dataset:

To cap off a recent series of posts on New York restaurants (see What’s the Safest Food in New York City? and Heatmap of Restaurants in New York City), I put together heatmaps of restaurant density by cuisine type.

Only one comment before we get started: I have no idea how the DOHMH categorizes restaurants. There are, for example, categories for Chinese, Japanese, Chinese/Japanese, and Asian. With that said, here we go:

American

Asian

Bakery

Caribbean

Chicken

Chinese

Deli

Hamburgers

Indian

Italian

Japanese

Jewish/Kosher

Korean

Latin

Mexican

Pizza

Spanish

Thai

Once again, some thanks are in order. Restaurant addresses and cuisines came from NYC OpenData’s Restaurant Inspection Results. Geocoding the raw addresses was done with Excel/VBA (don’t judge) and Yahoo! PlaceFinder. The heatmaps were generated with the Google Maps API and a JS heatmap library from Patrick Wied.

That’s it for restaurants. For the next few posts, I’m going to turn to a different data set altogether. Suggestions welcome.

staff:

Tumblr Insights: Election 2012 Report

With the U.S. presidential campaign already off to a roaring start, news from the Republican primary contests has been a major topic across Tumblr. As we near another crescendo in Florida, we were curious how the campaign—from the numerous debates and rallies, to election ads and gaffes—has played out so far in terms of the type and quantity of attention received by each candidate on Tumblr.

The first graph shows how frequently each candidate’s name appeared in posts. The second shows other tags most frequently associated with each candidate. We’re most impressed with the viral power of one creative concept blog: When Rick Perry’s Unpopular Opinions sprang up as a parody of one of Perry’s campaign videos, he easily became the most blogged candidate overnight.

Our Insights team will be bringing you more data as the campaigns progress!

gtwetwt

(Source: google.com)

"gtwetwt"

About:

Following: