InfoShots

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  • Glossy timeline interface for the History of the Rams

    Posted on July 20th, 2009 Will No comments

    The Cleveland Los Angeles St Louis Rams have a pretty long and interesting history — not overly populated with championships, but as much weirdness and fun as could be expected for the first professional sports team to reloacte west of the Mississippi.

    That history has been captured in a gloriously smooth side-scrolling timeline interface that is a pleasure to navigate and explore.

    Fun fact: Did you know that the iconic golden Ram horn on the helmet was the first ever logo to be used on a professional football helmet? And that it had to be hand-painted before each game, to touch up the spots that were worn off from repeated head-to-head clashes?

    URL: http://stlouisrams.com/history/

    Via our football-loving sister blog: RamsHerd.com

  • Not your father’s baseball stats.

    Posted on June 25th, 2009 Mike 2 comments

    It seems more and more these days that you can’t be a baseball fan without an encyclopedia of statistics to back up your every assertion. The time-honored tradition of watching a game and making observations has been rendered inadequate by the SABR-metric explosion of the 80′s and 90′s. Value over Replacement Player? Extrapolated Runs? Defense-independent ERA? I’d explain these for the benefit of those unfamiliar, but frankly, I’m not sure I understand them myself. Sure, these can be important, but they do seem to be an awful lot of work.

    Somewhere along the line, the “fun” aspect of basbeall knowledge dried up. Luckily, there are still those striving to counteract that: Flip Flop Fly Ball is the brainchild of illustrator/designer Craig Robinson. Devoted to the marriage of baseball statistics and infographics, the site is stocked with gorgeous visual representations of statistics from the quirkier side of America’s pastime. How much money would baseball have lost if all the stolen bases in 2008 were actually stolen? In which direction do batters in all the major-league ballparks face? And really, how tall is that obnoxious, faded green wall in Boston?

    Doesn't seem that monstrous to me...

    Doesn't seem that monstrous to me...

    So, whether you enjoy the infographics, the baseball knowledge, or both, head over to Flip Flop Fly Ball and indulge in a little baseball-stat-related fun before you break out your calculator to determine Albert Pujol’s Gross Production Average ( [1.8(OPS)+SLG]/4 = .3779). You’ll be glad you did.

  • Reader’s Companion to “The Story (so far) of Twitter”

    Posted on June 24th, 2009 Will No comments
    Twitter overload

    Twitter overload

    I don’t know if these citations will prove to be popular or just further example of how the online world turns us all into self-important navel gazers. But dammit, we did some work, poking around and reading things and emailing people and drinking iced coffees and suffering through terrible coffeeshop music.

    Firstly, my thanks to @scotthogrefe for introducing me to @davepeck, who is a card-carrying social media guru and gave us some good early pointers on where to look, including a whale of an article by @dom Sagolla. Even though Dom is writing a book — plug plug, 140 Characters: Style Guide for the Short Form — he still took time out to exchange emails on the early days of development, a thread I hope to continue as we expand the web version into print form.

    The Origins of Twitter

    LA Times | Technology blogTwitter Creator Jack Dorsey illuminates the site’s founding document

    - great article, inspired biographical reading (via Wikipedia, of course) on Jack, Biz, and Ev

    140 CharactersHow Twitter Was Born

    - compelling behind the scenes look at development, gave us lots of fuel for the early alpha and beta time period, and helped us identify some of the “big wave” events that brought exponential growth, including SXSW Interactive 2007 and the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards.

    Wikipedia – various entries on the foundation technologies behind the Twitter UI, including Instant Messaging, LiveJournal, SMS, and Unix Talk.

    Twitter Culture

    There was a lot we wanted to capture, but space constraints insisted that we hit the high points. But we found some cool resources, including the mystery of how many people are actually using Twitter. (one guess is as good as another).

    I really wanted to document the first known usage of the term “tweeps” – which just irritates the hell out of me. According to the Dictionary of Twitter lingo, @scottk75 gets credit, but there was no link to the original post. So we left it out.

    And finally, everything you could possibly want to know about Yiying Lu’s illustration, now infamously known as the FAIL WHALE. (I also found out that Mike really hates the fail whale. I was shocked! I really dig it.)

    Fail Whale - an homage dlego

    Fail Whale - an homage d'lego

    Twitter + Fame

    Maybe we’re missing the point, by trying to make any single twitter post into a noteworthy event. But it was cool tracking down the following tweets:

    @barackobama’s first entry

    @the_real_shaq’s first entry (cited by the NY Times article)

    @britneyspears’ infamous hacked entry (and there were others, as well)

    And this… There's a plane in the Hudson. I'm on the ferry going to pick... on Twitpic

    The timing of the piece was interesting. We were doing layouts when the word of the Twitpocalypse started floating around, and by the time we finished rendering, it had already passed. Then, the same day we submitted final art, some of our friends’ avatars started turning green.

    Finally, I’ll mention that the artwork at the top of this post was Mike’s first attempt at the gonzo Dan Z style, and that he sent it in to me before I sent him any story elements to work on. Brilliant.