Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Dair Grant
On Sat, Jan 2, 2010 at 6:36 PM, Martin Koppenhoefer
dieterdre...@gmail.comwrote:

It is our main page and a closed project on the main page of OSM IMHO
 doesn't suit well.


IMHO, a closed project on the main page is a good thing.

What is the purpose of the OSM web site? It is partly to provide a way for
end-users to view a map (although we provide a much simpler experience than
other sites), but it is also to show people what can be done with OSM data.

Those two goals have overlapped at times, but IMO the latter is more
important: showcasing useful and innovative things that have been done with
OSM data is more important than trying to split ourselves into open (terms
and conditions will apply) and not.


-dair
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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

Richard Fairhurst wrote:
 So I don't want OSM to get into arguments about opener than thou - 

Ok, then let's not use open. Let's just say some things (where you can 
look at how they're done as opposed to not being told) are better than 
others.

Or is there anyone who disagrees - anyone who thinks it is better if 
we are not told how something works?

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Tobias Knerr
Dair Grant wrote:
 showcasing useful and innovative things that have been done with
 OSM data is more important than trying to split ourselves into open (terms
 and conditions will apply) and not.

If it is there to show what can be done with OSM data, it does a very
poor job. The only thing it shows is an inferior Google Map clone:
pre-rendered tiles that cannot even be configured or modified in any
meaningful way. It doesn't help to demonstrate the the advantages of
having access to raw map *data* at all.

In order to truly show what's possible, we would need to completely
redesign that front page into a featured products catalogue that could
list routing applications, Garmin converters, OSM clocks, renderers,
paper maps and so on. This would, of course, include closed applications.

As it is, that page doesn't really serve the purpose of presenting OSM
products. Instead, it presents OSM data *itself* - with features such as
changeset list, data layer, XML export, etc.. And for that purpose, we
don't need closed rendering styles.

Tobias Knerr

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

Frederik Ramm wrote:
 Ok, then let's not use open. Let's just say some things (where you can 
 look at how they're done as opposed to not being told) are better than 
 others.

That was unnecessarily provocative, I admit. I think I will settle for 
the wording:

relevant material available under free and open license

And then wherever we list projects that use OSM data, just fill that out 
with a yes or no. I would like to make it more objective than free and 
open license, but if you put something like OSI license there then 
you focus too much on software, whereas the relevant material could 
also be a work of art licensed under CC.

Plus, the wording free and open license is also what the OSMF license 
working group suggests for the ODbL contributor agreement, so it cannot 
be completely bogus, can it?

(BTW I have no strong opinion on what to show on the main page and what 
not; I think it is ok to show non-open stuff on the main page but it 
should be made clear that it is non-open. If Google were to create a 
cool OSM based map rendering would we list it *without* pointing out 
that it is proprietary?)

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Andy Allan
On Sun, Jan 3, 2010 at 2:26 AM, Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com wrote:

 It needs to be one way or the other.
 Personally I think it _should_ be promoting map renderings, but on it's
 main map page it should be one that is truly open in the sense of OSM.

This sense of OSM seems to have been redefined recently, to no
longer mean community-based-mapping nor open-licensed-geo-data but
instead something involving the software licences of whatever tool is
used to process the data. Did I miss the memo?

Cheers,
Andy

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Dave F.
Tobias Knerr wrote:
 In order to truly show what's possible, we would need to completely
 redesign that front page into a featured products catalogue that could
 list routing applications, Garmin converters, OSM clocks, renderers,
 paper maps and so on. This would, of course, include closed applications.
Sounds like a good idea.
It doesn't have to be completely redesigned, just a link saying:

And here's some other great ways in which OSM can be used...

http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/List_of_OSM_based_Services

Excuse my ignorance - OSM Clock?


Dave F.






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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-03 Thread Tobias Knerr
Dave F. wrote
 Tobias Knerr wrote:
 In order to truly show what's possible, we would need to completely
 redesign that front page into a featured products catalogue [...]
 It doesn't have to be completely redesigned, just a link saying:
 
 And here's some other great ways in which OSM can be used...
 
 http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/List_of_OSM_based_Services

I'd prefer a somewhat nicer presentation than a raw table (and a more
selective approach, the full list can always be accessible using a more
... link or something like that), but the wiki page would be a good
first step.

IIRC there already were some suggestions and designs a few months ago,
either on this list or talk-de, but I'm currently unable to find them.

 Excuse my ignorance - OSM Clock?

http://www.opengeodata.org/2009/11/25/openstreetmap-clocks/

Tobias Knerr

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Frederik Ramm
Richard,

 In my view, what matters is someone's _overall_ contribution to OSM, not 
 their unquestioning adherence to the doctrine of free.

I am not talking about classifying *people* into properly open and 
proprietary - I wanted to classify *projects*.

The author of, say, openmtbmap can be the nicest guy  major OSM 
contributor; if openmtbmap is - for whatever valid reason - not open in 
the sense of letting everyone else look into and use openmtbmap, then we 
should very clearly make this distinction, rather than act as if 
openmtbmap were as open as OpenStreetMap itself.

The same author may have other projects which are properly open and 
which we would of course praise as such.

 Faced with one person who makes an enormous contribution to OSM, but 
 chooses to keep one aspect of their contributions closed-source; and 
 another whose main contribution is a lot of wiki voting, but has sent 
 two preset patches, assiduously annotated with some inordinate licence 
 preamble in capital letters - well, I couldn't criticise the former or 
 deny them any respect. And applying pressure rather smacks of that 
 Proper attribution lynch mob.

I think it is really important to not take this to the personal level. 
Just because user X does something propietary with OSM data doesn't mean 
that he is less of a nice guy. However (on the other hand) just because 
he is a nice guy doesn't mean that something proprietary he produces 
should be treated as if it was part of the family.

I'm doing business with OSM and I'm not ashamed to say that some things 
I do are proprietary. Others are open. I don't expect my proprietary 
stuff to feature prominently on the OSM web pages. I would not feel 
ostracised if OSM makes the distinction, saying about some these are 
cool projects that share the OSM spirit of openness and we fully embrace 
 recommend them and about others these are other projects/services 
using OSM data but they are non-free.

 Hey, I managed a whole post about Not-properly-Open without mentioning 
 the GPL. ...oh crap.

Well, of course in my mind I'm not making the distinction between a) 
free/open and b) proprietary, but between a**) absolutely free and not 
requiring to sell your soul to RMS, a) free/open if you sell your soul, 
b) proprietary. But I felt that was too much to recommend in one go.

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Dave F.
Dave F. wrote:
 John Smith wrote:
   
 2010/1/2 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
   
 
 I think it's high time this was done. IMO, OCM should be removed from
 the main map options asked persuasively to rename themselves as they're
 not really open, are they?
 
   
 What do you suggest they rename to?

 FreeCycleMap? :)
 
 Yeah, why not?
   
Is there a wiki page that lists all the sites that use OSM data. I think 
OCM should be put there.

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Richard Fairhurst
Frederik Ramm wrote:
 Just because user X does something propietary with OSM data doesn't mean
 that he is less of a nice guy. However (on the other hand) just because
 he is a nice guy doesn't mean that something proprietary he produces
 should be treated as if it was part of the family.

But what's the family?

People have written open-source OSM apps for closed platforms (Windows, 
OS X) and runtimes (Flash Player and formerly Java). Others spend time 
reverse-engineering closed formats (.img) for closed hardware (Garmin). 
I suspect the site JS has some hacks to make it render properly on (the 
closed-source) Internet Explorer. You could argue, and there are some 
reading this list who do, that these are therefore non-free and 
shouldn't be included in the OSM family.

OSM's raison-d'etre is free geodata. Nothing else. If we start getting 
doctrinal about how we think people should interact with the data, I 
think OSM, as a project, becomes more insular and less viable.

cheers
Richard

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Ulf Lamping
Am 02.01.2010 14:57, schrieb Richard Fairhurst:
 Frederik Ramm wrote:
 Just because user X does something propietary with OSM data doesn't mean
 that he is less of a nice guy. However (on the other hand) just because
 he is a nice guy doesn't mean that something proprietary he produces
 should be treated as if it was part of the family.

 But what's the family?

 People have written open-source OSM apps for closed platforms (Windows,
 OS X) and runtimes (Flash Player and formerly Java). Others spend time
 reverse-engineering closed formats (.img) for closed hardware (Garmin).
 I suspect the site JS has some hacks to make it render properly on (the
 closed-source) Internet Explorer. You could argue, and there are some
 reading this list who do, that these are therefore non-free and
 shouldn't be included in the OSM family.

This argument is a bit pointless, as you cannot draw the line where to 
stop it. Your graphic card BIOS is probably closed source, your harddisk 
BIOS is probably closed source, ... ;-)

The question for me is simply: Does the project open it's *own* work or not?

 OSM's raison-d'etre is free geodata. Nothing else. If we start getting
 doctrinal about how we think people should interact with the data, I
 think OSM, as a project, becomes more insular and less viable.

For me it's not about how people should interact, but just to make it 
clear what's open (in the sense of open source) and what is not.

A good example:

http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OSM_Map_On_Garmin#Software

has a column License, which makes it pretty clear.


A bad example:

http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OSM_Map_On_Garmin/Download

has no such column and it's a hassle to find out, which of the projects 
are open and which are not. Hint: a lot are not :-(

Regards, ULFL

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Joseph Reeves
 FreeCycleMap? :)
 Yeah, why not?

What's your definition of Free? Beer, speech or freedom? Following
your argument we'd have to call it
NoUpFrontFinancialCostToTheUser(ApartFromBandwidth)CycleMap

Or we channel the communities abilities into mapping rather than
arguing about this ;-)



2010/1/2 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
 John Smith wrote:
 2010/1/2 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:

 I think it's high time this was done. IMO, OCM should be removed from
 the main map options asked persuasively to rename themselves as they're
 not really open, are they?


 What do you suggest they rename to?

 FreeCycleMap? :)
 Yeah, why not?



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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Dave F.
Joseph Reeves wrote:
 FreeCycleMap? :)
   
 Yeah, why not?
 

 What's your definition of Free? Beer, speech or freedom? Following
 your argument we'd have to call it
 NoUpFrontFinancialCostToTheUser(ApartFromBandwidth)CycleMap

 Or we channel the communities abilities into mapping rather than
 arguing about this ;-)

I don't see how free speech is relevant in this case so - free beer.

It can be called whatever they like - MyCycleMap perhaps. It doesn't 
have to declare itself in the name - explain what it's source is in an 
'About...' dialog box along with an explanation about what it's keeping 
hidden.

But, remove it from the main page where it appears comparable with OSM 
in the open sense, which it clearly isn't.

My abilities have spent much time mapping over the previous week so I'm 
quite happy now, pointing out things that I think are out of proportion.

Cheers
Dave F.

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Martin Koppenhoefer
2010/1/2 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com

 But, remove it from the main page where it appears comparable with OSM
 in the open sense, which it clearly isn't.



+1, IMHO it should not be an option on the main map page as it is less
open than OSM. Instead we could have other projects there, that are as
open as OSM (and that preferably cover the whole planet, don't know how much
of those there are at the moment).

I agree with Frederik that this is a discussion about the project, not about
Andy and his other contributions. It is our main page and a closed project
on the main page of OSM IMHO doesn't suit well.

cheers,
Martin
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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Richard Fairhurst

Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
 +1, IMHO it should not be an option on the main map page as it is 
 less open than OSM. Instead we could have other projects there, 
 that are as open as OSM (and that preferably cover the whole 
 planet, don't know how much of those there are at the moment).

Right. When you've come up with a map that's as cartographically impressive,
as technologically capable, and as downright _useful_ as OpenCycleMap, come
back and ask again, won't you?

To me the front page of OSM seems like the ideal place to demonstrate look,
this is what having open data enables you to do. But, hey, maybe
fundamentalism is the in thing for 2010.

cheers
Richard
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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Frederik Ramm
Sarah,

Sarah Hoffmann wrote:
 More of (a) would be lovely. Speaking of it, is the source code behind 
 the OSM Inspector available somewhere? It might provide very instructive 
 to see how you do the data processing.

There's nothing special about the inspector itself and if anyone is 
interested we can probably release that (just a bunch of Javascript and 
Mapserver style files). The data files which OSMI uses are somewhat of a 
side product of our Geofabrik-internal, daily gobble up data and 
process it into all sorts of things our customers want job. This job is 
not Open-anything (not only does nobody get the source, nobody gets a 
binary either); it would currently be a major pain to separate the 
stuff for paying customers bit from the stuff for OSMI bit.

I have updated the OSMI wiki page accordingly. My main objective with 
this thread was a desire make it clear what is open and what isn't, and 
I hope the OSMI is now a good example of that.

But since you ask about the data processing; what we basically do is 
convert OSM data into our own format (which is not much different from 
CSV) and then use all sorts of utilities to convert it into whatever we 
need. This is a constantly evolving process, and early on we heavily 
relied on PostGIS for processing, but found that too clumsy and we're 
now moving away from PostGIS for as many things as possible.

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

first of all, I wasn't intending this to become an opencyclemap 
bashing thread. I wasn't even aware that there is something non-open 
about opencyclemap; I was prompted by your quote of openmtbmap. I didn't 
have a hidden agenda -

I'm not saying we should try to shame non-open solutions into 
submission. There are good and valid reasons for people to do things 
non-open.

Your argument about flash players and JVMs leads nowhere; I am not 
talking about openness of the target infrastructure but openness of the 
process. If I let you see and use all aspects of my work but you still 
need to buy a processor from Intel in order to practically use my work, 
that does not make my work less open.

Maybe instead of trying to define what counts as open, we could more 
easily say what is not open. If someone gives me a map rendered from 
OSM, but doesn't give me the style sheets or rule files or whatever so 
that I can see how he arrived at this map, then that map is most 
certainly not open. The process is secret. The map maker has maybe spent 
a lot of time figuring things out, and enjoys writing books or speaking 
at conferences about the cool aspects of his map that others cannot yet 
match, or tries to sell his consulting expertise. And it is his right to 
do so; and you are right in saying that in many cases such a non-open 
map will benefit the project more than no map at all. But that doesn't 
change the fact that the map is not open, and that others in the project 
who want to compete with that map will have to go through the same 
learning curve again instead of being offered the chance to stand on 
the shoulders of giants.

 But, hey, maybe fundamentalism is the in thing for 2010.

I wonder why you seem so fundamentally opposed to what I'm saying. The 
OSM mission statement contains the idea of [using geodata] in creative, 
productive, or unexpected ways. There can be no doubt that someone who 
makes his stylesheet and processes available for others to build on acts 
in this spirit.

It seems that my suggestion has conjured up images of some kind of 
openness police that will hunt down anyone who does something 
non-open, together with a mega-infectuous share-alike license that says 
that the second you even look at anything to do with OSM you have to 
upload your brain  hard disk to Richard Stallman. (Or should that now 
be Jordan ;-)

I assure you that this is not the case. As you know, I'm a PD advocate. 
Software I write, and data I contribute, is usually PD. As such, I tend 
to rely more on community norms and less on legal stuff: I make my 
things available for everyone, and I welcome it if others do the same. I 
will not hate someone who does not make his things available like I do, 
but I will probably be more willing to help a fellow free software 
author than someone who does proprietary stuff.

All I'm trying to do is introduce proper labeling - what is open and 
what isn't - and create a little incentive for people to share the cool 
stuff they do with OSM. An incentive - not a rule. Sharing something is 
often more than just uploading it to SVN. You have to put in a bit of 
documentation, remove that commented-out code over there, polish the 
whole thing a little bit for its public appearance. Maybe even remove 
the drats, I  don't know what this option does but it doesn't work 
without comments as they make you look silly ;-) That is extra work - 
work you don't have to do if you keep your stuff secret. All I want is 
to give people something in return - something like you get a silver 
star if you make a cool OSM-based application, and you get a gold star 
if you share it.

I think it is good and right to make this distinction. I don't feel that 
this warrants the fundamentalism battle cry. Maybe some won't buy food 
labeled organic and others won't buy food not labeled so; but that 
doesn't make proper labeling fundamentalistic. Proper labeling is just that!

As someone else pointed out, it is sometimes quite difficult to find out 
exactly how open something is. If everyone who announced some cool new 
OSM map or OSM editor or OSM web site could be encouraged to specify 
exactly which bits of his application are open and which aren't, that 
would make many things easier.

The Garmin map page that Ulf mentioned, where you have a green/red 
source available column, is very much what I was thinking of - maybe 
green/red is too harsh and it should indeed be gold/silver, but the 
table overall does not create the impression that the non-open stuff is 
somehow despicable. If something like that could be made a habit in OSM 
- call a spade a spade, and say where something is open and where it has 
little black boxes full of secrets, that would go a long way to making 
me happy in this respect.

(I'll review mentionings of Geofabrik services on the Wiki and amend 
them accordingly.)

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Colin Marquardt
2010/1/3 Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org:
 The Garmin map page that Ulf mentioned, where you have a green/red
 source available column, is very much what I was thinking of - maybe
 green/red is too harsh and it should indeed be gold/silver, but the
 table overall does not create the impression that the non-open stuff is
 somehow despicable.

Here is another such list:
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/List_of_OSM_based_Services

Cheers
  Colin

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Dave F.
Richard Fairhurst wrote:
 Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
   
 +1, IMHO it should not be an option on the main map page as it is 
 less open than OSM. Instead we could have other projects there, 
 that are as open as OSM (and that preferably cover the whole 
 planet, don't know how much of those there are at the moment).
 

 Right. When you've come up with a map that's as cartographically impressive,
 as technologically capable, and as downright _useful_ as OpenCycleMap, come
 back and ask again, won't you?
   

This is a classic example of  someone whingeing after they were 
expecting to be lauded with praise  palm leaves, as they rode through 
the city on a donkey, for doing something that no one told them or 
expected them to do. At the first sign of criticism they get all offended.

When you've come up with a map that's as cartographically impressive,
as technologically capable, and as downright _useful_ as OpenCycleMap,

No one on this thread actually criticized OCM on this level, but since 
you bring it up I would say it's distinctly average:

I mean, who, when planning a ride is desperate to deliver a letter to a 
letter box?
It doesn't display at level 18 which can lead to confusion in city centres.
It doesn't display the difference between paths  footways.
Bicycle parking labels on given a number of spaces if greater than 20. 
Personally I think knowing the number of smaller bike racks would be as, 
if not, more useful.
It doesn't display certain areas such as leisure=nature_reserve

Oh!  it's not open so that others who want to help improve it can 
contribute.

The one thing that is decent is the contour rendering.

 To me the front page of OSM seems like the ideal place to demonstrate look,
 this is what having open data enables you to do. But, hey, maybe
 fundamentalism is the in thing for 2010.

We keep on being told in these forums that OSM is _not_ a map making 
exercise, that it is purely a database for making maps. Yet, in big 
letters on the front page it says Show me the map - get out of my way!

It needs to be one way or the other.
Personally I think it _should_ be promoting map renderings, but on it's 
main map page it should be one that is truly open in the sense of OSM.

Cheers
Dave F.


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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-02 Thread Richard Fairhurst
Frederik Ramm wrote:
 Your argument about flash players and JVMs leads nowhere; I am not
 talking about openness of the target infrastructure but openness of the
 process.

I know you're not.

Nonetheless neither you nor I have a monopoly on defining open. People 
on this list have, in the past, regretted that OSM is viewable on 
non-free browsers, and that the source code for routing software using 
OSM data does not have to be released (in an AGPL style). There are 
people who feel that OSM absolutely should not have a Flash-based editor 
on the Edit tab. I don't agree with them, but that's not to say they're 
wrong and I'm right.

So I don't want OSM to get into arguments about opener than thou - 
gold stars or silver stars or the purple raspberry of Bad Closed Source 
No Donut. You have one definition; I have another; so does everyone on 
this list. We won't agree. If we start imposing additional demands over 
and above open geodata, then we shall talk ourselves to death as 
Google buries us with our own confusion.

cheers
Richard

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open (was: Re: [Talk-GB] Yet another trunk road query - A495)

2010-01-01 Thread Colin Marquardt
2010/1/2 Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org:
 Maybe it is time for us at OSM to make a distinction between

 (a) open projects in the sense and spirit of OSM, where scripts, style
 files, and everything else is open and license-wise available for
 everyone to look at and build upon, and

 (b) proprietary projects, whether of commercial or private nature, which
 we are still happy to have using our data and which we will still linkt
 to and all, but which we do not consider part of the family.

As a proud member of the (a) category[1], I'm all for it :)

Cheers
  Colin

1 - http://mapnik-utils.googlecode.com/svn/sandbox/cascadenik/hike_n_bike/,
http://gitorious.org/alpha-hillshading/alpha-hillshading/trees/master

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-01 Thread Dave F.
Frederik Ramm wrote:
 Hi,

  I'm breaking this out of talk-gb and into talk.

 Richard Fairhurst wrote:
   
 Sadly [the openmtbmap author] 
 refuses to open-source his code 
 (http://openmtbmap.org/faq/#i-would-like-to-have-a-look-into-the-style-file-for-mkgmap),
  
 which is entirely his prerogative but a shame nonetheless.
 

 Maybe it is time for us at OSM to make a distinction between

 (a) open projects in the sense and spirit of OSM, where scripts, style 
 files, and everything else is open and license-wise available for 
 everyone to look at and build upon, and

 (b) proprietary projects, whether of commercial or private nature, which 
 we are still happy to have using our data and which we will still linkt 
 to and all, but which we do not consider part of the family.

   
I think it's high time this was done. IMO, OCM should be removed from 
the main map options asked persuasively to rename themselves as they're 
not really open, are they?

Fredrick - I think this needs a separate new topic.

Cheers
Dave F.


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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-01 Thread Dave F.
Colin Marquardt wrote:
 As a proud member of the (a) category[1], I'm all for it :)

 Cheers
   Colin

 1 - http://mapnik-utils.googlecode.com/svn/sandbox/cascadenik/hike_n_bike/,
 http://gitorious.org/alpha-hillshading/alpha-hillshading/trees/master
Err.. Sorry Colin, I read the readme  other files but it looks like 
gobbledy-gook to me.

Is there an explanation anywhere of  what these do?

Cheers
Dave F.


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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-01 Thread John Smith
2010/1/2 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
 I think it's high time this was done. IMO, OCM should be removed from
 the main map options asked persuasively to rename themselves as they're
 not really open, are they?

What do you suggest they rename to?

FreeCycleMap? :)

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Re: [OSM-talk] Not-properly-Open-but-called-Open

2010-01-01 Thread Richard Fairhurst
Frederik Ramm wrote:
 We cannot, and do not want to, trademark the words open, free and
 the like, but I think we could be a little bit more assertive about whom
 we consider to be a kindred spirit and who is doing his own thing, and
 apply the tiniest amount of pressure for people to upgrade from (b) to (a).

 I think many of us will be surprised how many cool OSM projects
 actually fall into the (b) category.
 
 To make it absolutely clear, this is not about forcing anyone to do
 anything, about licenses or anything - it is just about saying loud
 and clear what we like, and giving those who do what we like a pat on
 the back while telling those who don't that we would respect their
 great work even more if they were open like us.

Hm, maybe. But YMMV on what we like.

In my view, what matters is someone's _overall_ contribution to OSM, not 
their unquestioning adherence to the doctrine of free.

Faced with one person who makes an enormous contribution to OSM, but 
chooses to keep one aspect of their contributions closed-source; and 
another whose main contribution is a lot of wiki voting, but has sent 
two preset patches, assiduously annotated with some inordinate licence 
preamble in capital letters - well, I couldn't criticise the former or 
deny them any respect. And applying pressure rather smacks of that 
Proper attribution lynch mob.

cheers
Richard




Hey, I managed a whole post about Not-properly-Open without mentioning 
the GPL. ...oh crap.

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