Public datasets on Timetric

The public data on Timetric comes from governments and other public bodies. We clean it up and normalize it, so that you can browse and compare data from any of these sources.


Amazon Web Services - Spot Price

From the Amazon Web Services

Amazon Spot Instances (http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/spot-instances/) is a way to use Amazon's EC2 compute cloud, at a price based on an auction model. This price is constantly fluctuating according to the demand placed on the EC2 cloud. We've tracked the history of these prices since the Spot Instance service was launched in December 2009.

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BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2010

From BP

BP, formerly British Petroleum is one of the world's largest energy companies. It provides its customers with fuel for transportation, energy, retail services and petrochemicals products. BP publishes a compilation of energy production and consumption metrics in this annual review.

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European Central Bank reference foreign exchange rates

From the European Central Bank

The European Central Bank publishes reference exchange rates between the Euro and other major currencies, based on rates from the central banks of all EU members.

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Eurostat: The European Union's Statistical Service

From Eurostat

Eurostat is the statistical office of the European Union. Situated in Luxembourg, it collates and publishes international statistics of interest to the EU and its member governments. It's an enormously rich resource, containing upwards of 80 million timeseries - we've brought you the highlights here, covering all the key indicators you need in making business decisions.

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METAR Weather data

From the National Weather Service (US)

Ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure as reported to the NOAA through the METAR system.

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Netmarketshare internet trends

From Netmarketshare

As recorded by internet traffic. Netmarketshare derive these series by aggregating information provided by the clients that access the network of websites that use their service

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Penn World Table for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices

From the Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices, University of Pennsylvania

The Penn World Table, generated by the University of Pennsylvania's Economics department, is one of the leading sources of public macroeconomic data - information about the size and state of the world's economies. It provides purchasing power parity and national income accounts converted to international prices for 188 countries for some or all of the years 1950-2004. In addition, the European Union or the OECD provide more detailed purchasing power and real product estimates for their countries and the World Bank makes current price estimates for most PWT countries at the GDP level.

Reference: Alan Heston, Robert Summers and Bettina Aten, Penn World Table Version 6.3, Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices at the University of Pennsylvania, August 2009.

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St. Louis Fed: Economic data - FREDĀ®

From the St. Louis Fed

FREDĀ® - Federal Reserve Economic Data - is a database of U.S. economic time series. We've imported all these series, covering everything from exchange rates to employment patterns throughout all fifty states of the Union, into Timetric. If you're looking for insight into the current financial climate, this is a really good place to start.

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The UK Office of National Statistics' Timezone time series database

From the Office of National Statistics (UK)

The UK Office of National Statistics' 'Timezone' time-series dataset covers every aspect of British economic life. As a collection of tens of thousands of individual measurements - of inflation, employment, trade, retail, stocks, currency and commodity prices, and just about anything else imaginable - it's breathtakingly broad. If you want to understand the British economy, all the data you need is here. Up until now, though, it's been hard to find and even harder to interpret once you've found it, so we've converted, uploaded and indexed it for you.

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The World Bank

From the World Bank

Including World Development Indicators (WDI), the primary World Bank database for development data from officially-recognized international sources.

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US Energy Information Administration: Sales, Revenue & Prices

From the Energy Information Administration (US)

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