Stalfur's Comments
| Post | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Ok, so I am a bit tired now | Don’t burn out too quickly. I took an entire summer to map my town of 35.000 people in 2013 and this month I’ve been doing some fixes every day after new imagery was available. As for Garmin check out the wiki page, much of the work might be already done for you. |
|
| Help needed with reverting changeset | I have reverted the changeset using JOSM. You did the right thing as a newbie, to ask for help! This tells you about the revert plugin in JOSM. Best of luck! |
|
| "Wisepilot map reporter" is absolutely useless | They have said they are trying to fix it, although I guess they can’t do much about the notes already posted. See this on mailing list. |
|
| Mapping Chihuahua City, México | Welcome! A handy trick when drawing sport fields, buildings and other that have 90° angles is to use the shortcut S when drawing to make all the corners go 90°. My first buildings were all crooked and still today I’m finding old ones and fixing the corners using S in iD editor. |
|
| none | It would be good to hear stories from Poland, they got something like 600 new users in a week after some tech show. How did those users do? Much vandalism? |
|
| none | I understand your concern and this sounds very tedious. The big picture is of course the trade-off, how many potential users do we lose if we start creating tiers where the bottom tier can’t do much? Personally if we already had a system where you can draw buildings, roads, put in POI nodes as a new user but not touch administrative boundaries unless upgraded by another established user, I would be thrilled. But we lack the tools for this, the programmers, time and more. Nodes shared between boundaries and roads or residential areas complicate this, we would have to run scripts to seperate them to allow boundaries/admin relations to be transferred to another layer. Personally I’m watching a fairly large area but it is sparsely populated and the number of new users is a few each month (sadly). The RSS feeds make it much easier though to keep up. |
|
| How to detect a wrong/improper/broken highway classification/hierarchy? | Excellent question. Seems like a SQL query would be able to catch this. I just don’t happen to have resources for it personally. |
|
| OSM Quality | You can also subscribe to RSS feeds of things happening in your designated area http://positron96.appspot.com/osmfilter.html Also see recent new editors with http://neis-one.org/2012/07/new-contributor-feed/ (more tools from Pascal Neis at http://resultmaps.neis-one.org/ ) |
|
| The first thing I mapped… | Nice work. May I ask why you did not put the street number on the buildings themselves which already had streetname and town and all that but instead as seperate nodes outside the buildings? |
|
| Experimental Overpass attic support in Achavi (augmented change viewer) | Looks and works brilliant! |
|
| Why doesnt my edictions are good to gpsyes and others?? | They probably haven’t refreshed their version. If you make a change now then it will appear, most likely, the next day on the routing websites, depends on how often they refresh their local copy of the database. |
|
| Too slow | Which part are you showing them? Are you using the default website or another tile supplier? Are you connected with DSL or fiber or using a modem? Do you have “Show Data” checked? This will slow viewing the map down - by a lot. I’m sure given more details we could assist you, I myself have been planning to make a “Starter kit” for teachers in my native country and so am eager to hear of any problems teacher might have with any class interaction with it. |
|
| New Starter | This would be the badly named “Unclassified Road” which should be “Road” or similar generic term. You can use the Land Use classification for the area to designate it as industrial. |
|
| @OsmThis: Twitter to OSM | I see, thought the geo-tagging could be read from image, my mistake :) |
|
| @OsmThis: Twitter to OSM | Tried this for the first time, not seeing any note. https://twitter.com/jbjensson/status/467372597605588992 |
|
| @OsmThis: Twitter to OSM | Looks very good, I’ll add this to the Mapping Botswana guide for example! |
|
| OsmHydrant | Very nice. I’m trying to load my area and the circles for loading fire hydrants just turn and turn and no data turns up? osm.org/#map=16/64.0987/-21.8970 |
|
| Mapping Botswana via Facebook | Indeed, your Mali example is what i was thinking of with my “Quality Inspector”. In addition it could look up in the Nominatim and other GPS sources for probably village names. I’m not very proficient with the .osm scanning which is hindering my development there, I moved onto other tasks for now but keep this in the back of my mind. My ideas are mroe numerous than lines of code I’m managing! This red/green webpage is more like the Trello taskboard, I have a defined list of GPS co-ordinates (under free license) which I then manually tick if present or not. Some of these already exist on the map and so I simply tick them to green when I find them. By default I put everything to red and not into a 3rd neutral state, however I might add the 3rd state as “not applicable” for example for places with no roads at all or no buildings at all. By OSM-login I mean I am going to add OSM-auth to it so you can login there and tick the boxes as applicable from red to green or green to red. As for reserving a task I’m thinking about it but each task is usually small enough that I’m not too worried about it at the moment, but might be useful for bigger things like the Botswana villages. If the taskboard tool gets bigger coverage and maybe scores of people using it intermittently then maybe some gamification could be introduced (OpenBadges for completing 10 farms or something) if I deemed it could help with for example kids who are mapping 10 farms as an assignment for school. I’ve been in contact with some teachers and they are interested in adding OSM and other similar open projects on the curriculum to teach students that they don’t have to be only data consumers, they can also influence and put their efforts on the map/Wikipedia/Gutenberg etc. Another pet project of mine! |
|
| Mapping Botswana via Facebook | Thanks Harry. I’ve been thinking about a Quality Inspector tool that digs through a data dump (I’ve been using Iceland as guinea pig) and lists various things in it, for example under each settlement it lists if it has a school or a firehouse or police station or whatever and the user can put an expected number in maybe (for example, Iceland as a whole should contain about 15-ish firehouses - will the output match that?). So this is not a Quality tool like current ones (which checks if the data is valid) but publishes summaries sort of for easier eyeballing of deficient data. For example if an entire region lacks schools, that seems very strange and so would merit a second look. So far these ideas swirl around in my head but actual solving using programming is slow going. I’m working on a new thing, I recently got a data dump from the land registrar (so mostly farms but also some other stuff) and I slapped some filters on it and am working on AJAXing it up, so you could use your OSM-login and then work on stuff on the list and tick the appropriate boxes (from left to right, is it on the map, is it connected to the road network, are buildings mapped, do we have imagery of it or is it lacking). So it’s a beta version but once done it should be a tool that people can easily do a couple of defined things from, they click on an item, get pointed to a location on the map, open up their favorite editor, add any of the items requested, save and then tick off which parts work. Also since no login is required for viewing the project page we can allow anonymous users to use this to find a location on the map where they can add a Note if there is something special about that place (farm is now abandoned or has a church or whatever). To be extended for other similar things, possibly moving the Botswana settlements to this format (so a seperate Trello login becomes needless). In my mind a lot of people would be willing to help with clearly defined and small tasks like these, they just feel daunted by all the stuff they find when they casually log in for the first time and see hundreds of polygons and paths as they look at their home location in a city. |
|
| Debian | Looks good, edging closer to installing own tileserver one day. |