A couple of points:
* Admin. boundaries are not straightforward to verify, but there is
plenty of
suitable objective evidence : from Boundary Markers (e.g.,
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/node/502944003), names on rubbish bins, or
the bin lorries, asset identification numbers on
There are also long sections of the Grantham Canal which are Nature Reserves:
there's a fantastic stretch in the Vale of Belvoir with masses of interesting
aquatic vegetation and in late May, early June a remarkable range of
dragonflies and damselflies. There are some conflicts in tagging
I note on the Natural England condition statement that they use the phrase
Residual Waterway, so perhaps we can make use of something like
canal=residual.
Jonathan Briggs did a nice article on the ecology of the Montgomery Canal in
British Wildlife a few years ago (BW, 17:401-410, 2006
Written last night, so some of this goes over ground already covered.
At one stage someone was doing a canal waterway map, but I think those
involved have other time commitments, like maintaining OSM editors and doing
the
default cartography.
Nick Whitelegg has Freemap which is aimed at
Sent: Sat, 21 August, 2010 18:07:46
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] Fw: Derbyshire area unconnected
Dave F. wrote on 21/08/2010 13:29:
On 21/08/2010 07:42, Jerry Clough - OSM wrote:
Sorry not to list.
- Forwarded Message
From: Jerry Clough - OSM sk53_...@yahoo.co.uk
To: Shaun
Sorry not to list.
- Forwarded Message
From: Jerry Clough - OSM sk53_...@yahoo.co.uk
To: Shaun McDonald sh...@shaunmcdonald.me.uk
Sent: Sat, 21 August, 2010 7:42:00
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] Derbyshire area unconnected
http://keepright.ipax.at/report_map.php?zoom=14lat=52.95432lon
Just followed a link from Mapperz to the MCZ Interactive Project and found this
little snippet on the FAQ:
The OpenStreetMap background mapping used by the interactive map has some
legal
boundaries built in (pale purple lines). These have some small
Sorry, not sent to list.
- Forwarded Message
From: Jerry Clough - OSM sk53_...@yahoo.co.uk
To: Glenn Proctor gl...@docproc.com
Sent: Tue, 20 July, 2010 12:41:59
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] Tagging roadside verge SSSIs
Verge side nature reserves are not uncommon:
http
This was me, but I know that Paul Sladen, Simon Halsey, and probably others,
were also affected.
Has anyone has sent the offending user a message?
He/she is a relative newcomer, and has edited in Trowbridge as well as
Carlton/Gedling. They have also edited in Germany, but no indication of
I like the idea for a project of the week using OS OpenData StreetView, but
would suggest that before we add lots of new roads we work hard to get roads
which are already in OSM properly named. Firstly it is improving data which is
already there, secondly it using a second, independent, data
I prefer the elephant contour line on a map of Ghana (in Gold Coast days),
which I remember seeing at a British Library exhibition many years ago. I think
it featured in QI at some stage, but cant find an image on the web.
From: Ed Loach e...@loach.me.uk
To:
Hi Tim,
Yes there is, at least with the version of GDAL I use. Chillly has written
about this on his blog, and the changes needed (adding Helmert transformations
- -sound fancy doesn't it) to the standard projection are noted in previous
messages here in talk-gb.
I think the divergence is
Potlatch's b option will place source=OS OpenData StreetView (note no
underscores) if you have OS SV in the background. I use this as I prefer 1
keystroke to 20 or so.
From: TimSC mapp...@sheerman-chase.org.uk
To: talk-gb@openstreetmap.org
Sent: Fri, 28 May,
Ask Richard F!
From: Tim François sk1pp...@yahoo.co.uk
To: talk-gb@openstreetmap.org; Jerry Clough - OSM sk53_...@yahoo.co.uk
Sent: Fri, 28 May, 2010 11:20:10
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] building shapes from OS Street View, with code
...any reason why
An interesting set of points. I've been puzzling over three particular cases
related to this. In each case I'm aware that the tagging is incomplete:
1. The Park Estate in Nottingham. This is emphatically a private estate, with,
these days, electronically controlled bollards gates etc for motor
accessible
Jerry Clough - OSM wrote on 26/05/2010 16:21:
An interesting set of points. I've been puzzling over three particular
cases related to this. In each case I'm aware that the tagging is
incomplete:
lots snipped
___
Talk-GB mailing list
From: Robert Scott li...@humanleg.org.uk
To: talk-gb@openstreetmap.org
Sent: Thu, 13 May, 2010 21:53:40
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] OS Locator / OSM correspondence list generation
On Thursday 13 May 2010, Jerry Clough - OSM wrote:
Thanks very much for this Robert.
I'd made
AFAIK ward boundaries have been done in two places:
Ipswich by Peter Miller pre OS data availability (e.g.,
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/relation/164654)
Broxtowe by will in the last few weeks importing OS Boundary Line data. In
the latter case data were imported and merged with
Apologies, again, for top-posting.
I'd echo Wilf's comments. There is a huge amount of detail which can be added
without worrying over much about the precision of the alignment. It's possible
to identify pedestrian crossings, traffic lit junctions, one-way signs on roads
( in car parks) etc.,
GRASS seems to have some kind of Voronoi algorithm, but I find its interface
very non-intuitive, so have not found it to try it out. This may be worth
pursuing as an alternative route.
As an aside: I notice that virtually all postcode boundaries are obviously
created in this way. For instance
Apologies for top posting.
I've been experimenting with the
Civil Parish boundaries with QGIS and ogr2osm.py (modified to keep ways
below 500 nodes). QGIS seems rather temperamental about reprojecting
shape files: there are a huge number of settings which seem to affect
the base projection.
I have an etrex Summit HC (i.e., with no external card, and (in practice 22Mb
internal storage). I load relevant tiles from the set of .IMG tiles hosted by
the SMC (http://www.smc.org.uk/ContourMaps.php). I use MapSource for selecting
and loading relevant tiles.
There are several pre-built
I wouldn't be surprised if Kintyre other than NR71 NR72 (Campbeltown) is
derived from much earlier mapping. Those two octads are the only ones published
for Kintyre in the 25k provisional/first series. Certainly for other parts of
highland Scotland serious errors existed until the 50k 2nd
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