Salt Mountains

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A helping of bread crumbs has fourteen times more sodium than potato chips? Good Magazine helps answer such questions with a surprising look at the salt levels in some of America’s favorite eats in an infographic by Next Generation Food. As expected, fast food burgers rank among the worst offenders—three of the four included are loaded with around 1,500mg of salt—but canned soups like chicken noodle and cream of mushroom don’t lag far behind, hovering around 1,000mg per serving. More worrying, the average American consumes 4,500 mg of sodium daily, over double the recommended amount.

While the infographic looks beautiful (click above for a larger view), the figures don’t, and the FDA plans to evaluate thousands of processed and packaged food items, placing caps on how much sodium they can legally contain.


Factory Food

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Which countries munch Doritos over Kale, and which stockpile canned beans over the bulk variety? Good posits the question in this infographic from The New York Times, which compares global eating habits. It comes as no surprise the U.S. is package-happy, from individually wrapped chocolates to styrofoam-ensconced takeout, while Spain and France run a close second. But China is the true winner of the container race, blowing its competition out of the water as the top fresh-food consumer.


Cartographies of Time

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In their new book “
Cartographies of Time
,” Daniel Rosenberg and Anthony Grafton dissect and track the methods people used when attempting to record the passage of time. These timelines, lists and antiquated infographics reveal particular attitudes and novel approaches to documenting history.

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Rosenberg and Grafton organize Cartographies, naturally, in chronological order, tracing the earliest timelines from ancient Greece all the way to modern reinterpretations. Expertly showing the evolution of the form, the book’s fascinating swathe of cartographic imagery will appeal to history buffs and data visualization fans alike.

The central dilemma these historians and chronologists faced over the centuries was to decide what was important, and—the central theme of Chronologies—the myriad methods employed to illustrate and recreate those histories.

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Scrolls, winding roads, columns representing centuries, trees and more visual aids are precisely recorded in Cartographies. One of the more resourceful, Johannes Buno, used animals and other inventive images to capture the spirit of a century. Relying on symbolism rather than scholastic precision to recreate a moment in time, in the process Buno helped redesign and redefine the timeline.

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One of Buno’s inheritors, present-day artist Katie Lewis, revamped the body as a timepiece in her 2007 work “201 Days.” In it, she used pushpins to represent significant “sense events” and connected them together with red thread. The result is a precise yet jumbled representation of Lewis’ bodily experiences.

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Rosenberg and Grafton look at other such ingenious methods, including crank scrolls like medieval film, rivers covered in dates and children’s games. There are also the many histories, or versions of history, they discover, like the Natural History Museum’s spatial exploration of the earth, one of the first timelines from sixth century France, and transcendentalist Elizabeth Palmer’s paint-by-numbers.

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Rosenberg and Grafton joyfully unravel these jumbled histories into a clear, straight line. Pick up their book from Amazon or Chronicle.


The State of the Internet

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When the prospects of digitization seem endless, design studio Jess3 recently stepped in to lend some clarity to the subject with an amusing infographic video illustrating the meteoric rise of the Internet. With 1.73 billion users, 243 million websites, 200 billion spam emails, and at least one new social networking platform cropping up every year, the interpersonal interactivity is at times difficult to fully comprehend. Their three-minute video puts it all into perspective, animating pie charts, thumb tacks, speech bubbles and more to help get a handle on the staggering size of the web.

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Now a nearly globally shared vocabulary, social networking sites actually began 15 years ago with Classmates.com. Jess3’s informative timeline on the rise of social networking websites charts the exponential expansion in the early 2000s with Flickr, Friendster, Myspace, Facebook, Youtube and more, concluding with the recently unveiled Google Buzz.

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Acknowledging how the Internet is at times a strange beast, Jess3 really captures the paradoxical nature of this century’s most game-changing invention—isolating yet intimate, unimaginably wide yet easily traversed.


The Cost of Healthcare

The United States spends more on medical care per person than any country. Really? What is surprising though is that the life expectancy is shorter for the average American than in most other developed nations and many developing ones. This info graphic by National Geographic visualizes this difference. To see where the U.S. stands you need to go here to access a larger version because we are off the charts.

Twitter Infographics

2009 saw Twitter grow into the most popular micro-blogging platform with over 7 billion tweets. The people over at TechXav have a nice collection of infographics that are worth a gander. Pop the hood for more.

Related:
Why Twitter?
$6 For the Twitter Homepage Graphic
Twitter Community Visualized

World AIDS Day Infographic

Currently 33 million people suffer from HIV worldwide, GOOD magazine’s transparency for World AIDS Day visualizes countries that have made positive strides in reducing the number of people with HIV and others that have experienced a rise. To view the image at full-size click here.

Growing the Green Job Boom

Ultimamente sono molto attratto dalle tavole di infographics. Questa qui sotto è dedicata alle tre iniziative ‘green’ del governo americano finanziate per creare nuovi posti di lavoro. Disegnata in collaborazione tra GOOD e Tiziana Haug & Steve Rura. Qui trovate l’immagine full-size.
[Via]

Growing the Green Job Boom

Twitter Community Visualized

Here’s an interesting infographic visualizing the twitter community if there were only 100 people. We want to know who the loud mouths are…

Thanks Sarah for the tip!