Inspired by the new era of data journalism (Simon Rogers's Datablog on the Guardian is a perfect example) and Paul Bradshaw's collective investigation journalism http://helpmeinvestigate.com/, I decided to pour out my gibberish thoughts here. Don't take it seriously, just look at it as afternoon brain snacks.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Saturday, August 10, 2013
A Journey to D3 for Data Visualization and Journalism
Inspired by René Clausen Nielsen's blog, World of Data, I decide to put myself on a 8-week challenge of picking up D3. Here are a few tutorial, as suggested by René like
Scott Murray ,
Jeff Heer and Jérôme Cukier's.
The final exam for which I would be the only test taker and grader) would be writing a post. What's the exam about? Two options here:
1. I am currently reading Sheryl Sandberg's Lean In, where she cited many interesting research findings about women's employment situation in the contemporary world. Just pick up one.
2. I love movies, mystery, thriller and crime books. I believe there are much data out there but challenge is these kinds of business are never my domain knowledge. According to Paul Bradshaw's inverted pyramid of data journalism, the first and foundational step to make data talk is to compile the real data. Where can I ferret out those data? Plus, I need a hypothesis and massive amount of time for data mining.
Anyway, stop whining and make it happen. If you can become a chef in 4 hours, I believe I can become the new punk, the one Simon Rogers refers to in his TEDxTalk (as shown below).
P.S. I was hesitating if I should hit the "Publish" button or "Save" (so I don't need to showcase "I fail my challenge.") But now you know what I've chosen......... Here I go!
The final exam for which I would be the only test taker and grader) would be writing a post. What's the exam about? Two options here:
1. I am currently reading Sheryl Sandberg's Lean In, where she cited many interesting research findings about women's employment situation in the contemporary world. Just pick up one.
2. I love movies, mystery, thriller and crime books. I believe there are much data out there but challenge is these kinds of business are never my domain knowledge. According to Paul Bradshaw's inverted pyramid of data journalism, the first and foundational step to make data talk is to compile the real data. Where can I ferret out those data? Plus, I need a hypothesis and massive amount of time for data mining.
Anyway, stop whining and make it happen. If you can become a chef in 4 hours, I believe I can become the new punk, the one Simon Rogers refers to in his TEDxTalk (as shown below).
P.S. I was hesitating if I should hit the "Publish" button or "Save" (so I don't need to showcase "I fail my challenge.") But now you know what I've chosen......... Here I go!
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