3dsav.blogspot.com
3d Sensing and Visualization: March 2011
http://3dsav.blogspot.com/2011_03_01_archive.html
3d Sensing and Visualization. Spring 2010 and Fall 2012, by Kyle. Thursday, March 31, 2011. For my final project, I created a performance visualization tool for 8-bit artist Nullsleep. The idea for the piece was to use Kinect depth information to create a changing landscape and then to have a 3D model of Nullsleep himself bounced around as the landscape shifts. To achieve this effect, I used the Bullet Physics. Landman code on Github. For example, the gradient. For the final project we worked with Eszter.
datavizchallenge.org
Budget Climb | DataVizChallenge.org
http://www.datavizchallenge.org/viz/72
Zach Schwartz, Fred Truman, Frankie Cheung. We've submitted a video, but the actual project is a computer application which uses a Kinect to allow physical interaction with budget data, which is rendered as a cityscape for the user to explore. In order to climb the data users must exert physical effort, revealing how the budget is distributed in a novel and tangible way. Run the application (with or without a Kinect) available at budgetclimb.com.
flowingdata.com
Physically climb over budget data with Kinect | FlowingData
http://flowingdata.com/2011/04/05/physically-climb-over-budget-data-with-kinect
Physically climb over budget data with Kinect. As an entry to the Eyebeam DataVizChallenge. To visualize your taxes, Budget Climb. By Frankie Cheung, Zach Schwartz, and Fred Truman places you in a virtual environment where you can climb and stand on top of tax data. Maybe not the best way to learn about the data, but I like the idea of data exploration as a game. See it in action below. It reminds me of Irad Lee’s Spamology. Obama’s Budget Proposal and Incorrect Forecasts. You fix the budget puzzle.
zachschwartz.com
Budget Climb
http://zachschwartz.com/work/budgetclimb
Climb a 3D chart of federal spending. Just like you always wanted. Is a physically interactive data environment where users explore 26 years of federal spending by exerting physical effort. The idea was to give people new perspective on how our government spends our money, and reveal how the budget is distributed in a novel and tangible way. Budget Climb was a collaboration with Fred Truman. Originally for 3D Sensing and Visualization class at ITP, and was created using openframeworks.
datavizchallenge.org
Visualize Your Taxes: Grand Award Winner | DataVizChallenge.org
http://www.datavizchallenge.org/winners
Visualize Your Taxes: Grand Award Winner. Where Did My Tax Dollars Go? Awarded $5,000 for best data visualization. The Data Viz Challenge was a call to designers and developers to visualize how our federal income taxes are spent. Created by Eyebeam and Google. Read more. Awarded $3,000 by the jury. Every Day is Tax Day. The remaining finalists were each awarded $500. Zach Schwartz, Fred Truman, Frankie Cheung. What Do You Work For? Mark Won, Salil Jain,. Can I Get A Receipt With That? What You Pay For.
github.com
GitHub - frankiech/budgetclimb: Budget Climb is a physically interactive data environment where we can explore 26 years of federal spending - giving us a unique perspective on how our government spends our money. In order to explore the data we must exert
https://github.com/frankiech/budgetclimb
Budget Climb is a physically interactive data environment where we can explore 26 years of federal spending - giving us a unique perspective on how our government spends our money. In order to explore the data we must exert physical effort, revealing how the budget is distributed in a novel and tangible way. Use Git or checkout with SVN using the web URL. Cannot retrieve the latest commit at this time. Failed to load latest commit information. You can't perform that action at this time.