Friday, September 21, 2012

IBM Has Many Eyes


Glenn gave me permission to post his email along with many of the comments he received.  Glenn wrote:

Last week I attended a series of talks sponsored by WINFORMS and IBM. The speakers were Brenda Deitrich -the leader of IBM's math department (now branded as Business Analytics) - and her lead visualization guy, Stephan Jou. It was exciting to see where IBM's math team has gone, considering that when I graduated I was impressed by the work they did but was unsure about moving there due to industry changes (cf. Bell Labs, Kodak).

But for this discussion, I'd like to think about the visualization ideas. Jou gave a tour through their web site IBM Many Eyes, as well as IBM Many Bills which focuses on depicting US legislation. Tim - what was the web site you were using with lots of visualization techniques? This looked very similar, where the public can upload their own data and try different and creative ways of visualizing their data.


Here are two of the IBM sites for a closer look:

Many Eyes

Many Bills


It got me thinking again about how Tim and Swish provided A8 with an interactive map, and how Brian developed interactive maps and sliders. These techniques are a major change in how we tell the story to decision makers and provide information to the rest of the community. We're used to building or using tools to make maps and other visualizations for ourselves, because we know how valuable they are to analysis. But each time we do, it usually takes a lot of effort, is hard to adapt on the fly (like FalconView), or is not presentable beyond the analyst (STORM w/ OpenMap).

I'm certain there is value in having a warm-base of graphics capability ready to support our analysts and AO's. But how can we get there cost-effectively? IBM sees a profitable market there - they bought the makers of SPSS not for statistics but for business analytics - data manipulation and visualization. Jou cited Leland Wilkinson's classic tome "Grammar of Graphics" about rule-based graphics language. Instead of building an Excel-like library of charts that often falls short (because "there will always be a need to tweak"), they aim to allow users to quickly build their own library with these rules.

Short of licensing IBM's new project when it's built and contracting their specialists, how can we do that? Do we need to keep reinventing the wheel (or settling for what Excel gives us) each time? Is any in-house effort doomed to follow our attempt to bypass Sharepoint with MIS? Is there any open source work that gets us most of the way there, and could we use it on the networks that matter? How much up-front and ongoing effort would be required to make a significant impact on A9, AF, DoD visualization?

I know some of you have pondered down these lines already. What do you think?

Regards,

Glenn