The Chronoscope Annotated Timeline
(http://timepedia.org/chronoscope/docs/gviz/) supports similar
features to Google's, but supports date ranges from nanoseconds to
millions of years. The zoom links panel auto-adjusts to the range and
frequency of the data, it renders up to 10s of thousands of datapoints
at full performance, has JS, Flash, iPhone, and Android versions,
multiple range axes, and loads more. It currently isn't in the gallery
because we are readying a new version that supports arbitrary tuples
of data per point, candle-stick charts (open/high/low/last tuple),
bubble charts, hover events, etc. Also, streaming datasets with
millions of points.
-Ray
On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 11:10 AM, Greg Pilla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This question has also been raised for the AnnotatedTimeLine
> visualization as well, so I'm guessing the response will be similar,
> but it doesn't hurt to ask anyway, so...
>
> Are there any plans on increasing the time resolution for MotionChart
> so that it matches the resolution of the Date object? In other words,
> will we be able to animate between datapoints taken on hour, minute,
> or second intervals?
>
> I just want to say that I'm happy with the additions that have been
> made to AnnotatedTimeLine and MotionChart since I first started using
> this toolkit (although I will probably always want more :{P ). Good
> work guys and gals!
> >
>
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