Or you ask them a additional question: what store/coffee shop is it located
in. And on top of collecting wifi data, you collect POI data
On Jul 9, 2016 4:00 AM, "Martin Koppenhoefer"
wrote:
sent from a phone
> Il giorno 09 lug 2016, alle ore 02:47, Bryce Nesbitt
sent from a phone
> Il giorno 09 lug 2016, alle ore 02:47, Bryce Nesbitt
> ha scritto:
>
> You just connected to a hotspot: none is in the database, add it?
>
> Then have the user drag it to just the right spot, and add metadata:
just that mostly/often you won't know
Definitely this is the type of thing you want to pop up and say:
You just connected to a hotspot: none is in the database, add it?
Then have the user drag it to just the right spot, and add metadata:
* Open/Password/Open With Confirmation Screen
* Free/Pay/Customers Only
* Speedtest
Hi Michael,
Am 06.07.2016 um 11:34 schrieb Michael Graaf:
> I write on behalf of a team preparing to create an app (free as in beer as
> well as in speech) which will help users find WiFi hotspots and also review
> them or report new ones. We already have some data-sets which appear to be
>
On Wed, Jul 6, 2016 at 5:59 PM, Greg Troxel wrote:
I can see two approaches to what you want to do. One option is to make
> a database of hotspots separate from OSM, with lat/lon for each. Or
> perhaps also a reference to an object in OSM. Then you can display that
> on an
Michael Graaf writes:
> I write on behalf of a team preparing to create an app (free as in beer as
> well as in speech) which will help users find WiFi hotspots and also review
> them or report new ones. We already have some data-sets which appear to be
> public-domain,
Greetings all,
I write on behalf of a team preparing to create an app (free as in beer as
well as in speech) which will help users find WiFi hotspots and also review
them or report new ones. We already have some data-sets which appear to be
public-domain, but these things keep changing hence our