watmildon's Comments
| Post | When | Comment |
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| My favourite OSM tools v.1.5 | I love lists like this! There’s always a few things I learn about. Here’s a few more I’ve found useful. https://ohsome.org/apps/dashboard/ - View tag counts by region over time. Really nice to track imports or just look at historical tag additions. https://overpass-ultra.trailsta.sh/ - A frontend for Overpass that works much better when you have lots and lots of data to render https://maproulette.org/ - A micro tasking manager |
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| Using the JOSM Conflation plugin to add 1500 addresses in 10 minutes | Thank you. Couple of things that may help you out. JOSM has keyboard shortcuts for moving between layers which you can change the keybindings to suit your needs. If you’re just grappling with the MapWithAI behavior to move to the map layer whenever you merge nodes, there’s a setting to modify that behavior. Settings > Preferences > MapWithAI preferences > Settings tab > “Automatically switch layers” checkbox. Or maybe there’s some other way to help out! Definitely let me know. Happy to help. |
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| Using HIFLD dataset in JOSM to find unmapped Hospitals in the United States | Maybe the HIFLD wiki? Could make a status box for each state similar to what we did for the Milwaukee Import |
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| Using HIFLD dataset in JOSM to find unmapped Hospitals in the United States | Lots and lots and lots of good ways to process files into a more OSM shape! If you do thought the import catalog you can find all manner of strategies. Here’s one for an address import up here in the Pacific Northwest. I am glad it was of use to you. The tooling (JOSM generally, conflation plugin specifically) is extremely powerful but can often be a huge hassle to jigsaw together into a workflow that is efficient. How much of the HIFLD hospital data did you make it through? |
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| Fixing tiny fonts in JOSM on Windows | Excellent addition! I have run from OpenWebStart from time to time so this definitely would have surprised me. Thanks for pointing it out. |
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| Fixing tiny fonts in JOSM on Windows | Wonderful. I knew I would need this the next time I flatten this machine so it helping others is a huge and perfect side benefit. |
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| Using Google to improve OSM | That is wonderful! What a great use case. I’ll have to set it up for my area and see if anything pops up. |
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| Import permission granted for Santa Cruz County, AZ | I’m still somewhat new to navigating the legal portion of these things and don’t have a great sense yet of whether the mail above is a strong enough statement. The folks on the import mailing group (US or otherwise) would have a better idea. The issues is that there’s lots of different flavors of “open” in data and they can conflict in various non-obvious ways. For example, a Creative Commons Non-Commercial license is an “open” license that conflicts with our OLDb license because we say you CAN use it for commercial use (with attribution). |
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| Import permission granted for Santa Cruz County, AZ | Definitely add the source to the list here so it’s tracked and other users can reference: osm.wiki/Potential_datasources/Local_data#U.S. I highly recommend finding imports of the type you’re trying to work on and reading their entries in the wiki. Scan through the Import Catalog. Always good to not reinvent things if you don’t have to. You can also find specific users to reach out to! For example, you’ll find my Indianapolis Address Import. For address info specifically, you’ll probably want to use the already prepared National Address Database info from ESRI as it’s already been cleaned up and OSMified. I’m running a huge project for the greater Phoenix area to do just that. The instructions link off into other reading about address data additions you may find interesting. I’m not super familiar with transforming building data but definitely wouldn’t mind working on it with you if that helps get things rolling. You can ping me here or the OSM US Slack or the OSM Discord with the same username. |
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| Import permission granted for Santa Cruz County, AZ | Nice! Presumably they have road centerline, address, and building footprint data? Anything else? |
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| High intensity OSM data capture just driving about.. | Love love love to see this. Incredible work. |
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| ChatGpt and tagging in OpenStreetMap | Totally right to be wary as it’s a “generate plausible text” tool and not a “go find the right answer” tool. That said, it’s always fun to play and see where things are and see where the limits of things are! Have you considered asking it to give cuisine=* suggestions based off the website for the restaurant? Having the language model do parsing of that form could be super helpful. I am reminded of some work someone posted in the OSM Discord some time back about using AI text tools to crawl website= tags to scrape and generate opening hours, phone number, and social media into data tags. |
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| Using GNIS data to find potential additions and corrections | As we work through this, I’m getting more and more interested in a general deduplication/simplification/deletion of common US import tags. Many objects have more than one synonym (or roughly synonym with the same value) which leads to maintainance issues (ex: merged nodes with different GNIS IDs, but they are in different synonymous keys.) Some cleanup that would immediately help reduce confusion/headaches: The 6 ways to tag GNIS ID. The many ways to encode name data NHD:GNIS_Name, gnis:name, the GNIS tags that are just is_in:* tags of a different format, etc I wonder if there’s precedent for merging out synonyms etc. Something to ask around about I suppose. |
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| Using the US National Address Database to assist TIGER tag cleanup | When I did the Indianapolis import I definitely hit issues where they disagreed. In those cases I had to find ANOTHER source of data to tie break, typically street side data. You can also see notes I left around Indianapolis like “what is the name of this street ‘foo’ or ‘bar’?”. Because I figured it would eventually get seen by a local and they can help be my arbiter. |
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| Finding areas where OSM is low in address data density | UPDATE! I have completed the address conflation of NAD data into Indianapolis. I’ll need to post an update to the dataviz for it to be reflected but… one city down, many to go. |
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| Working with the National Hydrography Dataset (or Not) | This is extremely helpful and always nice to have written down in an accessible location. Thanks for writing it up! |
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| Correcting addr:housenumber in the name field | Thank you for sharing! Seems all too easy to miss the correct accent marks. Reminds me of this excellent diary about finding and fixing spelling in the “cuisine” tag which you may find interesting. |
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| Finding non-English key names for cleanup while only speaking English | Oh absolutely. I was curious about “genus” and it’s only in the list because Latin was one of the “languages” that happened to survive my sorting. I highly doubt anyone is actually accidentally submitting Latin into the database. Casting a wide net means you’ll very often find false positives! |
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| Cleaning up cuisines in Canada with JOSM | I’m super new to this kind of editing work. I’ll definitely review my edits. Keeping on task (correcting typos etc) and resisting the urge to fiddle (in many cases somewhat haphazardly) is a real issue. This is all extremely well thought out and I appreciate the review and feedback from y’all. |
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| Cleaning up cuisines in Canada with JOSM | Just finished running this workflow for my local area. What a great idea. Some cuisine tags that aren’t in the list but made sense to me were: “gelato”, “pho”,”terikayi”. There’s hits for all those in tag info but would love to know if folks think there’s ways to improve those entries. |