I'd also like to add that people get more excited about OpenStreetMap when they
see their changes instantly added. I've trained people in both Potlatch,
Potlatch2 and JOSM. I pick the tool depending on specific class. Areas with
bad/no internet access we use JOSM and changes are immediately s
Stephen Hope writes:
> I keep hearing this, but I must be weird, because I had the opposite
> reaction both when I first started and when I show somebody how to use
> it. I took one look at Potlatch and thought "I want something that
> works offline to test with, with a save button when I'm ha
On 6 June 2011 17:55, Jaak Laineste wrote:
> Also we have always started with P2, JOSM is too scary for the first
> introduction. So offline OSM files is not an option.
I keep hearing this, but I must be weird, because I had the opposite
reaction both when I first started and when I show somebod
2011/6/5 Serge Wroclawski :
> On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 6:34 PM, Stephan Knauss
> wrote:
>> On 05.06.2011 22:18, Serge Wroclawski wrote:
For doing test edits: Why not use the dev api? Then you won't have to
worry
about uploads breaking something.
>>>
>>> When I've done this kind
On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 6:34 PM, Stephan Knauss wrote:
> On 05.06.2011 22:18, Serge Wroclawski wrote:
>>>
>>> For doing test edits: Why not use the dev api? Then you won't have to
>>> worry
>>> about uploads breaking something.
>>
>> When I've done this kind of training, it's been for a disaster, a
On 05.06.2011 22:18, Serge Wroclawski wrote:
For doing test edits: Why not use the dev api? Then you won't have to worry
about uploads breaking something.
When I've done this kind of training, it's been for a disaster, and we
need the real data, and the real api.
In what way does the dev API
On Sun, Jun 5, 2011 at 3:31 PM, Stephan Knauss wrote:
> On 05.06.2011 20:46, Jaak Laineste wrote:
>> Is there a procedure or contact to register an IP for temporary
>> higher load for such cases?
>
> You could use offline data and load this into JSOM. To rely on online
> ressources for a trainin
On 05.06.2011 20:46, Jaak Laineste wrote:
this reminded me an issue what I've had twice - I had made two
sessions of hands-on trainings for OSM, with about 30-40 computers in
[...]
Is there a procedure or contact to register an IP for temporary
higher load for such cases?
You could use of
Hi,
this reminded me an issue what I've had twice - I had made two
sessions of hands-on trainings for OSM, with about 30-40 computers in
a classroom. In both cases when they started to do actual data
download/editing, then last ones were rejected from API calls. Perhaps
just as we were under same
On 2 June 2011 03:42, David Murn wrote:
> On Wed, 2011-06-01 at 22:18 +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
>
>> Yes, you got blocked on 16th May by the looks of it. I don't think I did
>> it so it was probably one of my colleagues.
>
> Is there not some sort of audit trail or changelog for when users get
> bl
On Wed, 2011-06-01 at 22:18 +0100, Tom Hughes wrote:
> Yes, you got blocked on 16th May by the looks of it. I don't think I did
> it so it was probably one of my colleagues.
Is there not some sort of audit trail or changelog for when users get
blocked?
I think it would be useful if one could fi
On 01/06/11 21:48, Frank Steggink wrote:
When you've been downloading too much data, you'll get a 509 error. See
here: http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/API_v0.6#Error_codes
That's only for the automated limits, and they currently only apply to
the map call. In this case the user was making
On 01/06/11 21:11, Peter Mooney wrote:
wanted to download an addition 2,000 ways (their full history)
from the same machine today
- example "wget http://www.openstreetmap.org/api/0.6/way/2048/history -O
./world-xml/history-2048.xml"
I keep getting an ERROR 303 .. The error message doesn't make
On 11-06-01 10:11 PM, Peter Mooney wrote:
Hi all,
Quick question regarding the OSM API.
I have a server setup for my OSM research - it has a very fast
Internet link. My personal, home, broadband is much slower and limited
to 5Gb per month.
Anyway during April I downloaded the history files
On Wed, Jun 1, 2011 at 4:11 PM, Peter Mooney wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Quick question regarding the OSM API.
[ ... ]
> Have I found myself on a "banned" list? It would not be my intention to hog
> resources on anyone else - but I didn't think the requests were excessive.
Perhaps you have been blocked
Hi all,
Quick question regarding the OSM API.
I have a server setup for my OSM research - it has a very fast Internet
link. My personal, home, broadband is much slower and limited to 5Gb per
month.
Anyway during April I downloaded the history files (in OSM-XML) for a couple
of thousand ways. I j
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