Thomas.
My apologies. Thanks for letting me know.
Chris.
On Sep 22, 2009 4:03 PM, "Thomas Wood" wrote:
It's been raised here before, and yes, it is far too restrictively licenced!
:(
2009/9/22 Chris Andrew :
> Hi, guys. > > Just thought I'd post this link, because on the face of it,
it's > R
It's been raised here before, and yes, it is far too restrictively licenced! :(
2009/9/22 Chris Andrew :
> Hi, guys.
>
> Just thought I'd post this link, because on the face of it, it's
> REALLY annoying.
>
> Transport for London (TFL) are trialling a speed limiting system (ISA)
> that if successf
Hi, guys.
Just thought I'd post this link, because on the face of it, it's
REALLY annoying.
Transport for London (TFL) are trialling a speed limiting system (ISA)
that if successful will be fitted to vehicles nationwide. In order for
the GPS controlled sensor to tell whether you are speeding or n
While i'm sure this is a wonderful tool, what we are looking for is to take
the "downloaded traces" layer in josm, and make it (just the dots, without
lines if posible) into a fully fledged map layer.
The tiles will be tiny, with a few white dots on a black background.
We want to be able to capit
Thanks for that, but bearing in mind I am not a programmer, how does it
help me? :-\
I don't know the ID for any tracks there may or may not be in the area i
(may) want to map, and I can't find a way in OSM to reveal any GPS trace
ID other than a GPS Trace filename, (not even with my own traces
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 7:59 PM, Phil James wrote:
> John Robert Peterson wrote:
>
> Do we have anything that will draw map tiles of the trace data? (I'd like
> this for another project anyway: checking whether traces exist for an area
> when out with a mobile device)
if it's a public gpx, then l
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