Kathleen Lu via talk writes:
> My local University is the same way. Students and faculty automatically
> get access, but community and alumni can get access by paying fees.
>
> Is access=members an option?
>
> It implies that you have to become a member according to some criteria, but
> that
My local University is the same way. Students and faculty automatically
get access, but community and alumni can get access by paying fees.
Is access=members an option?
It implies that you have to become a member according to some criteria, but
that membership is possible for a large swath of
> Le 21 avr. 2020 à 03:26, Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>
>> Currently we can already mark if the library is open to the public on not
>> (access=yes means open to the general public), but it's unclear how say a
>> school library or library restricted to attendees of an educational
Andrew Harvey writes:
> Currently we can already mark if the library is open to the public on not
> (access=yes means open to the general public), but it's unclear how say a
> school library or library restricted to attendees of an educational
> facility like a university should be tagged (is it
Certainly, it is a good idea.
There is the list of 32 countries on the page:
https://english.slks.dk/libraries/library-standards/isil/ . Does it mean
that other countries did not join the ISIL classification yet?
I wanted to add an ISIL code for a library in a country which is not in
this
There is an international standard identifier for libraries, "ISIL" / ISO
15511, maintained by the Danish *Slots- og Kulturstyrelsen*, which I would
recommend to add: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:ref:isil
Cheers
Martin
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I would like to remark that many libraries have their Wikipedia
articles. Even when a library does not have an article, it could be
created. The best way to approach this is to do a survey of the library.
For example, I created the article (plus the Wikidata item and Wikimedia
category) for
When I think of access=customers, I think of toilets inside a restaurant,
or a parking lot outside a pub you can only usually access as a customer,
so only things that are inside other things. The restaurant itself or the
pub wouldn't normally have the access tag. But I guess for an institutional
On 21/4/20 10:44 am, Andrew Harvey wrote:
Agreed that we could do better, see the proposal process for new tags
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposal_process.
Currently we can already mark if the library is open to the public on
not (access=yes means open to the general public), but
Some questions..
Who will use this information in OSM?
In particular ISIL information appears to be, in Australia, for contact
between libraries and they will already have systems in place for that
so adding that information may not help anyone.
The library collection (books/films/etc), use
Agreed that we could do better, see the proposal process for new tags
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposal_process.
Currently we can already mark if the library is open to the public on not
(access=yes means open to the general public), but it's unclear how say a
school library or library
We are generally aware of the importance of the libraries, as they are numerous
and useful by their variety (public, academic, specialized, school…).
But, why they have been so neglected by us, the mappers, seing them on the
ground, getting maybe frequently in ?
So poors are the tags for
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