[Talk-us] weeklyOSM #323 09/20/2016-09/26/2016

2016-09-29 Thread weeklyteam
The weekly round-up of OSM news, issue # 323,
is now available online in English, giving as always a summary of all things 
happening in the openstreetmap world:

http://www.weeklyosm.eu/en/archives/8147/

Enjoy!

weeklyOSM is brought to you by ... 
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/WeeklyOSM#Available_Languages
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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Jack Burke
I think that was a discussion on one of the mailing lists. And, where you order 
was also what I understand the (very fine)  distinction to be. 

-jack 

-- 
Typos courtesy of fancy auto spell technology

On September 29, 2016 2:00:04 PM EDT, Greg Troxel  wrote:
>
>Harald Kliems  writes:
>
>> On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:17 PM Greg Troxel  wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> That's not what the OSM tag means; it's more european.  In OSM,
>"cafe"
>>> means (usually) that there is real food, but (always) that you order
>at
>>> a counter and then either take it yourself or have the staff bring
>it to
>>> you.  However, a coffee shop is very probably a cafe under this
>>> definition.  But so is a place that has real food cooked by a chef,
>>> except that you don't get waited on.
>
>> Where do you get the order-at-the-counter vs table service part from?
>I
>> don't see that in the wiki, and the picture on the amenity=cafe page
>shows
>> a waiter in an Austrian cafe, who most likely will take your order at
>the
>> table. https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:amenity%3Dcafe
>Furthermore,
>> there is a separate tag for self service
>> https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:self_service
>
>I really do not remember clearly where I read this; it would have been
>about 5 years ago.
>
>
>
>
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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Greg Troxel

Harald Kliems  writes:

> On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:17 PM Greg Troxel  wrote:
>
>>
>> That's not what the OSM tag means; it's more european.  In OSM, "cafe"
>> means (usually) that there is real food, but (always) that you order at
>> a counter and then either take it yourself or have the staff bring it to
>> you.  However, a coffee shop is very probably a cafe under this
>> definition.  But so is a place that has real food cooked by a chef,
>> except that you don't get waited on.

> Where do you get the order-at-the-counter vs table service part from? I
> don't see that in the wiki, and the picture on the amenity=cafe page shows
> a waiter in an Austrian cafe, who most likely will take your order at the
> table. https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:amenity%3Dcafe Furthermore,
> there is a separate tag for self service
> https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:self_service

I really do not remember clearly where I read this; it would have been
about 5 years ago.


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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Harald Kliems
On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:17 PM Greg Troxel  wrote:

>
> That's not what the OSM tag means; it's more european.  In OSM, "cafe"
> means (usually) that there is real food, but (always) that you order at
> a counter and then either take it yourself or have the staff bring it to
> you.  However, a coffee shop is very probably a cafe under this
> definition.  But so is a place that has real food cooked by a chef,
> except that you don't get waited on.
>
> Where do you get the order-at-the-counter vs table service part from? I
don't see that in the wiki, and the picture on the amenity=cafe page shows
a waiter in an Austrian cafe, who most likely will take your order at the
table. https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:amenity%3Dcafe Furthermore,
there is a separate tag for self service
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:self_service

 Harald.
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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Greg Troxel

Jeffrey Ollie  writes:

> Third, the laws/regulations around liquor licenses are complex for various
> historical and political reasons and vary state by state and probably even
> city by city. What classifies as a bar in one state might be a restaurant
> in another.

Agreed that terms in local law should be ignored.

> So, trying to come up with hard and fast rules as to what's a pub, bar or
> restaurant is doomed to failure. The only test that makes any sense is
> "what do the locals consider it?" I know that's too fuzzy for some people
> but trying to come up with precise definitions for OSM is doomed to failure
> because there aren't precise definitions in the real world.

I agree with the "what does it feel like" part, but not "what the locals
call it".  One of the central issues in tagging in OSM is that words are
used for a specific meaning (usually UK usage, as we know) and the point
is to have a consistent labeling of things around the world, even if
local language is different.  So that leads to "what would someone from
the UK, but who had lived in the area for a year, call it?".

But, I completely agree that the boundaries are fuzzy and that it does
not really matter which is used when it's close.


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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Jeffrey Ollie
I think that you're all overthinking it, and trying to fit a European
square into a US circle. First of all, the US doesn't have pubs, unless the
owner is specifically trying to recreate the atmosphere of a European pub
(or at least what an Americans think a European pub is). Doesn't matter if
a European visiting the US would think of the establishment as such, they
just don't really exist around here.

Second, almost every establishment that sells alcoholic beverages for
on-premises consumption is legally required to sell food of some sort. I've
been in bars that had a toaster oven to heat up frozen pizzas and that
qualified as food. And there are establishments where the distinction
between "bar" and "restaurant" based on the food they serve is very fuzzy.

Third, the laws/regulations around liquor licenses are complex for various
historical and political reasons and vary state by state and probably even
city by city. What classifies as a bar in one state might be a restaurant
in another.

So, trying to come up with hard and fast rules as to what's a pub, bar or
restaurant is doomed to failure. The only test that makes any sense is
"what do the locals consider it?" I know that's too fuzzy for some people
but trying to come up with precise definitions for OSM is doomed to failure
because there aren't precise definitions in the real world.

On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:16 PM, Greg Troxel  wrote:

>
> Andrew Wiseman  writes:
>
> > The wiki uses a European context, so here's my attempt at classifying
> what
> > is what in the US. Let me know what you think.
>
> I mostly agree; comments on details.
>
> > To me, a "pub" in the US would be bars that have food, but the food isn't
> > the main attraction - you mainly go there to hang out or talk with
> friends
> > or watch the game or just drink, but they may have food too. For
> example, a
> > sports bar or your neighborhood bar if they have wings or nachos or
> > burgers, but that's not the main draw. Wonderland in DC, for a specific
> > example.
>
> pub/restaurant is hard, as both have food.  But agreed that if (some
> combination of) the primary draw is a great beer selection, the ambience
> is "in a bar" vs "restaurant that has a bar someplace", and if the menu
> tends to burgers and pizza, then pub is the right call.
>
> > A "bar" would be a place that doesn't serve food at all, like a cocktail
> > bar or just some bar without food, where they might not have seats, which
> > is something the wiki suggests. The Adams Morgan area in Washington, DC
> has
> > a lot of these places, for example, where people stand around and drink
> > mostly, maybe dance too. McSorley's in New York would be another example
> of
> > a bar, with seats.
>
> Or even places that have some food, but are not really intending to have
> meals.   Or where the food is really really secondary as you say.
>
> > And a "restaurant" would be a place where there is alcohol but you mainly
> > go for food -- for example, bar and grill chains TGI Fridays, Applebee's,
> > Buffalo Wild Wings, etc. would fall into this category. So would
> non-chains
> > that are similar. I would posit that most people don't go to TGI Friday's
> > just to drink.
>
> Yes, but restaurant in OSM also requires that you are seated at tables
> with table service.  if you get it yourself, then:
>
> > There's also "cafe" as a separate tag which can include food and alcohol,
> > but to me a cafe is a coffee shop that might also have beer or food, but
> > coffee is the main attraction -- like a Starbucks in the US.
>
> That's not what the OSM tag means; it's more european.  In OSM, "cafe"
> means (usually) that there is real food, but (always) that you order at
> a counter and then either take it yourself or have the staff bring it to
> you.  However, a coffee shop is very probably a cafe under this
> definition.  But so is a place that has real food cooked by a chef,
> except that you don't get waited on.
>
> One area of disagreement you'll find is the boundary between fastfood
> and cafe.  A McDonald's, to pick the poster child, is clearly "fast
> food".  The OSM definition talks about how the food is prepared in
> advance vs to order for a specific customer.  I have been tagging dunkin
> donuts as fast food rather than cafe; you can get a sausage egg and
> cheese - but it's factory food in the microwave.  Starbucks I see as on
> the line, and boutique coffee shops tend to get cafe.  This is
> troublesome because it more or less comes down to "real food" vs
> "factory food".
>
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-- 
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Re: [Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Greg Troxel

Andrew Wiseman  writes:

> The wiki uses a European context, so here's my attempt at classifying what
> is what in the US. Let me know what you think.

I mostly agree; comments on details.

> To me, a "pub" in the US would be bars that have food, but the food isn't
> the main attraction - you mainly go there to hang out or talk with friends
> or watch the game or just drink, but they may have food too. For example, a
> sports bar or your neighborhood bar if they have wings or nachos or
> burgers, but that's not the main draw. Wonderland in DC, for a specific
> example.

pub/restaurant is hard, as both have food.  But agreed that if (some
combination of) the primary draw is a great beer selection, the ambience
is "in a bar" vs "restaurant that has a bar someplace", and if the menu
tends to burgers and pizza, then pub is the right call.

> A "bar" would be a place that doesn't serve food at all, like a cocktail
> bar or just some bar without food, where they might not have seats, which
> is something the wiki suggests. The Adams Morgan area in Washington, DC has
> a lot of these places, for example, where people stand around and drink
> mostly, maybe dance too. McSorley's in New York would be another example of
> a bar, with seats.

Or even places that have some food, but are not really intending to have
meals.   Or where the food is really really secondary as you say.

> And a "restaurant" would be a place where there is alcohol but you mainly
> go for food -- for example, bar and grill chains TGI Fridays, Applebee's,
> Buffalo Wild Wings, etc. would fall into this category. So would non-chains
> that are similar. I would posit that most people don't go to TGI Friday's
> just to drink.

Yes, but restaurant in OSM also requires that you are seated at tables
with table service.  if you get it yourself, then:

> There's also "cafe" as a separate tag which can include food and alcohol,
> but to me a cafe is a coffee shop that might also have beer or food, but
> coffee is the main attraction -- like a Starbucks in the US.

That's not what the OSM tag means; it's more european.  In OSM, "cafe"
means (usually) that there is real food, but (always) that you order at
a counter and then either take it yourself or have the staff bring it to
you.  However, a coffee shop is very probably a cafe under this
definition.  But so is a place that has real food cooked by a chef,
except that you don't get waited on.

One area of disagreement you'll find is the boundary between fastfood
and cafe.  A McDonald's, to pick the poster child, is clearly "fast
food".  The OSM definition talks about how the food is prepared in
advance vs to order for a specific customer.  I have been tagging dunkin
donuts as fast food rather than cafe; you can get a sausage egg and
cheese - but it's factory food in the microwave.  Starbucks I see as on
the line, and boutique coffee shops tend to get cafe.  This is
troublesome because it more or less comes down to "real food" vs
"factory food".


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[Talk-us] Bar vs Pub vs Restaurant in the US?

2016-09-29 Thread Andrew Wiseman
Hi all,

I was just thinking about this from an American context and went to the
Wiki, where someone else had the same question -- I think because we call
many places a bar. [1]

I think part of the confusion is because many municipalities in the US
require that places sell food if they sell alcohol, but to me, the food is
secondary. So thus they should be tagged as pubs.

The wiki uses a European context, so here's my attempt at classifying what
is what in the US. Let me know what you think.

To me, a "pub" in the US would be bars that have food, but the food isn't
the main attraction - you mainly go there to hang out or talk with friends
or watch the game or just drink, but they may have food too. For example, a
sports bar or your neighborhood bar if they have wings or nachos or
burgers, but that's not the main draw. Wonderland in DC, for a specific
example.

A "bar" would be a place that doesn't serve food at all, like a cocktail
bar or just some bar without food, where they might not have seats, which
is something the wiki suggests. The Adams Morgan area in Washington, DC has
a lot of these places, for example, where people stand around and drink
mostly, maybe dance too. McSorley's in New York would be another example of
a bar, with seats.

And a "restaurant" would be a place where there is alcohol but you mainly
go for food -- for example, bar and grill chains TGI Fridays, Applebee's,
Buffalo Wild Wings, etc. would fall into this category. So would non-chains
that are similar. I would posit that most people don't go to TGI Friday's
just to drink.

There's also "cafe" as a separate tag which can include food and alcohol,
but to me a cafe is a coffee shop that might also have beer or food, but
coffee is the main attraction -- like a Starbucks in the US.

What do you think? Am I way off? Browsing Taginfo and Overpass mostly seem
to agree with the above.

Here's the wiki discussion, my response is below. 1 -
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Talk:Tag:amenity%3Dpub#Pub.2C_restaurant.2C_or_bar.3F

Andrew

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