On Thursday 19 November 2015, Kate Chapman wrote: > > > > And if on http://tasks.hotosm.org/project/1300 i read: > > > > "Please draw one large area outline around groups of buildings and > > tag them landuse=residential" > > > > that is in violation of one of the core principles of OSM, namely > > to map reality, what's on the ground. It instructs mappers to map > > something that does not exist in reality based on abstract > > geometric considerations and to give it a tag that is meant for > > something different. > > > > Referring to > > landuse=residential is a globally used tag, so you can hardly call > out HOT for using it.
Is it really so difficult to understand that the cited instructions are wrong and lead to bogus mapping like here: http://mc.bbbike.org/mc/?lon=70.356396&lat=37.310341&zoom=14&num=2&mt0=mapbox-satellite&mt1=mapnik This might look plausible to someone from Europe or North America but the truth is in terms of mapping reality this is not even inaccurate, it is pure garbage as far as landuse mapping is concerned. The actual area that would truely qualify as landuse=residential is likely only about 5-10 percent of what is mapped here - if at all, in many cases the criterion 'predominantly residential' is likely not met and landuse=farmyard would be more accurate. And to address Richard/Frederik: This is not the same as early mapping in Europe, here we have a settlement structure which is fundamentally different from that of rural Afghanistan. You can not reliably identify any of these settlements on Landsat imagery. The coarse landuse drawing is merely extrapolated from the presence of buildings and is not connected to actually observable landuse on any scale. But there is no sense in getting lost in this particular example - it is just that, an example. So i repeat my suggestion to improve QA of the mapping instructions and allowing the OSM community to effectively correct mistakes there. -- Christoph Hormann http://www.imagico.de/ _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk