Not sure if this helps you or not, but there is another Bing Image Analyser
available at:
http://mvexel.dev.openstreetmap.org/bingimageanalyzer/
This one provides the date that each tile was provided.
--
View this message in context:
This move makes some sense to me. There is a degree of cross-over between
StackExchange sites as user profiles and badges can show all StackExchange
sites that a user posts on. So this might well bring in curious new users,
or just help to raise our profile a bit.
However I'm not convinced that
Andrew Errington wrote
As far as I know OpenCycleMap is a semi-private initiative with
limited server resources and limited human resources. It is updated
periodically, but there is usually a backlog.
Yeah the lag time does seem pretty long at the moment.
It took well over a month for
I am wondering who it is and why. THOU SHALT NOT REVERT confirms
he/she/it knows what they are doing.
Agreed. This one is called THE GENERAL SHALL NOT REVERT THEE
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/changeset/12777187
Can we permanently block by IP?
be a great way to raise interest
and possibly draw in new mappers.
GrahamS
On Tue, Jul 24, 2012, at 08:29 AM, Ian Sergeant wrote:
On 23 July 2012 18:39, Graham Stewart (GrahamS)
[1]gra...@dalmuti.net wrote:
How great would it be to add details of a way or feature
while you are stood
Rob Nickerson wrote
What's your wish-list?
I'd love to see a fully-featured editor that can be used in the field,
running on GPS-enabled smartphones and tablets.
How great would it be to add details of a way or feature while you are stood
right next to it?
I imagine entering the way's name
Dave F. wrote
In Bristol users have been tagging links to NCN 4 (signposted on the
ground with the number in brackets) with the ncnref tag.
This just adds confusion when displayed on the maps. We need a way to
distinguish links from the actual routes.
In the recent thread about the Dft
Dave F. wrote
I'm not sure OSM should want it...OSM tagging system is more detailed
accurate.
Yeah the OSM data is more accurate and detailed, no question, but the
Sustrans data is way more complete in terms of coverage.
For example in my area (Newcastle/Gateshead) I've worked to get
It seems Sustrans have struck a deal with Google allowing them to use
Sustrans National Cycle Network routes on Google Maps:
http://www.sustrans.org.uk/about-sustrans/media/news-releases/safe-cycling-routes-to-appear-on-google-for-the-first-time
Merging this data I see that some ways that just lead to an NCN route (but
are not actually part of the continuous route) are still marked with the
ncn=yes;ncn_ref=xx tags for the route the lead to.
What's the feeling on this? I'm a bit torn:
- On the one hand they are not the route, as in the
David Earl wrote
I don't know about elsewhere in the country, but in Cambridgeshire the
council has used the parenthesis convention on such signs
That would be sensible. I think Newcastle Council must have run out of
parenthesis :)
David Earl wrote
I think we could do well to do the
Thanks both Andys :)
As an example of somewhere this hasn't happened look at the current mapping
around St Peter's Basin in Newcastle. It shows and extra spur of the NCN72
along Bottlehouse Street, but actually the NCN72 runs along a parallel road
to the north (Saint Lawrence Street).
smurph wrote
I've just been looking through the CUBA data and I think we need to show
that a route is part of a relation (specifically NCNs - which are mostly
done by relation in the Bristol area) to avoid someone retagging all of
the ways as NCN when they are already part of an NCN relation.
Navfree is a free sat-nav app for iPhone and Android, which uses maps based
on OSM data (with suitable attribution).
The app features a tool for reporting mapping errors, similar to the one in
skobbler.
The navmii website states the tool lets users Easily send map errors from
within Navfree to
David Earl wrote:
In areas where it has been important for me (where I've been producing a
high quality paper map), I have tagged these as junction=approach.
The reason I needed such a tag was to avoid one way arrows cluttering up
the map on those little Y-shaped approaches to
Apparently the government has moved control of Ordnance Survey, Met Office
and Land Registry agencies over to the Department for Business, Innovation
and Skills.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/07/19/public_data_corporation_bis_ordnance_survey_met_office_land_registry/
From the article:
The
Fantastic news - thanks to the License Working Group for their efforts on
this.
I've added a new answer to the
http://help.openstreetmap.org/questions/5792/can-i-accept-the-new-contributor-terms-if-ive-contributed-data-from-ordnance-survey-opendata
/Can I accept the new Contributor Terms if I've
Lester Caine wrote:
there is little incentive to make changes
since OSM IS correct ... so the 80% is probably a little low in reality.
There is still benefit in tagging these discrepancies (where OSM is correct
and OS is wrong) with the not:name tag - it maintains the accuracy of this
I just noticed that todays
http://www.itoworld.com/product/data/osm_analysis/main ITO Analysis Summary
shows we are now over 80% for road name completion (i.e. OSM road names
compared to the OS Locator data).
I think all UK contributors should buy themselves a pint for that. Top
effort.
We
Steve Coast wrote:
80n wrote:
A: We will definitely stop using OSM as soon as OSM switches to ODbL
for it's output.
Q: Now when will that be?
Personally I hope as soon as possible. I suspect it will be nice to give
you 'no' guys some time to reconsider, as some already have.
Frederik Ramm wrote:
Legal subtleties are best discussed on legal-talk. If you care to make
your suggestion there, I'd be willing to point out why it doesn't work ;)
Fair enough Frederik, if it's a legal subtlety then I probably don't want to
know! :)
But I do feel slightly uncomfortable
ce-test, qualified testing bv - Gert Gremmen wrote:
The rotten thing here is that the ODBL fork has hijacked the domain name
and
servers, because of mainly because a majority let them do it.
That is an odd way of saying the the majority is always right, and if
wrong
they are
Hi Peter (et al),
Last update of the
http://www.itoworld.com/product/data/osm_analysis/main is currently
reporting as 16/06/2011 (today is the 21st)
Has it just fallen over, or is there anything that the community can
help with to get this valuable tool running again?
Cheers,
GrahamS
I've just been using the new Potlatch release and I'm sorry to report that
I've seen a bit of instability too Richard.
After flipping between the backgrounds a couple of times (between Bing, OS
Locator and OS Street View) while working I suddenly lost the Bing
background entirely and couldn't get
Steve Bennett-3 wrote:
..the -BY- part means you
have to attribute the source. So presumably you weren't in compliance
with their licence anyway...
My understanding is that attribution is covered by the public attributions
on this Wiki page:
Toby Murray-2 wrote:
There is no such thing as an enforced tag in OSM. If you choose not
to use a tag then that is your choice.
Enforced may have been a poor choice of word.
What I meant was that, as I understand it, there is no particular licensing
requirement that every node/way derived
Nice job David! Very clear and professional.
I'd definitely support these videos being added to the wiki ASAP.
One small point: it might be worth mentioning the 'B' shortcut in Potlatch
2, which will set the source=Bing tag without having to flip to the 'Misc'
tab and type it in manually.
--
Richard Fairhurst said:
The problem with these fast-moving mailing lists is that I get
halfway through a reply to Graham's e-mail, go to the pub..
My emails often have that effect :)
That raises the question of why on earth we're still using
cliquey semi-private email lists when we could be
Peter (et al),
I think everyone agrees that the OSM Analysis Summary (
http://www.itoworld.com/product/data/osm_analysis/main ) is extremely
useful for gauging our efforts and highlighting areas that need work -
even if there is clearly some disagreement about how we then use the OS
data on the
I'm arguing that completing the map by survey creates a community who
will go on to improve and maintain the map.
This is no doubt true.
But surely having an area that has been *surveyed* to 100% road name
completion is just as likely to put off any new contributors as one that
was *traced*
I am pretty sure it already does that. See Back Crossflats Place at
Yep, so I'd like to see that kind of mismatch (where OS Locator says
there is a street called Back Crossflats Place and OSM doesn't have
any way of any name at that location) presented in a separate list or
perhaps in a
Great shame. So - recruit some more mappers. Write better tools to help
the people who show up nearby on your user page, yet who haven't edited
yet.
You've got me there.
Of the 30 nearby people on my user page, 20 have never made any edit.
Only 3 have edited in the past 6 months and few of
Jerry Clough said:
Do you mean like this one:
[1]http://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewforum.php?id=5.
I was thinking more like the layout in nabble:
http://gis.638310.n2.nabble.com/OpenStreetMap-f660402.html
which I discovered shortly after making that comment and goes
quite a way towards a
Fyi, here is the full list of content in the source:name field for
Suffolk and bits of Cambs,Norfolk and Essex (ordered by frequency of
occurrence)!
Well that nicely demonstrates what a complete mess the source tags are!
I particularly like source:name=Mrs Sylvia Secker :)
If I can put in my
I despair that the lazy, armchair mappers are taking over, but as I say,
there's little I can do to stop it.
Personally I think this project needs all the help it can get. The more
data sources and contributors the better.
We're trying to build a map from scratch. It's not a simple task. If
There is definite room for arguing that it will reduce active
mapping in some situations.
This keeps getting raised and I'm not sure how true it is.
Go and look at some of the areas that are 95-100% complete
according to the ITO analysis:
http://www.itoworld.com/product/data/osm_analysis/main
If you import data into an area that doesn't already have an active
community, the community will spring up more slowly or not at all.
But that logic suggests that we should actively *discourage* people from
doing any mapping, as an overly complete map discourages community.
In reality there
For those that don't know, navmii make a car sat-nav app for the iPhone
called Navfree GPS UK ROI
This app is free, is built on OSM data, and is typically the #1 app in
the Navigation-Free category in the App Store (ahead of skobbler which
is currently #3)
This is a pretty good advocate for
do need to contact them I wouldn't want to just go over old
ground.
GrahamS
On Thu, 21 Apr 2011 10:46 +0100, TimSC mapp...@sheerman-chase.org.uk
wrote:
On 21/04/11 10:40, Graham Stewart wrote:
Northumberland county council have a definitive PROW map, showing over
3000 miles of public rights
One point relating to Average Speed Cameras:
Don't assume that the first camera is entry into a monitored
section and the next camera exits the monitoring.
This is not always the case.
They can be set up as dual-exit-entry like this:
Enter-A -- Exit-A-Enter-B -- Exit-B (see
Great work on this Peter, it's a really helpful tool.
One suggestion: perhaps on the Area Summary page you could add an
option to rank the missing roads by their approximate
length/area*, rather simply alphabetically?
Targetting the largest incorrectly named roads first seems like a
good way to
No firm answer for you, but I can tell you that I've had to move stretches of
coastline (around Newcastle) out to the MHW shown on the OS Streetview, as the
PGS coastline had me, my GPS trace and a couple of nearby buildings bobbing
about in the sea. :)
On 16 Sep 2010, at 02:43, Dave F.
What is the correct way to group a collection of buildings into a
relation when they are all part of the same institution?
I traced (from OS StreetView) the seven buildings of the Queen Elizabeth
Hospital in Gateshead:
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=54.93834lon=-1.57941zoom=17layers=B000FTF
Tim,
In Potlatch you can also use 'r' or 'Shift-R' to repeat the tags
from the last way you had selected.
See
[1]http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Potlatch/Keyboard_shortcuts
GrahamS
On Fri, 28 May 2010 10:39 +, Tim François
sk1pp...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
...he scares me
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