Showing posts with label Analysis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Analysis. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Analysis Challenge: Can you earn the most Gallery views this month?

One month ago, we launched the Recorded Future Gallery, and we’re delighted that the publicly shared reports have already racked up more than 10,000 views! This fast start is exciting, but we know the surface is only scratched.


So, we’re hosting a contest during February to see which talented analyst using Recorded Future can create the most interesting report! We'll crown a champion the week of March 4.
It’s easy to participate:

During February log in or sign up for freeCreate a report, and publish it to the Gallery.At the end of the month, the author of the most viewed report wins a new iPod 5.

It’s no holds barred for spreading the word, so tweet, link, and promote your work throughout the month to earn more views. For inspiration, there are examples on Analysis Intelligence, and below, you’ll find two featured reports from the Gallery.


While you’re building a killer report for the contest, know that we also have tools specifically designed for power analysts.


Formerly known as Premium, Recorded Future Professional adds the following capabilities to the free Basic toolkit:

Export for visualizations (image, PDF, PPT, HTML) and data (CSV, KML)Private workspace for saving reports and sharing with individualsAdvanced search tools for querying by publication time, source attributes, and language.

Upgrade to Professional from your Recorded Future Basic, or you can purchase a subscription directly.

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Debuting New Source Analysis Tools

Those of you following Recorded Future for a while will remember a visualization that allowed you to explore reporting on events by different source attributes. We're excited to reintroduce that functionality in the form of a new Source Map view available now in the Basic and Professional suite of tools. This visualization allows analysts to compare how events are reported across media types and source locations as well as what sources are most prominent, fastest to report, and positive or negative on particular events.


Below you'll find examples for several of the aforementioned uses. Click on the images to explore the new Source Map live in Recorded Future, and be sure to try out the different filtering options available via the "Customize View" menu.



The view is able to deconstruct a set of events according to the media category of reporting sources: blog, mainstream, niche, government, etc. See a live example here.

Click for live view


The Source Map can be used to display how events were reported based on the location of those media sources. The data is structured at the country level, so in the above example, you can see that United States, New Zealand, and Australian media outlets are dominating coverage of recent events related to North Korea.

Click for live view


Sources will often focus their energy on different subjects, rely on particular individuals for quotes, or skew the news in one direction or another. The organization of subject matter reported by different sources allows analysts to better understand those biases.



There are many other dimensions of source data to be explored in Recorded Future. Above, you'll see sources reporting on recent Microsoft events described by the sentiment of their reporting on the company. Other ways to evaluate the data include identifying those sources that report most frequently on a subject, most frequently break news of events, and even locations of events sorted by country of reporting sources.


Give the new features a try, and let us know what you think!