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From YouTube: Utilizing Open Data Dashboards
Description
Utilizing Open Data Dashboards
A
Hi,
my
name
is
katie
bridges,
I'm
a
senior
data
analyst
for
the
city
of
boulder
and
in
this
video
I'm
going
to
be
talking
about
navigating
dashboards
on
the
city
of
folder's
open
data
portal.
This
dashboard
is
for
bolder
crime
to
get
here.
I
simply
searched
for
bpd
and
saw
there
was
an
application
or
a
dashboard
and
navigated
to
that
page.
It
is
also
available
on
mobile
and
there
will
be
a
separate
video
created
on
that.
A
A
On
the
left
hand,
side
of
the
page
is
information
about
the
dashboard,
including
how
often
it
is
updated
and
the
filters
by
default.
This
specific
dashboard
is
showing
only
the
past
30
days.
If
we
wanted.
We
could
also
show
the
past
60
90
year
to
date,
or
we
could
choose
to
put
a
manual
input
in
and
choose
the
dates
that
we
were
interested
in
for
now,
I'm
going
to
keep
it
at
the
predefined
past
30
days.
A
Other
filters
here
include
the
day
of
the
week.
If
you
wanted
to
see
specific
offenses
that
occurred
on,
say
tuesday,
you
can
also
look
at
selected
report
months
or
selected
categories.
So
if
we
wanted
to
see
all
society
crimes,
we
could
click
on
society
and
the
map
would
filter
to
show
society
there
we
go
there.
We
go
so
on
the
right
hand,
side
of
the
page.
Here
we
can
see
the
total
number
of
offenses
in
each
of
these
categories.
A
A
One
of
the
other
really
cool
features
of
the
map
is,
in
the
top
right
hand,
corner
you'll,
see
a
magnifying
glass.
So
if
you
wanted
to
search
for
a
particular
location,
see
it
within
your
neighborhood
or
a
location
of
interest,
you
could
search
for
that
here.
If
I
look,
for
example,
at
the
boulder
public
library,
I
will
see
several
options
pop
up
that
are
the
boulder
public
library
locations.
A
A
If
I
click
on
a
particular
dot,
I
am
able
to
see
the
date
at
which
this
offense
occurred
and
the
type
of
offense.
So
here
I
can
see
on
the
1600
block
of
broadway.
There
was
a
trespass
of
real
property
on
7
9
20
21
at
7
40
am,
I
could
see
each
of
these
individually
up
here
in
the
top
right.
I
could
also
view
the
legend.
So
if
you
wanted
to
look
by
a
particular
police
district,
you
could
see
where
those
particular
districts
fell.
A
So,
if
you
didn't
like
the
view
here
which
are
showing
kind
of
the
streets
with
our
districts,
you
could
choose
a
different
base
map,
so
I'm
going
to
change
it
here
to
say
imagery
and
you
can
see
where
all
of
the
parks
and
the
buildings
are
within
the
city.
So
you
can
update
that
base
map
as
well.
To
see
where
specific
events
has
occurred
on
the
bottom
of
this
dashboard
is
a
trend
line
that
shows
the
count
of
offenses
over
time.
A
It
is
filtered
based
on
the
offense
type.
So
here
it
is
only
looking
at
the
trend
of
society
offenses.
If
I
unchecked
society
offenses
you'll
notice,
we
had
more
dots
appear
on
the
map
and
we
also
had
our
trend
line
at
the
bottom
of
the
page
update
those
are
the
features
of
the
main
page
at
the
bottom.
You'll
see
several
other
tabs.
A
One
of
those
tabs
is
our
neighbor's
code
description.
If
you
have
questions
about
filtering
by
neighbor's
offense
types,
which
I'm
going
to
click
on
here,
so
if
you
have
questions
about
what
is
counterfeiting
or
forgery,
you
could
use
this
neighbors
code
definitions,
tab,
which
I
will
click
on
here-
to
see.
Counterfeiting
and
forgery.
Is
this
definition,
so
this
will
allow
you
to
look
at
specific
offenses
that
you
might
be
interested
in
the
other
two
tabs
here
are
offense
charts
and
crime
prevention
tips.
A
The
crime
prevention
tips
are
great
to
review
and
incorporate
into
your
day-to-day
life.
The
offense
charts
take
the
same
underlying
data
that
was
on
the
main
page,
that
of
all
offenses,
and
allows
several
different
views
at
the
top
here.
We're
looking
at
year-over-year
offenses,
so
you
can
see
how
2021
is
comparing
to
2019
and
2020.
A
of
note
august
is
looks
to
be
below
average,
but
it
is
right
now
only
the
fifth
of
august,
so
it
is
not
able
to
predict
future
offenses.
It's
only
looking
at
those
in
the
system,
so
this
is
only
a
subset
of
the
full
month.
Sorry,
a
subset
of
august
2021
compared
to
the
full
month
of
august
in
2019
and
2020.
A
the
chart
below
this
looks
at
total
offenses
we
can
see
the
top
offense
is
all
other
offenses,
which
does
include
quite
a
few.
Second
is
all
other
larceny,
followed
by
destruction
and
damage
of
property.
Again,
the
filters
on
the
left
do
update
these
charts.
So
if
I
wanted
to
look
at
person
crimes,
for
example,
we
can
see
if
person
crimes
the
top
one
is
simple
assault.
There
have
been
45
simple
assaults
that
the
bpd
has
responded
to
within
the
last
30
days.
A
A
The
bottom
two
charts
look
at
trend
by
time,
so
looking
at
day
of
week
and
hour
of
day,
these
are
also
interactive.
So
if
we
wanted
to
see
person
crimes
on
a
friday,
we
could
click
friday
and
on
fridays
you
can
see
there
were
seven
simple
assaults:
five
intimidations
three
sex,
offenses
forcible
and
two
aggravated
assaults.
A
So
if
you
wanted
to
do
this
analysis,
you
could
kind
of
click
on
different
bars
and
see
what
you
see
different
trends.
This
would
work
the
other
way
too.
If
we
clicked
on
simple
assault,
we
could
see
the
trends
by
day
of
the
week
and
hour
of
the
day,
so
this
interactivity
between
the
offense
charts
and
the
map
page
should
allow
citizens
the
opportunity
to
dive
into
this
data
and
ask
very
specific
questions
and
be
able
to
analyze
them
in
further
detail.