Some of these seem to be of dubious real use.  Has anyone put any of them
though Jakob Nielsen-style user testing?

For example, I got taught to use mind-maps back at school in '86, but the
whole point of them is that you create them personally to help you to use a
"visual system" to help memorise abstract things - if someone else (or a
machine) makes them then you are into "meaningless" territory...

The spiky-graph one is the most comprehensible style.


On 14/08/07, Simon Cobb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/08/02/data-visualization-modern-approaches/
>
> Now, I'd like to see the musicovery.com approach applied as an alternative
> nav for the bbc radio player:
>
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/aod/index.shtml?button
>
>  ------------------------------
> *From:* Simon Cobb
> *Sent:* 16 May 2007 09:42
> *To:* '[email protected]'
> *Subject:* data visualisation links
>
>
>  Despite its use of the word 'awesome', this article led me to some
> interesting stuff:
>
> http://mashable.com/2007/05/15/16-awesome-data-visualization-tools/
>
> hope it does the same for you.
>
> Disclaimer: I forward it for the ideas/ concepts deployed by these sites,
> not for their accessibility
>
>



-- 
Please email me back if you need any more help.

Brian Butterworth
www.ukfree.tv

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