COVID-19 Visualizer
corona virus live update world-map
An interactive COVID-19 visualizer (coronavirus) that highlights countries around the world based on the most recent cases.
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Interactive COVID-19 resources are continuing to pop up online, providing up-to-date figures on the novel coronavirus pandemic for the public, researchers and public health authorities to view.
Johns Hopkins University's live COVID-19 tracker made waves when the internet first discovered its up-to-date data, covering new COVID-19 developments around the world.
Now, the COVID Visualiser is also providing a live, interactive experience for users to track the virus.
The covidvisualizer.com website was created in the US by developers at Carnegie Mellon University. It allows users to click on a country, territory or region of interest to peruse the area's confirmed number of COVID-19 cases, active number of cases, recoveries and deaths.
The map uses data derived from Worldometre's real-time updates, a platform that provides up-to-the-minute statistics based on reliable sources from around the world.
The researchers from Carnegie Mellon who developed the map, Navid Mamoon and Gabriel Rasskin, say they wanted to provide a simple and interactive way to visualise the impact of COVID-19.
"We wanted people to be able to see this as something that brings us all together. It's not one country, or another country; it's one planet - and this is what our planet looks like today," they wrote on their website.
The covidvisualizer.com website was created in the US by developers at Carnegie Mellon University. It allows users to click on a country, territory or region of interest to peruse the area's confirmed number of COVID-19 cases, active number of cases, recoveries and deaths.
The map uses data derived from Worldometre's real-time updates, a platform that provides up-to-the-minute statistics based on reliable sources from around the world.
The researchers from Carnegie Mellon who developed the map, Navid Mamoon and Gabriel Rasskin, say they wanted to provide a simple and interactive way to visualise the impact of COVID-19.
"We wanted people to be able to see this as something that brings us all together. It's not one country, or another country; it's one planet - and this is what our planet looks like today," they wrote on their website.
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