Sparklines

Edward Tufte descibes a form of word-sized, inline infoburst he calls a “sparkline”:

sparklines

A hyperlinked Sparkline would make webpages like superdense, fractal, layered, zoomable resources, and make the top-level of each topic look vital and organic like a terrarium of squirming data.

The next step would be to see Sparklines in the street, not just delivering data, but harvesting it – being it.

Crawling up lamposts as electricity consumption spikes during the ad-break of Coronation Street. Or infesting the wounds of a pigeon flattened by a delivery truck, updating the national epidemiological database and the air pollution record for that borough based upon trace metal readings in the carcass.

Tufte’s aiming to create bumps in the visual texture of the page that we can run our eyes over and just know. Lowering the load on our understanding not in reductive manner of many usability methodologies but trying to transform ways in which information is transferred to create a richer substrate for understanding.

» Ask E.T.: Sparklines [via Scoble]

0 thoughts on “Sparklines

  1. hoo boy.. sparklines look very cool. but with them becoming data like you describe, i can’t help but think of a tufte grey goo senario, where eventually all the world just becomes that map of the nepolean’s march to russia.

    shiver.

  2. I get the utility of sparklines as units of concentrated data representation. But what’s the point of them for data “harvesting”? “The next step” seems like hurdy-gurdy.

  3. Hmph. Just try telling all this to your Ph.D. supervisor when it comes time to lay out and write up your thesis, and see how well it goes down (in a word, it didn’t).

  4. would be good for tracing and feeding back a patient’s changing blood glucose level. maybe the sparkline is sent once a week as an mms to their mobile phone. we are doing this for a diabetes project. tufte needs to get more specific.

  5. sparklines

    [UPDATED] pati pradžia: kažkada kovo mėn. pradžia: Ask E.T. forum paskum: blackbeltjones/work dar: more links dar: live dar: diskusija dar: design ideas for report design dar: sąmojingi pavyzdžiai 🙂 dar: graphpad.com via: dph…

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    Catching up on nutritious boingboing nuggets from last week, I saw (and immediately amazoned!) this book Window Seat by Gregory Dicum. Broken down by region, this unusual guide features 70 aerial photographs; a fold-out map of North America showing maj…

  7. augmented reality at 30,000 feet

    Catching up on nutritious boingboing nuggets from last week, I saw (and immediately amazoned!) this book Window Seat by Gregory Dicum. Broken down by region, this unusual guide features 70 aerial photographs; a fold-out map of North America showing maj…

  8. Sparklines at the Observer

    It wasn’t up at launch because I was having problems getting the data, but my favorite part of the Observer Blog’s design is now up and running: Incoming Links Sparklines. My implementation doesn’t quite follow Edward Tufte’s idea for…

  9. Sparklines at the Observer

    It wasn’t up at launch because I was having problems getting the data, but my favorite part of the Observer Blog’s design is now up and running: Incoming Links Over Time Sparklines. My implementation doesn’t quite follow Edward Tufte’s…

  10. Sparklines at the Observer

    It wasn’t up at launch because I was having problems getting the data, but my favorite part of the Observer Blog’s design is now up and running: Incoming Links Over Time Sparklines. My implementation doesn’t quite follow Edward Tufte’s…

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