As a passenger in a moving car, I like to do OSM field mapping, constantly scanning the view outside and noting every detail I can spot. The catch is, I need to do it fast. Too fast to worry about proper tagging or structured data entry. What I really want is an app that shows my current location on a basemap, lets me tap anywhere on it to drop a point, and attach a rough plaintext note. Later, once I’m back home, I could export all those coordinates and notes as a GeoJSON file, import it into iD Editor or JOSM, and take the time to think about proper tags.
A few weeks ago, while traveling to Bandung, I tried doing “quick, live mapping on the road” with Vespucci. It turned out to be a bit of a nightmare. Each time I spotted something, I had to stop the GPS autofollow, download OSM data, add a node, pick a tagging preset, fill out the details, upload, and then repeat the whole cycle. By the time I was done with one object, I’d already missed several others. That constant stop-and-go completely killed the flow of observation.
What I wanted instead was a much simpler loop: keep the GPS autofollow running, spot something interesting, click on the map, type a quick note, and move on. No tagging, no data downloads, no breaking the momentum. Just rapid-fire, location-anchored note-taking while the car keeps moving.
At first, I tried building a dedicated Android app to do this. Unfortunately, my Gradle setup was corrupted, and fixing it meant re-downloading everything, which would have taken far too long. That’s when I remembered a small web app I had built three years ago for a similar purpose, although back then it didn’t have GPS tracking. So instead of starting from scratch, I decided to just add the GPS feature to that old app.
The result is now live at http://altilunium.github.io/sakumaps/v2.

It’s not a polished product, but it works exactly how I need it to: a simple way to drop geotagged plaintext notes in real time, without losing track of what’s happening outside the window.
Epilogue :
Picture a web platform where travelers can share moments from their journeys. Not just as photos or status updates, but anchored to exact locations on a map. You open the app, pick a coordinate, jot down a funny or memorable story that happened there, and keep going until you’ve mapped your whole trip in anecdotes. Once shared, these points start to overlap with others, forming a rich “experience cloud” tied to specific places on Earth. With enough users, it becomes more than a map, it’s a living archive of people’s stories, layered over geography.
I think that would be pretty cool.
Discussion
Comment from KhubsuratInsaan on 16 August 2025 at 02:14
On Vespucci you can create notes without downloading the data, and you can also auto download data based on your current location. Though I am not sure if you can keep the auto follow always on.
Comment from chris_debian on 16 August 2025 at 08:17
Hi, rphyrin.
That’s a really good idea, especially the reuse of your code. I’m not a developer, but am trying to get MOROW off the ground. I have two versions; one based on old code, which I couldn’t get to build, and one created in Flutter, which I’ve just started. Any thoughts you have, would be greatly received.
https://github.com/chrisdebian
Chris
Comment from LySioS on 20 August 2025 at 03:56
Great job,
I was doing the same last month when going back from holidays.
I used CoMaps with location and direction locked, and the bottom left button settled to quick adding.
That was sport though 😄
What would be great on your project is to have a speak-to-text fonction for better efficiency, like a geocoded dictation machine
Comment from M!dgard on 22 August 2025 at 13:59
I use OsmAnd for note-taking: @M!dgard/diary/391761
In OsmAnd you can even make audio notes if you enable the “Audio/video notes” plugin.
In Configure Screen, you can enable a custom shortcut button so you can make a note fast.
Comment from Geonick on 24 August 2025 at 22:25
Did you try the Every Door app? https://every-door.app/