Researching and developing non-traditional analytic methods and communications tools for journalism.

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  • View Article  Direct to the Dashboard

     We've been a fan of the dashbroad approach for a long time because dashboard graphics can give readers a quick snapshot of multiple sets of dynamic data.  Charley Kyd, who studied journalism some years back, has developed a nifty plug-and-play package -- Dashbroad Kit #1 -- to generate these.  And below is a recent and relevant posting from Jorge Camoes that gives us some good tips on the topic.

    Charts


    10 tips to improve your Excel dashboard

    Posted: 26 Jan 2008 06:42 PM CST

    Posts in the series Excel Dashboard
    1. How to create a dashboard in Excel
    2. 10 tips ...   more »
    View Article  Clever political mapping from the Brits

    From Poynter's E-media Tidbits

    Posted by Paul Bradshaw 10:48:59 AM
    Flash, Database, Mapping: Telegraph Does It with Politics
    The Telegraph's U.K. election map: Not just pretty, but potentially very useful.
    The Telegraph is making a habit of combining Flash and databases to impressive effect. Their latest project also includes mapping to produce a political map of the U.K. with real depth behind its Flashy appearance.

    The Telegraph achieves this with some nifty database connectivity. A click on a particular constituency brings up info about the last election results -- not in itself very impressive. However, a tab to the ...   more »

    View Article  The type of service newspapers should be supplying, but are not.

    This from O'Reillyi Radar.  (Yes, whoever wrote the hed surely meant "travel-time maps".) 

    Dynamic Time-Travel Maps From MySociety and Stamen

    london dynamic commute map

    UK-based non-profit MySociety teamed up with Stamen Design to develop some innovative time-travel maps. The snapshot of the map that you see above shows where you can live in London with a commute between 30 to 60 minutes where the median house price is over £230, 000. As you adjust the sliders, the map changes in realtime letting you adjust the commute times from 0 up to 90 minutes and the housing price from 0 to £990,00. The Department of ...   more »

    View Article  So just how much are those guys making, anyway?

    The editorial team at ResourceShelf and DocuTicker tipped us off to a potentially valuable link from the SEC.  While we find that the site is still short on data, we assume it will be filling up as various corporate reports are filed.  Check out:

    New from the SEC: Internet Tool With Instant Comparisons of Executive Pay

    Chairman Cox Unveils New Internet Tool With Instant Comparisons of Executive Pay

    Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox today launched the first-ever online tool that enables investors to easily and instantly compare what 500 of the largest American companies are paying their top executives. The new database highlights the power of interactive data to transform financial disclosure.

    The Executive Compensation Reader - available today on the SEC’s Web site at http://www.sec.gov/xbrl - builds on the Commission’s new requirements that went into effect earlier this year to dramatically enhance clarity and completeness of executive compensation disclosure.

    By tagging the executive compensation figures in XBRL, the computer language of interactive data, the SEC has created a new online tool to help investors more efficiently view Summary Compensation Tables and certain other data in the proxy statements of large companies. Investors can quickly glimpse the total annual pay as well as dollar amounts for salary, bonus, stock, options and company perks. They can instantly compare those executive compensation figures with other companies by sorting according to industry or size.

    The SEC’s new Web tool includes information in XBRL for 500 large companies that have filed proxy statements with the Commission. The new tool includes direct links to companies’ proxy statements, including footnotes and the companies’ explanation of their compensation decisions.

    Direct to Executive Pay Finder

    Source: U.S. Security and Exchange Commission


     

    View Article  The Dataweb and the DataFeret

    Marylaine Block's always informative "Neat New Stuff" [Neat New Stuff I Found This Week at http://marylaine.com/neatnew.html] tipped us to the DataWeb site and its interesting tool, the Data Feret (or "dataferet").

    "TheDataWeb is a network of online data libraries that the DataFerrett application accesses the data through. Data topics include, census data, economic data, health data, income and unemployment data, population data, labor data, cancer data, crime and transportation data, family dynamics, vital statistics data, . . . As a user, you have an easy access to all these kinds of data. As a participant in TheDataWeb, you can publish your data to TheDataWeb and, in turn, benefit as a provider to the consumer of data."

    What is the DataFerrett?
    DataFerrett is a unique data mining and extraction tool. DataFerrett allows you to select a databasket full of variables and then recode those variables as you need. You can then develop and customize tables. Selecting your results in your table you can create a chart or graph for a visual presentation into an html page. Save your data in the databasket and save your table for continued reuse. DataFerrett helps you locate and retrieve the data you need across the Internet to your desktop or system, regardless of where the data resides. DataFerrett: * lets you receive data in the form in which you need it (whether it be extracted to an ascii, SAS, SPSS, Excel/Access file); or * lets you move seamlessly between query, analysis, and visualization of data in one package; * lets data providers share their data easier, and manage their own online data. DataFerrett Desktop IconDataFerrett runs from the application icon installed on your desktop.

    Check it out at http://www.thedataweb.org/


     

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