Cool thing around pictures, as most of twitter clients can upload them themselves and make a short links in the posts, so, we can try to use that links and put them into nodes as well! Also @mentioning - we're adding both ways now - so, you'll be able to use @osm_it - to hide your mappings from your followers, or #osmit - as it works now... Next, a MapDust - have to get in more with service, as it makes sense to use it with osmitter. For now, when you're adding a POI, you'll get a @reply from osmitter with link to the node on the OSM, like this: http://twitter.com/#!/osm_it/status/87777704488865792 - so, you can check it on the go.
btw, cool to have this kind of feedback! -- RO 2011/7/5 Martijn van Exel <m...@rtijn.org> > Hi Oleg, > > Well you beat me to it :) This is in fact almost exactly what I had in mind > and what I discussed at WhereCampEU. > Apart from the comments Martin made, we also discussed using a mention > instead of a hashtag. This helps to keep the user's followers twitter > streams free of the osmitter tweets that do not make sense to most anyway. > The rationale here is that a tweet starting with a @mention will - I believe > - only show up in your follower's stream if they also follow that account. > Also, I've been thinking about feedback to the user. Because GPS is > generally inaccurate in dense urban areas this way of adding things to OSM > will result in quite a number of those things ending up on the next block or > on the wrong side of the street. It would be good if there were some way for > the user to easily review his submissions. This could be done in a number of > ways. Firstly there is the intermediate layer that Martin mentioned. I was > talking to Oliver (Skobbler) about using MapDust for that and that makes a > lot of sense to me. If you choose to go the route you chose and add directly > there should be either something like a queue of twitter submissions on the > osmitter web site that you could pull up to review your submissions, or > possibly a twitter reply with a link to a mobile site allowing you to do > that. As it is, this system will generate a lot of inaccurately located POIs > – or does your experience show otherwise? > A last thing that I've been thinking about implementing is a way to add > links to photos to the POI. Twitter clients on smartphones generally have > tight integration with photo sharing services - take a picture, twitter > client uploads and inserts link to image page on sharing service. That link > could be added as a tag (url:photo or something?) to the poi. > > Best > Martijn > > > On Tue, Jul 5, 2011 at 8:06 PM, Oleg <gel...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Martin, >> >> Yes, I've talk to Shaun McDonald - he told me about this discussion. The >> sad thing - I was planning to visit wherecamp this summer as well, but no >> luck there ;) >> Think, correcting posted data is a useful tool, we can do that - as we can >> keep all the data, we'v parsed. >> First we want to add is a human-readable tagging - so, you can add "fast >> food italian pizzeria Ololo #osmit", but, still thinking on formatting and >> parsing rules on this case. A good example is another place, named "French >> Fries", for instance... >> If there's any idea on parsing both of the cases correctly... and yes = >> we'll update that example! >> >> -- >> RO >> >> 2011/7/5 M∡rtin Koppenhoefer <dieterdre...@gmail.com> >> >>> While I think that this is generally not a bad idea, I'd still expect >>> that the data has not the average positional quality OSM usually has. >>> Martijn van Exel gave a talk at Wherecamp-EU in Berlin about the same >>> topic (twitter to osm) and in the following discussion the consensus >>> was towards a intermediate layer where those tweets would be stored, >>> so that you can do reasonable verification at home with the comfort of >>> a map and probably some nice aerial fotos in the background to >>> validate the "raw" data. >>> >>> I also stumbled upon the first tagging examples on your page: >>> Italian pizzeria >>> amenity=cafe name=Pizza Ololo cuisine=italian #osmit >>> >>> Is this really consensus to tag a pizzeria as cafe? There is also >>> restaurant and fast_food in the amenity value-set. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Martin >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> talk mailing list >>> talk@openstreetmap.org >>> http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk >>> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> talk mailing list >> talk@openstreetmap.org >> http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk >> >> > > > -- > martijn van exel > schaaltreinen.nl >
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