1. Jason Kottke posted it to his weblog. Either you know about Kottke or you don't. Many journalists do.
2. I shared the map on Flickr with a CC by-SA license. Which meant any publication could republish it for free without even asking me.
I'm still a little embarrassed about it. The map is pretty simple. The visualization is highly misleading and has all sorts of ugly visual artifacts. That Daily Mail article is full of mistakes (including misspelling my name three different ways.) The picture wasn't even really my goal, it was just a debugging workprint off my "real" project, a GitHub repo teaching people how to make maps in Javascript with vector tiles. But the picture looked cool and was easy to understand.
But I'm also proud of the result. It did look cool! And the recognition pleased my vanity. If I wanted I could have landed several years of consulting work off the momentary fame, I had all sorts of requests for custom work based on it. My favorite outcome was the artist Tamsie River took the data, made a giant mold, and poured a hot iron cast of the Mississippi watershed. I'm still sorry I didn't go for the event. https://tamsie.com/River%20of%20Iron.html
I assume the virality of that map comes down to Tufte.
It's actually an interesting map/graphic. It paints a dramatic story but you really have to study it. Probably wouldn't fly in a newspaper or typical magazine.
I remember a story a number of years back that showed complex relationships in Afghanistan in intricate detail. Similar sort of deal.
Yes, Tufte did much to popularize the Minard map related to Napoleon, but there were map dealers that had been intrigued by it and discussing it for quite a while prior to that. Those discussions can leak into academia and pollinate a whole new batch of discussions.
Virality as part of the ebb and flow of popular culture is interesting. But, we find it as interesting when an old map will somehow drift through the pace layers of culture and become a discussion point. That resurfacing of an older map could allude to deeper issues and mechanisms that are ongoing.
You see those dwindling circles of Bison population and it hits you that not only could this be reoccurring, but perhaps the disappearance of other species could have similar cascading reactions. Some have pointed out that with the loss of the primary food source of the Bison, friction with settlers escalated quickly. It also had huge impacts in the soil of the West. Maybe the dust bowl wouldn't have been as cataclysmic.
----
Unfortunately we're concerned that even viral maps can be lost over time. They become dead links. And somehow even the wonderful people at Internet Archive can't save everything.
This is part of why we push cartographers we know to print something they've done at the end of each year. Paper is astoundingly enduring. If there was one map that you did and it resonates with you, please print it out. Build a small portfolio of hard copies over the next few years. Your work is worth printing!
"Anecdotical"...heck even when it was the Space Force Fighter-Pilot, saying "A triangle is enough to steer my spacefighter", and a cartoonist told, that even for navigating "it may better to have one more, an extra data-point" -for you know, something more to... gasp
...no, there was none making it gone "viral". BTT: but sure, maybe politics may do... P-:
I had a map go viral in 2013, a map of US rivers. Here's the Daily Mail article about it, the apotheosis of virulence. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2342083/The-veins-n...
Two things made it go viral.
1. Jason Kottke posted it to his weblog. Either you know about Kottke or you don't. Many journalists do.
2. I shared the map on Flickr with a CC by-SA license. Which meant any publication could republish it for free without even asking me.
I'm still a little embarrassed about it. The map is pretty simple. The visualization is highly misleading and has all sorts of ugly visual artifacts. That Daily Mail article is full of mistakes (including misspelling my name three different ways.) The picture wasn't even really my goal, it was just a debugging workprint off my "real" project, a GitHub repo teaching people how to make maps in Javascript with vector tiles. But the picture looked cool and was easy to understand.
But I'm also proud of the result. It did look cool! And the recognition pleased my vanity. If I wanted I could have landed several years of consulting work off the momentary fame, I had all sorts of requests for custom work based on it. My favorite outcome was the artist Tamsie River took the data, made a giant mold, and poured a hot iron cast of the Mississippi watershed. I'm still sorry I didn't go for the event. https://tamsie.com/River%20of%20Iron.html
For those looking for the travel time map:
https://www.rome2rio.com/blog/2016/01/08/time-flies-accordin...
How about novelty?
I’m not sure about “viral”, but the spilhaus ocean map is fascinating to me largely because of the novelty aspect.
I was hoping for the famous Napoleon losing troops map to and from Russia.
Still a good read though, just a focus on today's trends rather than the timeless pieces...
I assume the virality of that map comes down to Tufte.
It's actually an interesting map/graphic. It paints a dramatic story but you really have to study it. Probably wouldn't fly in a newspaper or typical magazine.
I remember a story a number of years back that showed complex relationships in Afghanistan in intricate detail. Similar sort of deal.
Yes, Tufte did much to popularize the Minard map related to Napoleon, but there were map dealers that had been intrigued by it and discussing it for quite a while prior to that. Those discussions can leak into academia and pollinate a whole new batch of discussions.
Virality as part of the ebb and flow of popular culture is interesting. But, we find it as interesting when an old map will somehow drift through the pace layers of culture and become a discussion point. That resurfacing of an older map could allude to deeper issues and mechanisms that are ongoing.
Have been intrigued to watch Hornaday's Bison extermination map surface in discussion. https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~3...
You see those dwindling circles of Bison population and it hits you that not only could this be reoccurring, but perhaps the disappearance of other species could have similar cascading reactions. Some have pointed out that with the loss of the primary food source of the Bison, friction with settlers escalated quickly. It also had huge impacts in the soil of the West. Maybe the dust bowl wouldn't have been as cataclysmic. ---- Unfortunately we're concerned that even viral maps can be lost over time. They become dead links. And somehow even the wonderful people at Internet Archive can't save everything. This is part of why we push cartographers we know to print something they've done at the end of each year. Paper is astoundingly enduring. If there was one map that you did and it resonates with you, please print it out. Build a small portfolio of hard copies over the next few years. Your work is worth printing!
"Anecdotical"...heck even when it was the Space Force Fighter-Pilot, saying "A triangle is enough to steer my spacefighter", and a cartoonist told, that even for navigating "it may better to have one more, an extra data-point" -for you know, something more to... gasp
...no, there was none making it gone "viral". BTT: but sure, maybe politics may do... P-:
[weekend:modus]
(2022)