On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 11:16 AM, Gregory Williams
gregory.willi...@purplegeodesoftware.co.uk wrote:
Indeed. It looks like it’s mainly the university sites and arterial roads.
Does your main shopping area pretty much coincide with Oxford Uni’s main
colleges? University of Kent in Canterbury
Looks like there's only partial coverage in Oxford as well...
http://www.spokeseastkent.org.uk/maps/cycle-parking-heat-map/?zoom=13lat=51.75754lon=-1.2523layers=BT
Really? I would have said it was pretty comprehensively mapped in
Oxford. The heat-map shows nicely where all the shopping areas
PS I wonder whether the stands at Oxford Brookes Uni don’t have any capacity
tags. They don’t glow anywhere near as much on the map.
You're right about the Brookes stands. I've just applied for a job
there, so those might see some attention soon *fingers crossed*
Craig
On 23 September 2011
On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 11:36 AM, Craig Loftus
craigloftus+...@googlemail.com wrote:
Looks like there's only partial coverage in Oxford as well...
http://www.spokeseastkent.org.uk/maps/cycle-parking-heat-map/?zoom=13lat=51.75754lon=-1.2523layers=BT
Really? I would have said it was
Hi,
I have been added a few buildings recently and the other day I discovered
the buildingtool in JOSM which is most helpful. One thing I do struggle a
bit with is aligning buildings in JOSM. I know I can align nodes, but
haven't succeeded in aligning whole buildings (ie. routes).
Is there a
On Thursday, September 22, 2011, Dale Puch dale.p...@gmail.com wrote:
Personally I like the idea of seperating out portions of the database into
separate sections, but I prefer more use orientated divisions.
[snip]
There are many good reasons for all of this data to be together in the
master
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