> This is a three minute video on, mostly, maps and addresses. Probably applies
> to boundaries too. http://sivers.org/jaddr
Interesting. Although, I don't know what it is, but TED speakers always
manage to creep me out and sound supremely sanctimonious, no matter how
enlightening their subject m
> It is a big world.
>
> This is a three minute video on, mostly, maps and addresses. Probably
> applies to boundaries too.
> http://sivers.org/jaddr
>
Do they have OpenBlockMap in Japan?
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Subject: Re: [Talk-us] Gluing boundaries to roads (was Talk-us Digest, Vol 31,
Issue 1)
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 11:33 AM, Nakor wrote:
> At 2010-06-01 06:00, Lord-Castillo, Brett wrote:
>>> I don't think I have encountered a situation where an administrative
>>>
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 11:33 AM, Nakor wrote:
> At 2010-06-01 06:00, Lord-Castillo, Brett wrote:
>>> I don't think I have encountered a situation where an administrative
>>> boundary at the city level of higher follows a road (i.e. if the road
>>> changes alignment, the boundary changes alignment)
At 2010-06-01 06:00, Lord-Castillo, Brett wrote:
>> I don't think I have encountered a situation where an administrative
>> boundary at the city level of higher follows a road (i.e. if the road
>> changes alignment, the boundary changes alignment).
>>
Interesting. I worked on Michigan county
At 2010-06-01 06:00, Lord-Castillo, Brett wrote:
>I don't think I have encountered a situation where an administrative
>boundary at the city level of higher follows a road (i.e. if the road
>changes alignment, the boundary changes alignment). Sometimes boundaries
>below the city level are define
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