On Sep 17, 6:13 pm, Rossko <[email protected]> wrote:
> But beware the terms of whichever geocoding service you might use ...
> Google's geocoder for instance, is for providing data for use on
> Google's maps (reasonably). Using the service to identify photos with
> convenient labels sounds to be outside of those terms?
we are using google maps in a lot of ways for all of these images -
they are used on our own world map, in georss, on google earth, etc.
So maybe i'm not getting exactly what you mean.
>
> I think your 'friendly' idea might only be friendly for the speakers
> of one language, isn't this a world deal?
I'm talking about a URL, not a title (which can exist in many
languages, and ours do). a URL can be something that makes sense when
you read it, or something that doesn't make sense. I am trying to
create URLs that make some sense, rather than URLs that don't give any
evidence of what the page is about. For speakers of any language.
Whatever the address is, it might be easy or less easy for a speaker
of a certain language to guess what the page is about. Certainly, URLs
are less interesting for chinese people, but that's nothing I can
really do anything about ;-)
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