On 02 Apr 2014, at 15:40, Karsten Loesing karsten@torproject.org wrote:
On 02/04/14 11:46, thomas lörtsch wrote:
nice work! One nitpick: if the legend to the left was colour coded like the graphs I would not need to hover over the graphs to see which curve reflects which category.
Right, I asked the same thing on the ticket:
Ah, cool. I didn’t know the URL for the tracker.
I was thinking about how it could be possible to combine all perspectives in one graphing window. Especially the seperate window for the bandwidth perspective seems a little wasted and disconnected. Maybe the bandwidth could be rendered as a backdrop plane behind the curves, then on top / in front of it the bandwidth graphs in shades of e.g. red to yellow and the weights graphs in shades of blue to green. Not sure if that works or if you have tried it already. Would need 3 scales on the left, probably colour coded again. Benefit would be that the time slider on the bottom would work for all perspectives synchronously. I always like to have all the information in one place so that my eye doesnt have to wonder, my brain doesn’t have to correlate etc. But of course there’s a treshold where the interface get’s too cluttered to be useful anymore.
Hmm. I don't fully understand the graph that you suggest. Can you attach a draft, maybe even something drawn on paper?
Just imagine all curves in one graphic instead of three. And then I’m making suggestions on how to make that mess readable again :)
My initial reaction is that this is going to be a heavily overloaded graph.
That is of course the problem. It would have to be tested how far color coding can help. Probably your instinct is right and it’s not feasable. Maybe Christian already tried and dismissed it.
In particular putting three different scales on the y axis is discouraged, I think.
That’s solvable. Bandwidth scale to the left, weights to the right, and uptime doesn’t really need a scale (just a legend saying that 100% equals the full height of the graphic).
Also, with all the different colors this graph becomes pretty hard to understand for color-blind people.
It’s definitely not for color-blind people, but I don’t see a way around that since different styles for strokes (like ‘dotted’ etc) make the curves pretty hard. I don’t know about the details though - which colors are more problematic then others, what are critical tresholds between shades of colors etc.
If there's a way to overcome these problems, happy to brainstorm more about the topic. :)
Ciao Thomas