Automagically scraping the finder.eircode.ie site is a grey area, I would
caution against doing that for the moment.
I was more suggesting a person opting to submit a known postcode, and
have that result be marked in OSM. Probably using a mobile app using
OSM and querying the finder.eircode.ie
So I did some tests.
If I go to finer.eircode.ie on my phone and put in a postcode, and
then click directions, the co-ordinates are handed over to my phone. I
then have a choice of which mapping app to use. It is important to
pick DIRECTIONS as other options use the eircode mapping website. The
Hi Richard
While you’re asking can you ask will app developers be able to query the
database as the website does currently? Even with the same usage restrictions
it would be useful. That way apps could be built to navigate to the postcodes.
Donie
On 17 Jul 2015, at 15:16, Richard Cantwell
You type in your eircode and it finds your property, simple, no messing about
trying to find where you want to go.
I know someone said they looked up eircode on their smartphone,
clicked on the link and their phone automatically opened up the GPS
co-ordinates and showed the route, presumably in
Maybe set-up a website like Free the Postcode in the UK ?
http://www.freethepostcode.org/
Once the database gets to critical mass they will hopefully just open the data
themselves, like the Post Office/Royal Mail were forced to do in the UK.
Unfortunately, ignoring it and hoping it will
The Eircode leaflet refers to privacy statement on www.eircode.ie/privacy
Skralm
On 17 July 2015 at 14:01, moltonel molto...@gmail.com wrote:
On 17 July 2015 11:30:55 GMT+01:00, Simon Poole si...@poole.ch wrote:
What better way to ignore than come to the conclusion that the data
can't be
HI Dan
Are you on Android, because on iOS it only jumps to Apple maps when you click
directions?
Donie
On 17 Jul 2015, at 15:44, Daniel Cussen d...@post.com wrote:
So I did some tests.
If I go to finer.eircode.ie on my phone and put in a postcode, and
then click directions, the
On 17/07/2015, Killyfole and District Development Association
webmas...@killyfole.org.uk wrote:
Maybe set-up a website like Free the Postcode in the UK ?
http://www.freethepostcode.org/
Once the database gets to critical mass they will hopefully just open the
data
themselves, like the Post
On android it asks dedicated mapping app, or firefox or chrome, and I
select afterwards just once so it asks me every time.
I assume if I do not pick just once it will remember and go straight
without asking me, as your apple is doing.
See here for first place I found after a search:
On 17/07/2015, Richard Cantwell manaboutco...@gmail.com wrote:
My current view is that the codes themselves are not copyrighted, but the
ECAF (flat file with postal address and Eircode) and ECAD (database with
aliases, co-ords and other things) are copyrighted.
That was my understanding as
Hi Dan
That just show me how to add the OSM overlays to an existing map in my app.
The directions that come from the Eircode site uses a custom url scheme of
maps.apple.com http://maps.apple.com/ as it’s detecting that iPhone is in the
user agent header. That will open the maps app
Am 17.07.2015 um 02:30 schrieb moltonel 3x Combo:
But I actually don't want to play that game. I'd rather do my best to
let Eircode flop as hard as possible (amongst others by ignoring it in
OSM) so that in a few years time the government and/or a coalition of
geocoding users decide to
Hi,
Adding individual Eircodes shouldn't be a problem. Adding the whole database is
another matter. Facts can't be copyrighted, databases can.
So just like I can read the name of an office on a sign and add it to OSM, I
can do the same when I read the Eircode off their business card.
On 17
Am 17.07.2015 um 19:40 schrieb Colm Moore:
Hi,
Adding individual Eircodes shouldn't be a problem. Adding the whole database
is another matter. Facts can't be copyrighted, databases can.
So just like I can read the name of an office on a sign and add it to OSM, I
can do the same when I
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