If you’ve ever sat through a PowerPoint presentation or read a quarterly report, you’ve probably been bored by a chart or graph. Chances are, it was blue, red, and yellow on a gray, lined background.
We all know it: Polish that resume all you want, but it’s gonna be “read” for 10 seconds, tops. So it makes a lot of sense to ditch the resume altogether, and create a chart instead. Via Patrick ...
We've all seen presentations that made us wonder, "What, exactly, is that graph saying? What am I looking at?" Hopefully, we haven't all given those presentations, but let's be honest—many of us ...
President Obama gets a lot of credit for mounting a presidential campaign–and government–that uses 21st century technologies in an unprecedented ways, from his online organizing and fund-raising ...
Founded by Flickr's Caterina Fake and a team of MIT graduates, Hunch was designed as a collective intelligence decision-making system that predicts what you will enjoy based on past decisions. As the ...
Staring at a blank slide while wrestling with raw numbers still slows teams down. A 2025 SlideSpeak study found chart ...
Twenty years of sales for Nintendo consoles and handheld systems has been released in a helpful infographic. While the graph does not cover NES sales, as it's just looking at the past 20 years, and ...
In 1943, as American businesses tried to guess whether wartime relief from the Depression would translate into postwar prosperity, the Tension Envelope Corporation printed this chart for customers.
We have been spending a lot of time analyzing Breaking Bad as we walk up to the final episodes (which begin Sunday night), but now it is time to break down the show in a scientific way that Walter ...