The timeline of watching internet porn.
via www.madatoms.comPublished on Power of Data Visualization. Note: If you read this via Email or Feed-reader click Permalink below to download bigger image.
The timeline of watching internet porn.
via www.madatoms.comPublished on Power of Data Visualization. Note: If you read this via Email or Feed-reader click Permalink below to download bigger image.
Published on Power of Data Visualization. Note: If you read this via Email or Feed-reader click Permalink below to download bigger image.
So you want to procrastinate on the Internet? For The McGill Tribune, 14 September 2010.
via www.flickr.com
This is a visualization of the network packets of a YouTube video, slowed down 12 times. You can clearly see the handshake, some odd client/server negotiation, and the full ramp-up.
Created using Packet Flight: github.com/aristus/packet-flight Each flying circle represents a network packet. The small green ones are control packets: ACK, SYN, etc. The larger blue ones are data packets. The data is from a real tcpdump of the first 4 seconds of Rick Astley's music video.
How does our output of digital (and decidedly less tasty) tomatoes compare with our worldwide production of real tomatoes? And perhaps most importantly, who are these casual croppers, and are they anything like their plow-toting counterparts?
mashable.com broke it down by the numbers and put some of these FarmVille trends in perspective for you.via mashable.com
An infographic presents "all the facts" you ever wanted to know about Internet memes and the sites that host them.
For those who don't know, a "meme" is a cultural idea that "self-replicates and spreads among the people." An online meme can take the form of a video, a catchphrase, a website, a joke, an image, or a parody.The infographic includes an epic mix of some of the funniest, most popular memes in Internet history. Ever wondered about the origins of the Dancing Baby or the Dancing Hamster? Wonder no more!
During the last week of July, AVG researchers compiled a list of virus and malware attacks by country picked up by AVG security software. This means we have compiled data from over 127 million computers in 144 countries to determine the incidence rates of virus attacks by country.
via thompson.blog.avg.com
Net neutrality has taken up a lot of headline space over the last two weeks. There was the Goggle and Verizon thing, and then something happened with the FCC and some Congress members, and the French may have been involved somehow... Admit it, your eyes are glazing over aren't they?
via www.onlinemba.com
Given the recent closing of Google Wave and Eric Schmidt's celebration of their failures; take a look at some of Google’s other flops and failures that were pretty much DOA.
via www.wordstream.com