Paule d'Atha désigne les trois data-journalists d'OWNI : Marie Coussin, Julien Goetz et Nicolas Patte.
This week we pick our favourites from the recently announced nominees for the Data Journalism Awards, nine examples of data-driven journalism at its finest.
This week we give thanks for the Data Journalism Handbook, and get lost in the tangled worlds of novel plots, nuclear relationships and the Paris metro.
Our weekly round-up of the best of data on the web, as chosen by OWNI’s team of data journalists.
In this week’s round-up of data-driven projects: watercolour maps, GPS genius, a sci-fi timeline and radical cartography. It’s The Week In Data!
Our weekly review of data journalism on the web, with the usual helping of breathtaking visualizations, inspiring citizen projects and tips on how to get involved yourself.
Visualising the Iliad, dropping hypothetical nuclear bombs, bringing open data to Russia and dataviz democracy – the best of the best of data brought to you by our dedicated team of data-driven journalists.
Our weekly review of data journalism on the web, with the usual helping of breathtaking visualizations, inspiring citizen projects and pretty, pretty colours. Carpe Data!
Our weekly round-up of the weird and wonderful world of data journalism returns, with an update on the progress of open data in France and the UK, an anatomy of an infographic, and visions of the future…
Our weekly dispatch from the world of data – featuring some vintage data visualizations, jaw-dropping ‘big data’ apps, the Super Bowl and two data disappointments from our American colleagues.
How does a data map get made? What time is your train coming at? Where’s the “hottest” holiday spot right now? How’s that financial crisis coming along? Who’ll be the next president of Finland?
The rise and fall of empires, the race for the White House, what the 1% do for a living and Deleuzean rhizomes explained. Our pick of the best of data on the web this week.
Our favorite data projects of the week, featuring applications to help you access the World Bank’s secrets, dissect your most loved films and pick your US presidential candidate. It’s The Week In Data!
Mapping movies in Paris, comparing the cost of living in Bangalore and Berlin, making art out of maps and dissecting Republicans – all that and more in this week’s round-up of the best of data on the web.
OWNI’s data team have returned to bring you their first data round up of 2012, featuring seasonal diagrams, vintage visualizations, orchestral insights and the best of the Best Of’s. It’s The Week In Data!
A selection of the best of the best of OWNI’s weekly round-up of data on the web, from a year that’s seen so many wonderful, innovative, inventive, colorful, moving and funny data projects.
Parachuting presidential candidates, the analysis of rumors, Monopoly, Queen and Mozart. Your latest helping of The Week In Data is here, and expects delays in the arrival of train data.
The corruption in our world, the supremacy of ants and a little Chopin to set you at ease. All that and more in this week’s super soaraway The Week In Data, brought to you by OWNI’s dedicated data team.
In this week’s data round-up brought to you by OWNI’s data journalists: data meets art, surveys, DIY, the Olympic Games and women’s safety.
Our interactive map offers an overview of the mass surveillance industry revealed today by OWNI and Wikileaks, an industry that’s now worth $5 billion a year.
This week OWNI’s data journalists take you to the United States: a country of moblility and of inequality, a country of innovative thinking where money is king – and where dataviz rhymes with biz.
This week OWNI’s data journalists have been playing with Rubik’s cubes, rating their governments, running the New York City marathon and comparing the Bible and the Koran. It’s The Week in Data…
Each week OWNI’s data-journalists will give an overview of the best of data on the web. Maps, infographics, pretty colours – an anthology of signifiers in our brutal world of information. This week, we head to Spain.
Is Google changing the way we think? As we become more dependent on technology, our memory might be suffering….