On Sat, Jun 06, 2009 at 11:17:13PM +0100, Tim Morley wrote:
In a few weeks, I'll have the chance to present OSM to an audience of
youngish (18-30), intelligent, open-minded people, who more than
likely haven't yet come across the project. There may well be people
who are familiar with
On Sat, 2009-06-06 at 23:17 +0100, Tim Morley wrote:
In a few weeks, I'll have the chance to present OSM to an audience of
youngish (18-30), intelligent, open-minded people, who more than
likely haven't yet come across the project. There may well be people
who are familiar with free and
On 07/06/2009 13:48, Richard Weait wrote:
What about quality control?
OpenStreetMap has more surveyors and more quality assurance. Anybody
can fix it. You've seen the failings in commercial maps (slow updates,
limited data, unmapped areas) and in commercial maps you can't fix that.
You,
In a few weeks, I'll have the chance to present OSM to an audience of
youngish (18-30), intelligent, open-minded people, who more than
likely haven't yet come across the project. There may well be people
who are familiar with free and open source software, but that
probably won't be
El Domingo, 7 de Junio de 2009, Tim Morley escribió:
Failing that, how do *you* explain to someone that uses Google Maps
every day why you spend your time re-creating the same thing under a
different name? (Slightly provocative question, perhaps, but it must
be a very common one too -- what's
On Sat, 6 Jun 2009, Tim Morley wrote:
Some videos of OSM themed talks are available at [1] and [2]
You might get ideas from those. [2] has starts out with a discussion on
different freedoms a map might give (or not give).
Searching for OpenStreetMap on slideshare.net also gives many slidedecks
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