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Understanding

Understanding

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $16.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extraordinary
Review: A totally new way of transforming information, conveying ideas and seeing new patterns. Well done Mr. Wurman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful & Interesting
Review: Do you like boring garphics? Or, do you prefer to see only labels in a chart cause you have difficulty understanding that a picture of a young teenager probably means "young teenagers" and that a picture of an old person means "old people"? If your answer is yes, this book isn't for you. Please understand that this book isn't either "good" or "bad," everything will depend of what you like.

I bave been in many countries and I have never seen a book so well done: it is beautiful, creative and makes "data" to become alive and interesting. As far as having difficulty in understanding the graphics, I found that there were only two chapters (out of 13) that were a little more difficult to understand. These chapters, in my opinion, were not important ones (but the graphics look amazing). It will be great if there could have a little preview of this book at amazon.com so people could have a better idea how it looks inside. I am sure that many people would be deligthed to have this book at home as it is one of the best book done about this subject worldwide!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Understanding---it is NOT!
Review: From the promise of the title you expect to be presented with a lucid, logical, intuitive compilation of interesting information. You will be disappointed! The promise is empty. Not that the graphics aren't excellent, but the dis-organization of the book throws it all off. There is no table of contents, no index, no page numbers. There are about a dozen sub-tables of contents buried within the book, but they are a mess as well. Each is organized by contributor, with endlessly ovelapping topics. While it might be fun to flip through this from time to time, if you seek to look anything up, you may have to turn each of the 300 pages to find it. And heaven forbid you want to mark/refer to an interesting page - without pages numbers it's rather difficult. I think they should recall all of these and hire Don Nornam or Ed Tufte to create a thoughtful, intuitive means of knowing what's in here and how to find it. What were these guys thinking? Excellent idea, terrible implementation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Making the invisible completely visible
Review: I have kept this book close by ever since I first came across it in 1999. I have been surprised to see the mediocre reviews on it because I consider it to be one of the best efforts at making enormous amounts of information about everything in our society and world accessible and understandable. You have to realize that the information is complex and the graphic interface which reveals the information has depth and takes more than a cursory look to really see the entire picture. I gave this book to all my sons, friends and others who want to see and understand the huge amounts of information that swirl around our lives. Each page stands on its own and it is the kind of book I never get tired of. I learn something new every time I pick it up. This is a wonderful and fun book about very complex information. A tour de force in my opinion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Graphics!
Review: I read the reviews on Amazon.com as well as other media before ordering the book. I new that Amazon would take it back if it was not up to my expectations, so I took the plunge. To my great delight, I found the book to be more than interesting- it is exciting! I'm a bookaholic - but this book would appeal to even those folks who don't usually like to read. The information leaps off the page because of the great graphic format. A couple of the graphs have information that simply can't be correct - but I have checked several in other sources and they are surprising, but correct. Buy this book and leave it on a table - your teenagers will pick it up and learn by accident.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Breathtaking
Review: I've never had a head for facts and figures which is why statistics of how many of this or the cost of that always bored the pants off of me regardless of how much I could use the information. This book changed all that for me and is the finest example of data visualization I've ever seen.

Open it to any page and whether the subject is: how much does it cost to raise a child or poverty by race, the information screams at you in easy to understand graphics and brilliantly conceived and executed diagrams.

The information presented is almost encyclopedic in scope exploring complex and facinating issues presented in a variety of manners by a variety of contributors that employ many differing ways of explaining data, but what they all have in common is a high degree of creativity, a wonderful use of color and crystal clarity.

By the end of the book, which can be viewed in any order you choose, you are bound to be not only impressed with the design and beauty, but you're sure to have a clear understanding of just how the United States is constructed and operates at the start of the year 2000.

This book is a treasure.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An exercise in self-delusion
Review: If you need to witness intellectual Onanism by a group of graphic designers, many of whom seem to have unhealthily high opinions of themselves, this anthology is for you. Some of the charts, such as those by Hamid Rashi, are completely incomprehensible to the point of self-parody, albeit probably intended to be trendy. Others, such as those by Ramano Rao, might convey useful information, but are printed on colored backgrounds and hence unreadable.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An exercise in self-delusion
Review: If you need to witness intellectual Onanism by a group of graphic designers, many of whom seem to have unhealthily high opinions of themselves, this anthology is for you. Some of the charts, such as those by Hamid Rashi, are completely incomprehensible to the point of self-parody, albeit probably intended to be trendy. Others, such as those by Ramano Rao, might convey useful information, but are printed on colored backgrounds and hence unreadable.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Let Down
Review: In Wurman's InformationAnxiety2, he not so sheepishly plugs UNDERSTANDING with paragraphs such as,

"Not only is this a valuable tool in a civics class or history class or economics class or social studies class, but it is the perfect demonstration for educators on the different ways in which people learn: visually, audibly and tangibly."

Too bad Wurman is grossly incorrect. The data in this book is difficult to decipher and understand. One must truly work with the book to derive the benefits of the data presented--which goes against the grain of the books mission.

Wurman tells the story of the publication of Understanding in InformationAnxiety2, indicating that UNDERSTANDING was done in fast fashion.

"It was printed in December 1999-nine months after it was an idea that everyone said was impossible. Would it have been nice to have had page numbers? Yep. A table of contents? Yep. An index? Yep. But, I got it done. That's the art of the possible."

Too bad the book is next to impossible to use.

Sadly, too, the complimentary web site is a real mess in terms of visibility (can't resize the text and must open more and more widows to get the real value of the site) and usability.

It's a shame. The information presented in the book and on the site is incredibly valuable and helpful. Prepare to work to get it though.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A Complete Disappointment. Don't waste your money.
Review: Richard Wurman started his career creating informative and interesting visualizations of data. Unfortunately he has descended over the last few years into a love of chartjunk and bad design. The diagrams included in this book are as bad as any of Edward Tufte's well known examples of horrible information design. The colors are over the top. 3d charts are used when a 1d line would suffice. Infoporn is probably the best description what this book contains.

Highly NOT recommended. This book is TRASH. Save your money, or at least us it to pick up one of Tufte's books. There is no comparison.


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