Kevin I have a script that collects all the changesets for a BBOX. Below are the coordinates of the BBOX with partly Tibet and India.min_lon=80.6828, min_lat=26.7027, max_lon=87.4739, max_lat=29.8856 regard Pierre
De : Kevin Bullock <kbull...@digitalglobe.com> À : 'Pierre Béland' <pierz...@yahoo.fr>; Andrew Buck <andrew.r.b...@gmail.com>; "hot@openstreetmap.org" <hot@openstreetmap.org> Envoyé le : Mercredi 29 avril 2015 11h53 Objet : RE: [HOT] AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGH! #yiv8126997952 #yiv8126997952 -- _filtered #yiv8126997952 {font-family:Calibri;panose-1:2 15 5 2 2 2 4 3 2 4;} _filtered #yiv8126997952 {font-family:Tahoma;panose-1:2 11 6 4 3 5 4 4 2 4;} _filtered #yiv8126997952 {font-family:Verdana;panose-1:2 11 6 4 3 5 4 4 2 4;} _filtered #yiv8126997952 {font-family:Garamond;panose-1:2 2 4 4 3 3 1 1 8 3;} _filtered #yiv8126997952 {panose-1:0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0;}#yiv8126997952 #yiv8126997952 p.yiv8126997952MsoNormal, #yiv8126997952 li.yiv8126997952MsoNormal, #yiv8126997952 div.yiv8126997952MsoNormal {margin:0in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;font-size:12.0pt;}#yiv8126997952 a:link, #yiv8126997952 span.yiv8126997952MsoHyperlink {color:blue;text-decoration:underline;}#yiv8126997952 a:visited, #yiv8126997952 span.yiv8126997952MsoHyperlinkFollowed {color:purple;text-decoration:underline;}#yiv8126997952 p.yiv8126997952MsoAcetate, #yiv8126997952 li.yiv8126997952MsoAcetate, #yiv8126997952 div.yiv8126997952MsoAcetate {margin:0in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;font-size:8.0pt;}#yiv8126997952 span.yiv8126997952EmailStyle17 {color:#1F497D;}#yiv8126997952 span.yiv8126997952BalloonTextChar {}#yiv8126997952 .yiv8126997952MsoChpDefault {font-size:10.0pt;} _filtered #yiv8126997952 {margin:1.0in 1.0in 1.0in 1.0in;}#yiv8126997952 div.yiv8126997952WordSection1 {}#yiv8126997952 Pierre – those are incredible stats, would love to see an update when convenient. I’ve been followinghttp://osm.townsendjennings.com/nepal/ but your information seems to differ. From: Pierre Béland [mailto:pierz...@yahoo.fr] Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2015 7:57 AM To: Andrew Buck; hot@openstreetmap.org Subject: Re: [HOT] AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGH! I would add to this, This is the ransom of the success we had with the OpenStreetMap responses over the last few years - Haiti 2010 1.5 million edits - Haiyan 2013 4.5 million edits - Ebola million edits 16 milllions up to now? - Nepal 2015, 1.5 million edits in three days (my last count yesterday night) These HOT activations are quite a labotary, both very frustrating and motivating. We grow rapidly, interconnect with more organizations and constantly have to revise our workflows, adapt to new contexts. At the same time, this is what's make our force. What's can help the most in such HOT activations is some groups of experimented OSM contributors that take tasks like validation or routing. At the same time, the coordination is very important. Workflows and progress should be discussed. Amazing also all the products that came out in the last few days proposed by various developpers. Too busy to list them now. Please add these in the wiki. Cheer Pierre De : Andrew Buck <andrew.r.b...@gmail.com> À : hot@openstreetmap.org Envoyé le : Mardi 28 avril 2015 8h18 Objet : Re: [HOT] AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGH! -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I do agree with you in principle, and actually suggested using the information on the task manager linke number of tiles a user has completed to do things like flag new users tiles for extra caution in validating and such. Whether we want to restrict validating by them as well is another possibility. We need to be very careful though to not discourage them because new users are the people that become experienced users a short time later and we need all the volunteers we can get. Also, I do think we tend to focus too much on the task manager, especially during activations; that is why I mentioned the josm thing. It is an excellent tool, and we should definitely continue using it, but we should also look at other ways more experienced mappers can help out. Downloading large areas by an experienced mapper and 'spot checking' them it a very good, and efficient, way of doing QA for those that know how. We need to be thinking of these other, non task manager, workflows for more experienced mappers that don't interfere with the workers on the task managers, but also allow for more efficient work by those who can handle the tools. - -AndrewBuck
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