Visualization continues to mature and focus more on the data first than on novel designs and size. People improved on existing forms and got better at analysis. Readerships seemed to be more ready and eager to explore more data at a time. Fewer spam graphics landed in my inbox. So all in all, 2013 was a pretty good year for data and visualization. Let's have a look back.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
The Best Data Visualizations of 2013 - Gizmodo
From: http://gizmodo.com/the-best-data-visualizations-of-2013-1485611407
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
The use of registers in the context of EU–SILC - Eurostat
From: http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-TC-13-004/EN/KS-TC-13-004-EN.PDF
The European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) instrument is the main data source on income, poverty, social exclusion and living conditions in Europe. It provides the data for the
calculation of the Europe 2020 social inclusion target and further EU flagship indicators in the social field. In the current financial and economic crisis, the pressure for timelier and more comprehensive data on poverty and social exclusion has become very acute. In view of the flexibility of the EU-SILC instrument, which allows countries to combine survey and administrative data source(s), and given the advantages of administrative data in terms of burden, cost and survey error reduction, a broader use of registers, and in particular register income data, for EU-SILC is envisaged among Member States.
Friday, December 6, 2013
China turns to big data to gauge inflation - China Daily
2013-12-06 13:42
China DailyWeb Editor: qindexing
China DailyWeb Editor: qindexing
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Through teaming up with high-tech companies, China's National Bureau of Statistics will start using big data technology to improve the collecting, processing and producing of the country's consumer price index, a key gauge of inflation.
Xian Zude, chief statistician with the NBS, said in an interview with xinhuanet.com on Wednesday that his bureau will use big data to achieve a "breakthrough" in the census of the CPI.
He added that the bureau will include data from Chinese e-commerce companies in official statistics in an effort to bring the CPI census to the next level and ease the time-consuming tasks of those doing the censuses and surveys.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Solving Big Data’s big skills shortage - The Conversation
From: http://theconversation.com/solving-big-datas-big-skills-shortage-20352
The skills required to tap Big Data include statistics, mathematics, computer science and engineering. Shutterstock.com
According to analyst firm vpnMentor, Big Data is at the portion of the hype cycle called the “peak of inflated expectations”.
The business world is awash with all sorts of claims about the magic of Big Data and how it will transform industries by increasing productivity and profits and opening up opportunities that nobody even knew existed.
But this will only happen if companies are able to hire enough people who actually understand what Big Data is, how to collect it, and preserve it. Computing and analytical skills are also required to get Big Data to reveal its hidden secrets and visualise it in novel ways. And there unfortunately, is the rub. There are just not enough data scientists, people with the required skills to satisfy this unmet demand.
The shortfall in Big Data experts is set to rise and in the UK alone, one digital industries employer body has predicted there will be a need for 69,000 of these experts in the next five years. This claim is not original. Back in 2011, McKinsey & Co was claiming a US shortfall in Big Data experts of 140,000 - 190,000 by 2018.
The shortfall in Big Data experts is being manifested in a number of ways. The first and most obvious is through recruiters casting an ever-widening net in their search for appropriate talent.
There is some agreement that Big Data analysis and data visualisation requires skills in computing as well as statistics and mathematics. This has meant that university graduates with statistics, computer science and engineering have been the main source of potential employees. --------
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