Visible Numbers


Book Description

Bringing together scholars from around the world, this collection examines many of the historical developments in making data visible through charts, graphs, thematic maps, and now interactive displays. Today, we are used to seeing data portrayed in a dizzying array of graphic forms. Virtually any quantified knowledge, from social and physical science to engineering and medicine, as well as business, government, or personal activity, has been visualized. Yet the methods of making data visible are relatively new innovations, most stemming from eighteenth- and nineteenth-century innovations that arose as a logical response to a growing desire to quantify everything-from science, economics, and industry to population, health, and crime. Innovators such as Playfair, Alexander von Humboldt, Heinrich Berghaus, John Snow, Florence Nightingale, Francis Galton, and Charles Minard began to develop graphical methods to make data and their relations more visible. In the twentieth century, data design became both increasingly specialized within new and existing disciplines-science, engineering, social science, and medicine-and at the same time became further democratized, with new forms that make statistical, business, and government data more accessible to the public. At the close of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first, an explosion in interactive digital data design has exponentially increased our access to data. The contributors analyze this fascinating history through a variety of critical approaches, including visual rhetoric, visual culture, genre theory, and fully contextualized historical scholarship.




Visible!


Book Description

How to make your company unmissable! Flashes everywhere, loud, turned-up commercials appear on the screens. A day without advertising catching our eye is hardly imaginable in modern everyday life. Customer attention is a valuable commodity. But how can companies easily and effectively catch the eye of potential customers and convince them of their own product or service? In this book, online marketing expert Oliver Pott explains how you can achieve smart and sustainable visibility for your company in just six steps in order to address particularly relevant target groups and thereby significantly increase your sales. If you also master the three dimensions of valuable visibility – consisting of relevance, authority and storytelling – you can completely abandon flashy campaigns in the future and still remain visible and relevant.




Numbers Rule


Book Description

The author takes the general reader on a tour of the mathematical puzzles and paradoxes inherent in voting systems, such as the Alabama Paradox, in which an increase in the number of seats in the Congress could actually lead to a reduced number of representatives for a state, and the Condorcet Paradox, which demonstrates that the winner of elections featuring more than two candidates does not necessarily reflect majority preferences. Szpiro takes a roughly chronological approach to the topic, traveling from ancient Greece to the present and, in addition to offering explanations of the various mathematical conundrums of elections and voting, also offers biographical details on the mathematicians and other thinkers who thought about them, including Plato, Pliny the Younger, Pierre Simon Laplace, Thomas Jefferson, John von Neumann, and Kenneth Arrow.




Motor Age


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Factory


Book Description

Vols. 24, no. 3-v. 34, no. 3 include: International industrial digest.










Knowledge


Book Description