Sunday, September 11, 2011
ALBINAL – Keep Your Wheels
I was asked by Bristol City Council to design an InfoGraphic that represents the Keep Your Wheels project. The scheme offers young moped/motorbike riders the chance to earn £100. In exchange they have to learn a bit about road safety and keep a clean licence for 12 months. Bargain or what?
Here you can see the InfoGraphic in all its glory…
…and close ups of some of the characters and rough drawings. Comments welcome.
iPhone 4 vs. HTC Evo vs. Droid Incredible
With Steve Jobs’s unveiling of the iPhone 4 at yesterday’s WWDC, the modern smartphone battleground was just cranked up a notch. Apple’s newest launch into the mobile stratosphere has already spurred much speculation of which phone will ultimately win the smartphone battle. Looking at all of the stats, I don’t think there’s much competition. AT&T just needs to get their shit together. Then the sky wouldn’t even be a limit for these folks.
Hit the jump to see the infographic-goodness comparing specs of the hottest smartphones on the market: the iPhone 4, the HTC Evo and the Droid Incredible.
Halloween Facts
What a very cool infographic we have here, Dotty. I’m partial to any infographic that focuses on the origin of holidays–I’ll admit that. But I think by any standard this is an infographic of the highest order. It’s chock full of facts about Halloween.
Oil Infographic
I appreciate infographics, for the clarity they can bring to sometimes complex information, and yet, we risk losing sight of the fact that while it is huge disaster, there are bigger oil disasters in other parts of the world which are not getting the same attention.
Take the mess in Equador for example, or the one in the Niger Delta.
These are all understandable once we acknowledge that we are enormously dependent on oil to drive our society. It’s time for a change, before we drown in this black sticky stuff we love so much.
Here is an infographic describing the Gulf Oil disaster on one big page. Click on it, to see a BIG version.
Take the mess in Equador for example, or the one in the Niger Delta.
These are all understandable once we acknowledge that we are enormously dependent on oil to drive our society. It’s time for a change, before we drown in this black sticky stuff we love so much.
Here is an infographic describing the Gulf Oil disaster on one big page. Click on it, to see a BIG version.
What do people think of SPAM?
How do you define SPAM? Opinions differ. This infographic from Flowtown tries to get to the heart of the matter. North American numbers, but non the less very useful in understanding what people think of SPAM.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)







