Import your own data
Upload data tables from spreadsheets or CSV files, even KML. Developers can use
the
Fusion Tables API
to insert, update, delete and query data programmatically.
You can export your data as CSV or KML too.
Visualize it instantly
See the data on a map or
as a chart immediately.
Use filters for more selective visualizations.
Publish your visualization on other web properties
Now that you've got that nice map or chart of your data, you can embed
it in a web page or blog post. Or send a link by email or IM.
It will always display the latest data values
from your table and helps you communicate your story more easily.
Look at the
Fusion Tables Example Gallery
Turn location tables into maps
Points, lines, polygons, customer addresses, placenames, countries and more can
be mapped in minutes with Fusion Tables. Columns with location data are
automatically interpreted.
Find the story in your data
Apply colors or icons based on your data.
Make an intensity map for countries, states or provinces.
Use KML polygons to make custom intensity maps.
Show a heat map of point locations.
Display thousands of trails at one time. It's easy to turn
a datafile into a map that tells the story visually.
Share that map!
Embed it in a blog, send collaborators a link, save it as a KML file to view in
Google Earth, or even take advantage of Fusion Tables to host your dynamic KML
link so collaborators will always see the latest mapped data.
Fusion Tables is like an online file format
Want to make data available? Link to your dataset hosted in Fusion
Tables and your website's users can see the data without downloading
it. They can explore ways to map, chart, calculate on or even search
the data. They can apply filters and download just the subset that's
useful to them. Or you can prevent export - it's up to you.
Always distribute the most correct version of your data
Enable use without creating hundreds of copies of your data sitting
around on hard drives. When data is hosted in Fusion Tables, viewers
will always see the latest version. Charts or maps they've made will
automatically update when you improve your dataset.
Need to attract developers? Offer an API on your data, instantly
When your data is hosted in Fusion Tables, it's immediately enabled
with an API that you can give developers permission to use. And whenever
we write tutorials or add new API capabilities, your data gets the benefit
automatically, without requiring tech staff attention by your organization.
Merge your data with other people's data
Does someone else have different data about the same entities you do?
Whether it's countries or caterpillar specimens, tables of data owned by different
people can be merged virtually in Fusion Tables to see all information in one place.
Always up to date
When any base data table is updated, the merged table will show the latest value too.
Share only what you want to
Need to keep some of your dataset private? Publish a subset of rows
or columns that stays
up-to-date with the original table, but has its own share permissions.
Build on public data sets
Some data owners have selected to make their data public. Search for and
take a look at these
data sets or call them via the
Fusion Tables API.
You can merge with another person's public KML boundaries to make a
custom intensity map, merge a flag image data set to make your map bubbles more colorful,
and much more.
Keep track of who owns what
Fusion Tables helps you keep track of where data is from. During import or
at any time, you can specify attribution for the data. The attribution will
appear even when your data is merged into other tables.
Invite collaborators to view, contribute columns or edit
Just enter the email addresses of the people with whom you want to share a
table and send them an invitation.
Make sure they see it your way
When you've applied filters, sorting, and a visualization to tell your story,
send a link to colleagues so they can see exactly what you're seeing in the data.
Discuss data rows, columns or cells
Your data's viewers can leave feedback on the data per column, row or cell.
Discussions keep track of who said what, and any changes to the data over time.
You can get notifications of any comments directly to your email inbox.