Holy mackerel, Martin! :-) Congratulations. A quick visit to your site was 
amazing. I have not downloaded and tried it yet, but what I see makes me 
think that this is like dynamic Graphviz for Neo4j visualization (and, I 
assume by extension, graph DBs in general). I can say, however... Peter, 
Anders, this has BIG +1 for GraphGist integration. :-)

I know I'd like to be able to tap Martin's framework for use in my Winter 
GG Challenge submission, if possible.

I'm sorry not be speaking from direct experience yet, but I wanted to be 
among the first of the community to say, "Thank you!" This is an AWESOME 
contribution.

Congratulations.
--Jim--

On Tuesday, January 7, 2014 10:47:58 AM UTC-6, Pernollet Martin wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I just would like to announce that I've released Datagr4m, a framework 
> dealing with graph visualization. 
>
> Why another one? It let you build hierarchical clusters of nodes in a 
> graph, which makes the layout more readable than standard graph layouts. It 
> has other advantages that you can read/see here [1].
>
> Despite the .com domain, all is open source [2] :) There is also a Neo4j 
> viewer application to let you navigate a hierarchical graph [3] and some 
> standalone demos. A few videos give an overview of navigating computer 
> networks graphs [4].
>
> I hope you will enjoy this contribution,
>
> Cheers,
>
> Martin
> @jzy3d
>
> [1] http://datagr4m.com/node/4
> [2] https://github.com/datagr4m/org.datagr4m
> [3] http://datagr4m.com/node/9 
> [4] http://datagr4m.com/node/5
>

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