On 31/08/16 10:03, Maarten Deen wrote:

How did people manage before the age of smartphones, accurate GPS and free maps?

Regards,
Maarten
Felix Dellatre, a German who lives in Managua, told in his presentation "Community mapping in Nicaragua" at the OSM US conference in San Francisco in 2013, that people do not come after dark because of the risk of being lost. They cannot go to the cinema, theater, courses, etc.

He also said that the absence of address system makes it impossible to call police or ambulance, and as a result local informal "authorities" emerge which try to establish a semblance of an order. He told that addresses are given is such a way as: "make four hundred steps to the north from the place of a burnt church, and ask Miguel".

Please, note than both Nicaragua and especially Brasil are relatively well-to-do countries with stable central authorities. You may look at the maps of the cities of many other countries and see that a lot of areas do not have street names at all and will never have them. The current system of street names and house numbers is not scalable, and it is not suitable for the whole world. The same as say, excuse me, a flush toilet system, which is common in Europe and North America, and yet it is absolutely not applicable for many other places. You may see this excellent BBC documentary "The Toilet An unspoken History" about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZHm3vkavgM .

I am sorry for this a bit too strong example, but it illustrates well that not all things to which we are accustomed are applicable elsewhere, especially in a places with scarce resources.

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