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 An In-Depth Look At Pivot, Microsoft’s Newest Data Visualization
Tool<http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/Techcrunch/%7E3/0EQVPA0viG0/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 04 Dec 2009 07:30 AM PST


At Microsoft’s PDC <http://microsoftpdc.com/> event a few weeks ago,
Microsoft Live Labs <http://livelabs.com/> introduced a new technology,
called Pivot, <http://getpivot.com/> to make sense of interconnectedness
between objects on the web. The underlying premise of Pivot is to view
relationships between “collections” of individual information on the the
web. Many of the connections between items on the web aren’t necessarily
tangible, but Pivot helps crawl massive amount of objects on the web and
produces sleek visualizations of all that is connected. We sat down with
Microsoft developer Gary
Flake,<http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/exec/techfellow/Flake/default.mspx>who
created Pivot, and Microsoft evangelist Brandon Watson to take an
in-depth look at the application. While Pivot is currently in private beta,
we have 500 invites for TechCrunch readers who use the code “16FC 2946 0C4C
4CCB” when downloading the app here. <http://getpivot.com/download/>

Pivot is itself a standalone application, but it relies heavily on Internet
Explorer’s rendering engine. The best way to understand the importance of
Pivot is through a real-world example of how this technology would work. So
let’s say I wanted a visualization of all the Wikipedia links to
TechCrunch,<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techcrunch>Pivot would
essentially crawl all of Wikipedia and create a map of the
Wikipedia pages that are connected to TechCrunch, such as Michael
Arrington’s Wikipedia page. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Arrington>

Another real-world use of Pivot is extracting data from Facebook. For
example, you can use Pivot to crawl
Facebook<http://www.anythingtheycando.com/blog/>and break down friends
by various data points like relationship status or
college. Microsoft has an interesting example of Pivot being used to sort
through Sports Illustrated covers, where you can break down covers into
verticals by type of sport, team, athlete and more.

On the backend, Pivot is a rich media application that is built on top of
the .NET framework and is powered by C Dragon, which also is integrated with
parts of Silverlight, Microsoft’s version of Flash. C Dragon contributes to
the advanced zooming and movable interface of Pivot. The application also
includes an Excel plug-in that lets you import data into Pivot.

When turned on, Pivot can also make sense of your own browsing history (if
you are using Internet Explorer). Pivot hosts a portion of IE within the
app, and will get a sense of your browsing history over time and then will
slice and dice your history based upon various verticals. You could even
integrate<http://www.manyniches.com/developers/crunchbase-data-mashed-into-microsoft-pivot-2/>Pivot
with our own data base CrunchBase so users can visually break down all
of the data within the site.

Pivot is definitely a cool toy to play around with and its scalability and
results are impressive. Not only does it allow for deep-data dives from the
web, but its visualizations are sleek and the rich-media features from C
Dragon make the app easy to navigate.

Pivot isn’t the first compelling technology to come out of Microsoft’s Live
Labs. Photosynth, <http://photosynth.net/> a graduate of Live Labs, is an
impressive<http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/22/macs-now-play-nice-with-photosynths-nifty-3d-photo-albums/>photo
viewing project that stiches together images to create pseudo-3D
worlds.

Here’s a nifty screencast of how one developer used Pivot to mine data from
Facebook:


-- 
==========================================
J. T. Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA
www.analyticjournalism.com
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
http://www.jtjohnson.com                 [email protected]

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