Josef,
FWIW, I'm happy to help get you started with gnuplot if that's where you
end up. Might be good enough for your immediate needs.
I've also dabbled in R a little bit if that is what you'd rather do.
Henrik Thostrup Jensen <htj at nordu.net> wrote
Wed, 9 Dec 2015 13:37:40 +0100 (CET):
| Hi
|
| I've been using d3 for a couple of things. But I am by no means good
| at it. If you are lucky there is something at the d3 example page that
| could be useful.
https://github.com/mbostock/d3/wiki/Gallery
|
| Note that a couple of hours will probably not take you that far. Good
| visualization is a significantly bigger time sink that it looks like
| from afar.
|
| Otherwise there is gnuplot. Old and reliable, not superdifficult (but
| almost impossible to make it look "good").
|
| /Henrik
|
| On Wed, 9 Dec 2015, josef wrote:
|
| > Hi,
| >
| > I’m looking for someone who knows a thing or two about data
| > visualisation and has a few hours to spare.
| > I have a few sets of entries (accepted root certificates in CT logs,
| > 10 logs with 20-500 entries each) and I’m interested in showing how
| > they overlap, preferably with the possibility to klick around a
| > bit. There are probably some people online who would also find it
| > interesting…
| >
| > I don’t really know anything about setting up the front end but I
| > have some scripts for generating the data. Anyone interested?
| >
| > // Josef
|
|
| Best regards, Henrik
|
| Henrik Thostrup Jensen <htj at nordu.net>
| Software Developer, NORDUnet