A refinement, perhaps Bradley and others agree with me, perhaps not.
A USFS NF is a "virtual" multipolygon (not one in OSM, we can get to that
later) of three kinds of things:
1) An "outer" (but not the biggest one) which is "the enclosing land which USFS
manages, except for inholdings,
On Jun 24, 2020, at 9:40 PM, Bradley White wrote:
> NF congressionally designated boundary, minus private inholdings (more
> specifically, non-USFS-owned land), gives you the boundary of land
> that is actually managed and protected by the USFS. This boundary
> should be tagged with
> However, I'm not exactly sure how the outer polygons found in NFs differ from
> either the "Congressional" boundary or the one Bradley says he would tag
> "boundary=administrative" (and I don't think we should tag it that,
> especially while excluding a specific value for admin_level), but
Summit registers are fairly common on the higher peaks in California.
> On Jun 24, 2020, at 12:07 PM, Mike Thompson wrote:
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 1:03 PM Mateusz Konieczny via Talk-us
> mailto:talk-us@openstreetmap.org>> wrote:
> >
> > Is summit register something that is often
Ray,
As you learned from Spencer Alves, postal codes are not areas. As far as I
know there are no zip code areas in OSM. I would recommend using QGIS and
Postgis to construct your queries using OSM and TIGER zip code boundaries.
Are you looking for any broadband connectivity, just cellular, DSL,
Zip Codes are Not Areas
http://www.georeference.org/doc/zip_codes_are_not_areas.htm
Specifically for Zip codes, the best you could do is query for addr:postcode.
> On Jun 24, 2020, at 2:33 PM, Ray Kiddy wrote:
>
> Hello -
>
> I am interested in where people in the US lack internet connectivity
Wow. Bizarre, but good to know. Yes, I _always_ have thought that
zipcodes partition land areas.
Now I have to wonder if ZCTAs are still around and if they are mapped. I
expect not.
much thanx - ray
On 6/24/20 2:39 PM, Spencer Alves wrote:
Zip Codes are Not Areas
Hello -
I am interested in where people in the US lack internet connectivity and
I keep thinking that I should be able to use OSM for some part of this.
I am recalling (perhaps not accurately) that connectivity information is
published by the FCC and I think that at least some of the
I (momentarily?) recede from my "watching mode" in this thread to offer my
agreement with Mike and to reiterate a slight disagreement with Bradley (or
maybe to ask Bradley and especially the wider list here for clarification), as
while it seems we get closer to a "more definitive" way to tag NF
Another feature that is often found at summits around here is a roughly
constructed shelter, such as:
https://images.app.goo.gl/KogTgXChrGx93Ab96
These have been made over the years by various hikers stacking rocks in a
semicircle. One can sit down inside them and obtain some shelter from the
On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 1:03 PM Mateusz Konieczny via Talk-us <
talk-us@openstreetmap.org> wrote:
>
> Is summit register something that is often found in USA mountains?
At least in Colorado they are. Nowadays they are often pieces of pvc pipe.
Mike
___
Is summit register something that is often found in USA mountains?
("A summit book or summit register is a record of visitors to the summit
of a mountain. It is usually enclosed in a weatherproof, animalproof metal
canister.")
I am asking as I plan to implement summit register part of
seconded stevea -- very interesting and cogent, definitely reading these
National Forest expositions
best regards from Berkeley, California --Brian M Hamlin MAPLABS
___
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Talk-us@openstreetmap.org
On Tue, Jun 23, 2020 at 7:35 PM brad wrote:
>
> There are a few cases where property owners have put up illegal, or very
misleading signs.
I have come across this too. The signs are on private property, but face
you as you are traveling on a legal FS road and looking straight ahead. It
makes
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