Skip to main content

Home/ DJCamp2011/ Group items tagged tableau

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tom Johnson

Beautiful but Terrible Pyramids: Tableau Edition - The Excel Charts Blog - 0 views

  • Beautiful but Terrible Pyramids: Tableau Edition by Jorge Camoes on July 12, 2011 // Well, here is my first chart in Tableau, finally! After publishing my experiments with population pyramids (using Excel), I thought I could try Tableau Public with the same dataset from the US Census Bureau. Here is the result. I never really played before with Tableau Public and it took my less than an hour to upload the data and make this chart, without reading a manual or watching a tutorial (changing line colors was the hard part). It says a lot about its usability.
  •  
    Beautiful but Terrible Pyramids: Tableau Edition by Jorge Camoes on July 12, 2011 Well, here is my first chart in Tableau, finally! After publishing my experiments with population pyramids (using Excel), I thought I could try Tableau Public with the same dataset from the US Census Bureau. Here is the result. I never really played before with Tableau Public and it took my less than an hour to upload the data and make this chart, without reading a manual or watching a tutorial (changing line colors was the hard part). It says a lot about its usability. http://www.excelcharts.com/blog/beautiful-but-terrible-pyramids-tableau-edition/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JCCharts+%28Excel+Charts+Blog%29
  •  
    Select your favorite nation. Note how this could be used to illustrate population changes for a single nation over time or nation-to-nation comparisons.
Tom Johnson

IRE Hands-On Training Materials | Tableau Public - 0 views

  •  
    IRE Hands-On Training Materials To use these files, you need Tableau Public Desktop. It's free-- just click the orange "Download" button in the top right part of the page. Unfortunately, it's Windows only at this time, so you'll need Parallels or Bootcamp (or a friendly colleague with a PC) to run it on a Mac.
Tom Johnson

Visualization contests around the corner - 0 views

  •  
    Visualization contests around the corner May 25, 2011 to Contests | Comments (3) The best way to learn how to visualize data is to grab a dataset and see what you can do with it. You can read as many tips and tricks as you want, but you're not going to get any better until you actually try. Contests are a fun way to do this. Participate So here are a handful of visualization contests to get your hands dirty. Hey you might even win a couple of thousand dollars. Not that money matters to you, because as well all know, learning is your reward. Hacking Education - A contest for developers and data crunchers. DonorsChoose.org has inspired $80 million in giving from 400,000 donors, helping 165,000 teachers at 43,000 schools, and the donation site has opened up this data. Can do you do something with it? Deadline: June 30, 2011. Data In Sight - A hands-on competition in San Francisco's SoMa district with surprise data sources. Some talks, lunch, dinner, and a 24-hour hackathon. Event date: June 24, 2011 (better to register your team early). Tableau Interactive Viz Contest - This one is coming up the quickest, but is the most straightforward. Plus, you get a t-shirt just for entering. Grab some business, finance, or real estate data and go to town with Tableau Public. Deadline: June 3, 2011.
Tom Johnson

Socrata: Open Data Cloud Solutions for Government Organizations - 0 views

  • Make it easy for your organization to publish and manage public data You can achieve your organization’s transparency goals, cost-effectively, by streamlining the data publishing process and automating maintenance and updates. Internal stakeholders, in any department or agency, with little or no technical assistance, become first-class data publishers. While administrators manage the organization’s data in one central location, offer constituents a consistent and privately-branded online experience and get real-time data consumption and citizen engagement metrics.
  •  
    Make it easy for your organization to publish and manage public data You can achieve your organization's transparency goals, cost-effectively, by streamlining the data publishing process and automating maintenance and updates. Internal stakeholders, in any department or agency, with little or no technical assistance, become first-class data publishers. While administrators manage the organization's data in one central location, offer constituents a consistent and privately-branded online experience and get real-time data consumption and citizen engagement metrics.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page