b-unicycling's Comments
| Changeset | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 146593003 | almost 2 years ago | I wouldn't know the ethnicity of the shop owner, but it's a Polish shop. I don't know if that means all the products are from Poland. |
| 146161349 | almost 2 years ago | I think that tag was already there, when I added the pound tags. I didn't want to interfere with it. |
| 133359834 | almost 2 years ago | I don't know what happened there, but it should work now. |
| 101878581 | almost 2 years ago | No, "ecclesiastical enclosure". Just go with "enclosure", I'd say. And sub-categorize (enclosure=ecclesiastic), if you like, but there is no convention for it yet. You can do whatever you like, basically, just don't map it as a ringfort. |
| 146475245 | almost 2 years ago | Oh dear, thanks for reverting; I hadn't noticed. |
| 146161946 | almost 2 years ago | Nice work. I'm done now browsing through Wikimedia. |
| 146163099 | almost 2 years ago | It has a picnic table in it on wikimedia and seems to be considered a "pocket park", so no typo. |
| 146161946 | almost 2 years ago | All your taginfo links prove is that "pound" is a word much more often used than "pinfold". You would have to check what the "pound" in all the placenames refers to. "town pound" is also used in the United States, I have come across no instance of "town pinfold" yet, so it is a word used not just in the South of England. I'm not trying to get rid of regional words, but we need a standard that is understood intuitively by people. |
| 146138308 | almost 2 years ago | I don't know what you mean, they are mapped as two separate things - an area for the pound and a building for the lockup. I can't split the wikimedia image in two. |
| 146161946 | almost 2 years ago | Also, Historic England calls it a "pound": https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1149031, even thought they use both terms in their database. |
| 146161946 | almost 2 years ago | I don't think we should start allowing for regional tags for features that have had a specific standard label on maps for over 150 years. I could agree to changing the value to animal_pound, but I'm yet to encounter a historic car pound. |
| 146138308 | almost 2 years ago | If I interpret the wikimedia source correctly, the large one is for animals and the small one for humans. There are a few more cases like that, where the lockup is next to the animal pound. |
| 145424251 | almost 2 years ago | SomeoneElse has already contacted me over it, and I've apologized to him and said he could revert the change sets. There seem to be differences between Ireland & Britain and Continental sites, according to the talk page on the wikipedia article. The names containing "Hillfort" will remain which doesn't make things easier for classifications. |
| 145424213 | almost 2 years ago | You're right, of course. Please feel free to revert the changesets.
|
| 145302437 | about 2 years ago | I've moved them |
| 122330372 | about 2 years ago | Yup, you're right, I used the tag from memory (false memory, probably parallel to "hiking"). All fixed now, I hope. |
| 141471233 | about 2 years ago | According to the Sites and monuments records and Wikipedia, there are two. The Western one is not complete, though. |
| 143206367 | about 2 years ago | It is; I know the American English version is "Dutch door", but I find the Hiberno-English version more self-explanatory, especially since they're not limited to the Netherlands at all. |
| 96212066 | about 2 years ago | I would think so. You can visit the restaurant without being a guest in the hotel. Maybe that's true for most hotels... |
| 142807936 | about 2 years ago | Thanks for that, much appreciated! |