Mr Fischer revealed that it takes 40 minutes to set up file data and 3 minutes to produce the image.
At first glance, the image below looks like a satellite image of Europe at night. Actually, it is a map that reveals how active Europeans are on social networking sites Twitter and Flickr. Created by Eric Fischer, the map combines data from geotagged photos from Flickr and geotagged posts on the micro-messaging network Twitter.
The red dots represent Flickr pictures while the blue dots are tweets. The white dots locations that have been posted to both. Mr Fischer focuses on the continents of Europe and North America, where computer and internet usage is most prolific, making detailed maps of big cities, including New York, Barcelona and Tokyo – as well as the entire globe.
He added that the program runs through the photos/tweets in chronological order, plotting the earliest ones the most brightly and stepping the brightness down for points that don't show up for the first time until later on.
"Points are also allowed to diffuse by a few pixels when there is an additional record for a point that is already plotted, with the brightness falling off exponentially as the point that is actually plotted gets further from its intended location.
Each pixel is the somewhat weird area of 2.25 square miles because a smaller area made the whole-world image too big for Flickr to let me post it."
At first glance, the image below looks like a satellite image of Europe at night. Actually, it is a map that reveals how active Europeans are on social networking sites Twitter and Flickr. Created by Eric Fischer, the map combines data from geotagged photos from Flickr and geotagged posts on the micro-messaging network Twitter.
The red dots represent Flickr pictures while the blue dots are tweets. The white dots locations that have been posted to both. Mr Fischer focuses on the continents of Europe and North America, where computer and internet usage is most prolific, making detailed maps of big cities, including New York, Barcelona and Tokyo – as well as the entire globe.
He added that the program runs through the photos/tweets in chronological order, plotting the earliest ones the most brightly and stepping the brightness down for points that don't show up for the first time until later on.
"Points are also allowed to diffuse by a few pixels when there is an additional record for a point that is already plotted, with the brightness falling off exponentially as the point that is actually plotted gets further from its intended location.
Each pixel is the somewhat weird area of 2.25 square miles because a smaller area made the whole-world image too big for Flickr to let me post it."
Chicago |
London. See how the river Thames reveals itself in the map indicating the increased number of tourists taking photos and then uploading them to the photo-sharing site. |
North America |
New York |
Singapore. Dominated by Twitter users. |
Sydney |
Tokyo |
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