Vào lúc 10:28 2020-05-05, Michael Reichert đã viết:
Using the same nodes (like mapping to adjacent landuse polygons) breaks
routing because routing engines would allow trains to switch between the
levels. Using duplicated nodes at the same location is likely to trigger
quality assurance services
Due to some discussion between Minh, Martin and I on the Talk page of United
States admin_level, we seemed to agree that restoring admin_level=6 to
Connecticut counties is reasonable. I did so, and made minor changes to the
wiki to outline why.
SteveA
Hi,
On 5/15/20 23:12, Joseph Eisenberg wrote:
> I also think that it makes sense to have counties as admin_level=6 in
> Connecticut and Rhode Island, if local people still know their counties
> and the governments still recognize them for geographic, statistical and
> some other legal purposes.
I also think that it makes sense to have counties as admin_level=6 in
Connecticut and Rhode Island, if local people still know their counties and
the governments still recognize them for geographic, statistical and some
other legal purposes.
-- Joseph Eisenberg
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 1:42 PM
(3d attempt, apologies if you should get this several times)
Hi,
I am tempted to revert stevea's removal of the admin_level=6 from
counties (where this was in place for the last 10 years or so, eg
https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/1839542/history) until a
consensus is found that they should
Yes, I enabled moderation to cool off the "home rule" thread a bit.
I also stopped getting notification emails from the mailing list system
that any messages had been moderated. I didn't notice until I checked the
web interface. I've disabled the moderation for now.
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 10:04
Hi,
has someone switched on moderation for this list, and if so, why? I sent
a message 6 hours ago and re-sent it one hour ago and neither seem to
have gone through. Have I overlooked an announcement? Or is it just broken?
Bye
Frederik
--
Frederik Ramm ## eMail frede...@remote.org ##
The divisions and subdivision definitions are an ISO Standard, like threads
on nuts and bolts. And the 'politics' are the very least important aspect
of making the distinctions, because vast amounts of networks ( computers,
logistics, air travel ) rely on common understanding of these. Also
Having watched this discussion, I feel I can add a little bit.
There is a collection of "agencies" with different titles and different
functions that GENERALLY fall into this category. COG (council of
governments), TPO (transportation planning organization), RPO (regional
planning
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