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Mind mapping related. Visual Mapping.com: New Exciting RSAnimate Video: The Divided Brain. Mind Maps/Thinking Maps/Graphic Organizers. Infographic: A Gargantuan Map Of The Internet. What does the Internet look like? Is it computers or sub aquatic cabling? Is it satellites or code? Is it discrete websites and files, or is it just one branching, undulating cat meme evolving over time? Click to enlarge. To Ruslan Enikeev, the Internet is “nature, sky, space, science, and fractals”--an image he shares on his website, The Internet Map, which uses an association algorithm and a Google Maps front end to show 350,000 sites as their own universe.

“For other people data and math is just numbers and tables, maximum graphs, but I can see more--its inner beauty. It took him over a year, with the help of Russian creative agency Positive Communications. When you couple this association with the country-specific color-coding, you see that China (yellow) and the US (blue) are in a clash of control of the Internet, with Russia (red) and Japan (purple) hanging around the periphery. “It was not my aim to make the site useful, but still you can use it,” Enikeev explains. Infographic: Ingenious Maps Of Humanity's Real Footprint. Atlanta looks like a dragon sigil. London resembles a sloppy Rorschach test. Tokyo could be a giant fish mouth engulfing the sea. These are what some of the world’s biggest metropolises actually look like. They’re mapped, not based upon political boundaries, but by human populations--charting where the people have actually settled within the city limits.

London It’s the work of Antoine Paccoud for the LSE Cities Project, which is studying the 129 urban areas that represent 35% of the human population--or about 1.2 billion people worth of compressed landmass as of 2010. “I was looking for a way to measure metropolitan density in a way that did not need to rely on heavy computations or sophisticated machinery: I simply traced over satellite imagery by hand in a systematic way,” he tells Co.Design. The maps themselves began as Google Earth satellite photography.

Tokyo See the project here. [Hat tip: Flowing Data] 11 Of The Most Influential Infographics Of The 19th Century. We live in a world steeped in graphic information. From Google Maps and GIS to the proliferation of infographics and animated maps, visual data surrounds us. While we may think of infographics as a relatively recent development to make sense of the immense amount of data available on the Web, they actually are rooted in the 19th century--a fact that I write about in my most recent book. [John Smith’s “Historical Geography” (1888) portrays a country driven by two fundamentally different ideals: the avaricious slaveholding South and the God-fearing, righteous North.]

[Emma Willard’s “Chronographical Plan,” or “The Tree of Time” (1864) attempts to “impress upon the mind” of her young students the logic and order of U.S. history.] The following survey of early information contains examples that are by no means intuitive or clear--some are downright chaotic--but they stand out for their attempt to integrate more than one class of information or tell a complex story in a single picture. The Best Infographics Of 2012. It stands to reason that we saw more infographics this year than any before in history. There’s definitely more data out there and, as evidenced by the diversity of projects seen here, designers are clearly up to the challenge.

Data viz has to be considered one of the fastest growing segments of design today, and thankfully, it’s growing in some exciting new ways. Where the Internet infographic was defined, for a period, by the dense, super-long column of facts and figures, we’ve recently started to see more projects that engage directly with data in novel ways--like the student-made rig that paints earthquakes in real time, or the lattice of metal, created by artist David Maly, that mimics the action of the ocean waves over a thousand miles away.

There’s definitely the risk of infographic overload, but with thoughtful, novel projects like those, we’re always game. Infographic: Get More Out Of Google. Official site of Centerpointe Research Institute, Creators of Holosync Meditation Technology. Photography Tips & Tutorials. Photoshop. The Top 75 ‘Pictures of the Day’ for 2012. *Update: The Top 100 ‘Pictures of the Day’ for 2012 have just been published. Click here to check out the most up-to-date post! After the positive reception from last year’s “Top 50 ‘Pictures of the Day’ for 2011“, the Sifter promised to highlight the top 25 ‘Pictures of the Day‘ at the end of every quarter, eventually culminating in an epic Top 100 for 2012.

It’s hard to believe we’re already into the final quarter of 2012. With that, here are the Sifter’s Top 75 ‘Pictures of the Day‘ for this year. If any image really intrigues you, be sure to click the title link or picture itself. That will take you to the individual post page where you can find out more information. *Please note the photographs themselves were not necessarily taken in 2012, they just happened to be featured as a ‘Picture of the Day’ this year. Enjoy! Photography Tips & Tutorials. Photo editor online - Pixlr.com edit image. Photo editor | PicMonkey: Free Online Photo Editing. Welcome to Digimarc for Images. Add Copyright and Contact Info to Your Images Digimarc for Images adds a persistent, yet imperceptible digital identifier to your images, communicating your copyright ownership wherever they may travel across the Web.

Take people to your own site, rather than this demo page. Locate Where Your Images are Being Used Online It's a big web out there. If somebody steals an image from your website, we'll help you find it. With a digital watermark embedded via a qualifying subscription, you can track usage online. At Your Service Digimarc offers several resources to help you get the best results from our software. Listen in on free, informative webcasts about digital watermarking for digital images.

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