Dear All,
I have amended the proposal with the tag and a simplified example.
The proposal is definitely more KISS.
drinking_water:refill_scheme =
Best regards,
Stuart
On Wed, 22 Jan 2020 at 14:21, Philip Barnes wrote:
>
>
> On Wednesday, 22 January 2020, European Water Project wrote:
> > H
Dear Phil,
A group of us have recently started an NGO called European Water Project to
develop a similar scheme to that of Refill all over Europe. I have
written a Progressive Web Apllication https://europeanwaterproject.org
available in 8 languages for this purpose. We currently are only mappin
On Wed, 22 Jan 2020 at 13:21, Philip Barnes wrote:
>
> Its a shame the website doesn't have location, I do not use Google play,
> but I guess thats why you want to put them into OSM.
>
I tried the app on Android. It uses Google maps, which is common for
Android
apps. I expect the Apple version
On Wednesday, 22 January 2020, European Water Project wrote:
> Hi Paul et. al,
>
> I would also be very supportive of this straightforward approach which
> would address many of the concerns regarding an over complicated tagging
> scheme covering cases that are often mandated by local legislatio
Hi Paul et. al,
I would also be very supportive of this straightforward approach which
would address many of the concerns regarding an over complicated tagging
scheme covering cases that are often mandated by local legislation.
One clean solution could be the following or something similar.
drin
On Wed, 22 Jan 2020 at 10:46, Jez Nicholson wrote:
> Yesbut (I believe that) this tag is driven by the 'refill scheme' use
> case, which should be identifiable on-the-ground by displayed information.
> Data could be collected by apps built by the schemes.
>
For those unfamiliar with the sche
Yesbut (I believe that) this tag is driven by the 'refill scheme' use
case, which should be identifiable on-the-ground by displayed information.
Data could be collected by apps built by the schemes.
The general case of "will a retailer give me free water as a customer" case
is discussed to see
I would tend to agree with Frederik.
In GB (1) all licensed premises (2) must offer free tap water to customers.
This covers all pubs and bars, most restaurants and some cafe. The mappers
time would be far more efficiently spent adding a tag to indicate which
restaurants and cafes are licensed