Adam Dunn's Comments
| Changeset | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 175420545 | 17 days ago | Welcome DuckMan2!
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| 173650345 | about 2 months ago | There's a short bit of footpath at the south-east corner of Kay Meadow Park that has duplicate ways. One way says lit=yes, the other way says lit=no. If you have the chance, would you mind verifying which is correct? Thanks! |
| 173418331 | about 2 months ago | I see you've added layer=foot to the chairlift. This doesn't really make sense. What were you intending by this? |
| 169742242 | 5 months ago | Thanks for updating this! I drove through some of the changes this morning with my GPS so I could update things, but looks like you beat me to it! |
| 154321272 | over 1 year ago | Did you just update this because of DirtyTesla ;) |
| 153995958 | over 1 year ago | Really? |
| 153990095 | over 1 year ago | Hello, and thank you for your contributions to buildings in High Level.
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| 153405059 | over 1 year ago | Hello, and thank you for your contribution to OSM!
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| 153349782 | over 1 year ago | Hello, it looks like you've made some sharp angles in Silver Creek and accidentally connected it to the roadway.
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| 153222006 | over 1 year ago | Thank you for your contribution to OSM!
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| 152896269 | over 1 year ago | Potential misspelling in the name? |
| 152873080 | over 1 year ago | Thank you for the contribution to OSM! For your information, the barrier=gate tag should be used at the specific point where the gate exists, and the the trail itself would still be tagged with highway=path and access=private. Is the gate right beside Rennie Road, or is it in from the road a bit? Are there other gates that prevent accessing the trails from Hecker Road or Tasman Road? Thanks again for contributing to the Courtney area! |
| 152769569 | over 1 year ago | Hello, and thank you for your contributions to OpenStreetMap. It looks like you have directly traced the roof outline from overhead photos, but the roof angles have added extra corners that don't exist in the building outline. The building outlines should be more "rectangular" to match the blueprint of the building. Please see the guidance here with respect to "double pitched roof": osm.wiki/Roof_modelling#Typical_errors_in_the_interpretation_of_roof_geometry_from_aerial_images
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| 152743267 | over 1 year ago | Hello, when tagging a commercial area like the beach buildings, you wouldn't tag the area as natural=beach. That tag should only be used on the sandy beach area. You could tag the building area as "landuse=commercial", and then each building you could tag appropriately, like "shop=alcohol" "name=LCBO". |
| 152743157 | over 1 year ago | I'm guessing there's not actually a railway inside this offramp in Vaughan. Did you intend to tag this a different way? Perhaps as a footway or path? |
| 152700662 | over 1 year ago | It looks like you added a new run "Gentle Giant" on top of the existing run "Gentle Giant" (so there's two runs on top of each other).
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| 95644637 | over 1 year ago | Hello from 3.5 years later. I noticed this because it looks like a duplicate way of an inner polygon that already existed. |
| 148749190 | almost 2 years ago | Thanks for reminding me about this sidewalk crossing. There's also a new tag that was approved in the wiki just in December, called crossing:continuous=yes that works perfectly in this situation. So I added that as well. |
| 33869971 | almost 2 years ago | Actually, upon looking around the wiki a bit more, if you look at the "Talk" page for man_made=survey_point, there is a table with pictures of example tags (uploaded by user T99), and aerial=yes is the first example in that table. This photo gives an idea of what I'm talking about. However, the X in that photo is much smaller than the X markers near Yellowknife - the ones near Yellowknife are around 2-3 meters across. |
| 33869971 | almost 2 years ago | The tag aerial=yes (now deprecated on the wiki) was originally used for survey points that have a marker visible from the air. In the case of these survey points near Yellowknife, the marker is a giant white X painted on the ground, and the survey marker is at the intersection of the X. This serves the purpose of making it easy to align photographs that have been taken from an airplane with a known point on the ground (accurate to a few centimeters). This is very useful for aligning "Bing Aerial Imagery", or "ESRI World Imagery", and I don't know why it was marked as "deprecated" in the wiki without having replacement tagging. Based on the wiki, as far as I know, there is currently no way to tag survey points that have markers visible from the air, even though it's a very useful feature for mappers. |