Data News

  • Tue Nov 27 2012
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    Mapping the Floods

    Check out where the floodwaters went, and how that corresponds with the predicted storm-surge zones along the entire New York and New Jersey Coastlines:

    The flood data comes from these hugemongous shape files, which actually took 10 hours for my MacBook to render into tiles and upload to Mapbox.

    For mapping folks who know their way around PostGIS, I used ST_Dump to break up the the huge shapes into thousands of smaller ones — a trick I learned from Andrew Hill. I think that helped it from taking even longer.

    We have one more revision up our sleeve on this, which I hope to have up by later this week.

    — John Keefe

  • Fri Nov 09 2012
    1 note

    Quick shout out to our @datanews folks and the entire @WNYC digital team for our fantastic election-night map and coverage, particularly to Data News interaction designer Louise Ma who pulled together so much information into such a beautiful page. More posts on the plumbing behind the maps coming soon.

    Quick shout out to our @datanews folks and the entire @WNYC digital team for our fantastic election-night map and coverage, particularly to Data News interaction designer Louise Ma who pulled together so much information into such a beautiful page. More posts on the plumbing behind the maps coming soon.

  • Thu Nov 08 2012
    359 notes

    Since Sandy left town, we’ve been downloading MTA subway-recovery maps to feed WNYC’s Changing Trains map. Our Steve Melendez put them together in a time-lapse GIF. Click through to the full-size image.

    Since Sandy left town, we’ve been downloading MTA subway-recovery maps to feed WNYC’s Changing Trains map. Our Steve Melendez put them together in a time-lapse GIF. Click through to the full-size image.

  • Sun Nov 04 2012
    5 notes

    Predicting Questions, Building Answers

    With hurricane Sandy churning far off the Florida coast, we began anticipating questions people would have around the storm. And then we tried to code answers to those questions as fast as we could. 

    In order, those questions turned out to be:

    Where’s the storm forecast to go? For this, we dusted off our Hurricane Tracker, built for hurricane Irene, and fed it with the National Weather Service data for Sandy. As with almost all of our work, we made it free and easy to embed, and many news outlets did.

    What zone am I in? Again, we dusted off something made for Irene — our NYC Evacuation Zone Map. We updated it with better colors and areas newly designated as Zone A. We also published a project I’d been working on since Irene: a Storm Surge Map of the entire New York and New Jersey coastline.

    Where’s the storm now? As the storm approached land, we switched layers in the hurricane tracker from the forecast track to a real-time radar image.

    Sandy Radar Detail

    What systems are closing, and when? We knew there was a good chance the subways and other transit services would be shut down ahead of the storm. We also knew that there was no single place where all of that information resided. So days before the storm, we built our Transit Tracker. Thanks to Steve Melendez coding it over the weekend, we had it running when officials announced the transit shutdown plans. As an added bonus, the tracker is fed by a Google spreadsheet, so multiple producers can update it simultaneously.

    Where’s the water rising? With everything shuttered, we wanted to help people watch the storm’s effects in real time. The National Weather Service maintains a network of flood-level monitors on the coast and on inland rivers. We took a feed off that system and modified it slightly to show pop-up charts for our Flood Gauge Watch — which we monitored through the storm.

    As the storm hit, Melendez and I worked at WNYC under backup power making minor fixes and trying to catch up on our election-night mapping project.

    After the storm, the team tackled two more questions:

    What’s the traffic like? We heard traffic was gridlocked as people returned to work Wednesday, so we resurfaced our Traffic Map to show the trouble spots — which included most of Manhattan.

    Which subway lines are open? Anticipating the subway system would open in stages, we wanted give people a map as the restoration progressed. I guessed that the MTA would provide a list of partially-open lines before they had maps, so Louise Ma built a beautiful base map from files left over from our Lost Subways project and prepared to update it. Melendez found a clever way to let people to pan and zoom it like a Google map. But I was wrong: The MTA issued clear PDF maps right away, so we scrapped Ma’s map and fed the official version into Melendez’s Changing Trains app.

    There’s a lot more we wished we could have done — and could have done better. That may be the subject of another post. But we hope we what we made provided answers when they were needed.

    - John Keefe

  • Mon Oct 22 2012
    67 notes

    Map of Same-Sex Couples’ Rights

    Today we posted a new map to show the rights for same-sex couples across the US:

    Louise Ma’s design really jumps out, and I like the way it works interactively.

    We wrestled with this a lot — and were inspired by the great gay rights data visualization by Feilding Cage and the Guardian crew.

    In the end, though, we decided to tell a smaller story, focusing on laws affecting same-sex couples. We tinkered with several cartograms and data charts, opting in the end for the US map.

    Does it work for you? Let us know by tweeting at us @datanews.

    — John Keefe

  • Tue Oct 16 2012
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    Babs v. Jay-Z on the Rails

    Using the MTA’s public turnstile data, we charted the boost in subway ridership to the Barclays Center station caused by Jay-Z and Barbara Streisand concerts:

    Mathematically, they’re about the same. But Streisand wins when it comes to Long Island Rail Road riders.

    - John Keefe

  • Wed Oct 10 2012
    0 notes

    Sentiment Grid: Drones

    I love how the latest sentiment grid is shaping up — this one on the use of military drones.

    It follows two others we’ve already put up, one on the US debt and another on Social Security and Medicare.

    All of this is part of WNYC’s 30 Issues in 30 Days pre-election series. And the inspiration for the sentiment grid comes from the great work of the New York Times interactive team.

    - John Keefe

  • Tue Oct 09 2012
    1 note

    Offshore Oil Map

    We continue to support WNYC’s 30 Issues in 30 Days coverage with a what may be the only interactive, zoomable map showing the estimated recoverable oil off the U.S. coast.

    This is really the work of Stephen Reader, who found the data and turned it into a usable geographic file. That actually required some hand work, using the open-source mapping program QGIS, because some of the areas were outlined in a series of lines instead of full shapes, or polygons.

    I ended up using QGIS to take Reader’s original KML file and shrink it down to a simplified version, which is easier to navigate online and still served our purposes. 

    Once again, we added rollovers to the map using Albert Sun’s fantastic gmap-features JavaScript program to turn the KML file into Google Maps polygon objects we could act upon.

    - John Keefe

  • Tue Oct 09 2012
    0 notes

    Working Together

    A quick, useful map for a New Tech City story: Coworking spaces in NYC.

    Made, and updated, with Fusion Tables.

  • Wed Oct 03 2012
    8 notes

    Debate Bingo! A fun little sprint

    UPDATED BELOW

    It’s not journalism. And it barely counts as “data news.” But the WNYC Debate Bingo game was a great exercise in designing, coding and publishing a web application — in just 48 hours.

    Jumping on an idea from political editor Caitlin Thompson, we stood before a whiteboard Monday morning and talked out how we might build an interactive bingo card. Randomized cells? Definitely. Should it check in with a master spreadsheet of correct answers? No. Should users be able to tweet out individual cards? Yes. 

    Interaction designer Louise Ma grabbed onto the concept, got inspiration from images of classic bingo cards and mocked up a design in Illustrator; Stephen Reader and Thompson filled and tweaked a spreadsheet of phrases for the boxes.

    By Tuesday morning, Steven Melendez was coding Ma’s design and the functionality we had all talked about. He also figured out a way to encode the board’s state into the URL so it could be tweeted.

    Late in the day we shared the game with folks within WNYC to kick the tires. Their feedback led to several improvements, such as adding an admonishment if you try to “Yell Bingo” before you have five pieces in a row. 

    This morning, we put it on WNYC’s website and sent it out via Twitter. We immediately got comments that it should have a “print card” option — which you can see was in our original whiteboard sketch — so Ma and Melendez added that on the fly.

    We hope folks find the game fun. But working with this amazing team to make it was even more so.

    UPDATE 10/4/2012: In the spirit of public media, and public code, we just shared a “white label” version of the game code so anyone with a some programming chops can use it for their own site. 

    - John Keefe

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Louise Ma

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