(Urk, I've been replying off-list by mistake again. Excuse me if you were the lucky recipient of one of my replies)
RE Magpies: I was thinking this too. As far as I know, it's a problem in different locations from year to year though. That would mean it needs cleaning up each year after the magpie season's over. It'd be good if we could set some kind of node expiry tag to flag nodes and ways for deletion in 3 months time (or however long the problem is likely to last,) but otherwise it sounds like a bit too much hassle. Ash. (Also, I'm not going to stick around and work out where the attack perimeter is. You can do that. They're nasty creatures. ;) On Fri, 2009-09-11 at 08:45 +1000, Hugh Barnes wrote: > Just read in my local rag about a magpie hotspot map: > > http://city-south-news.whereilive.com.au/news/story/magpie-hotspots/ > > This occurred to me just recently after being on the receiving end of > an air raid. Should probably be areas rather than nodes. It would be a > useful feature on the cycle map and any walking maps created from OSM > data. > > Food for thought? > > Cheers > > _______________________________________________ > Talk-au mailing list > Talk-au@openstreetmap.org > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-au -- Ashley Kyd • Web & Software Development in Brisbane, Australia. • Phone (07) 3129 2332, or visit http://kyd.com.au/
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