![]() So many elements in this track serve multiple purposes. But Pink in the Night absolutely blew me away by expanding on this concept, deftly interweaving choreography, music visualization, and environmental scenery to create Branches’ most evocative and synesthetic work yet. □ = not recommended Pink in the Night - Branchesīranches’ 2020 release Ribs was unique for its inclusion of a scenery environment segment in a track that was primarily dedicated to music sync, adding a human element that grounded the piece beautifully. Also, Cold Death will not automatically play in the playlist, as it is marked as containing sensitive content and you have to press “I understand and wish to proceed” to manually consent to watching it, so it may work better to go directly to the video link separately from the playlist. Note that Don’t Belong (unfinished) by Chuggers is not included as it is not on YouTube, and A Summer Song is also not included as it was taken off YouTube since it was originally posted. Enjoy!Ĭlick here for a playlist of all videos in this roundup (in order). For their first time as a guest reviewer on this blog, they have also reworked some of their original reviews into guest reviews. You probably know Twig - their channel is home to numerous Line Rider works featured in these roundups, as well as in our annual Top 10 videos - such as Widows in Paradise and You Are the Sunset. So as an end-of-year special, I’ve taken my old reviews for that and reworked most of them, as well as written new reviews for everything I didn’t write about the first time around. Well, if you know me, you can guess that that bugs me a little! Even more so because there was a roundup for January 2021, but it was a joint venture with Twig (from the channel Branches ) and rather than being published here, it was privately published in the Line Rider Artists Collective. – a second viz at the bottom, that give you the name of the top 10 riders for the clicked edition.Surprise! It occurred to me that the first published Line Rider Review Monthly Roundup was in February 2021, which means that at the end of the year we would have Roundups for every month in 2021 except January. – a highlighter, so that you can easily identify the Edition when you click – as a decade filter, in order to allow the user to focus his attention to a certain group of editions, due to technological improvements it is not fair to compare the riders performance in 1918 and in 2016 ( for instance the state of the road in France after World War II was a disaster) Once you have done it, you have to create some fancy calculations ( Chris DeMartini’s website explains all the steps perfectly).įinally, I give some flexibility to my viz: To do it, you need to have a specific data structure ( cf references at the end of this post), in my case I have joined two tables to achieve it, because it will duplicate the rows, as needed. – the hop p represents the time between the 1st rider and the rider, who arrived in the p position. – each checkpoint represents the position of a rider on a specific Tour edition ![]() This video gives me the idea to use this representation in my new dashboard in this case : ![]() The steps ( checkpoints) are connected by a hop with a beautiful bezier curve, and the hop height is determined by the time between two steps.Įxample : from Jump Plot | A new way to visualize event data A Jump Plot is a good way to visualize event data ( ex supply chain or manufacturing workflow), because it allows you to verify if your process follows all the steps, and the time between the different steps. ![]() According to them a Jump Plot is very useful to identify outliers in repeated event sequences and/ or if you want to identify root cause of process delay. This is an excellent video, funny and very instructive, that I highly recommend.ĭuring this session, Chris DeMartini and Adam McCann presented a new graph ( created by Chris DeMartini and Tom Vanbuskirk), that I have never heard before : the Jump Plot. My curiosity crossed path with the excellent video of two giant Tableau Zen Masters Adam McCann and Christopher DeMartini about New Advanced Chart types : Jedi Charts: Creating New Advanced Chart Types – YouTube At that time, I was watching the Tableau Conference videos, which are my favorite tool to increase my Tableau and design skills. A box and whiskers seems correct to me, but I wasn’t totally convinced to be able to distinguish between the editions. In one of the viz, I wanted to compared the top 10 riders across the different Tour editions, and especially focus the reader’s attention on the outliers. ![]() I recently published a new viz about the Tour de France after several weeks working on the data very late at night (thank you wikipedia) and the vizualisations. ![]()
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