2720 m
Diary Entries in English
Recent diary entries
3520 m
3050 m
Peak Forest
See pt1 of this series here.
See pt2 of this series here.
A Long Overdue Release
The goal with the Field Mapping Tasking Manager (FMTM) was to adopt an agile development style, making a new release around once per month.
3 months have passed since the last blog post and there was no FMTM release in between!
What gives??
Well, the team has been working extremely hard simplifying usage of FMTM and making it much more usable.
It’s been hard to find a good point to stabilise a release due to so many great and rapidly developed updates!
From this release onwards we plan to follow through with a new version increment every month. Look out for version 2024.4.0 next month.
Public Beta Now Live
- The main goal we have been working towards is releasing a public beta this month.
- The public beta for FMTM is now live on https://fmtm.hotosm.org
- The idea to to have the public test out it’s functionalities & definitely break a thing or two!
- With your valuable feedback we want to make FMTM the best it can possibly be 🙏
Started working on extending sidewalk mapping coverage into Emsworth Borough. I’m working much the same way as I did for Ben Avon, mapping sidewalks using a combination of aerial imagery, street-level photographs (Bing, PEMA, Esri, as well as my own), and in-person survey.
I was somewhat surprised to see that a footpath I have used numerous times going back many years was unmapped, so I added it (marked on the associated map).
I am trying how best to approach the area of Memorial Field (adjacent to Ohio River Boulevard / PA-65). The area currently marked shows as a football field, but the actual usage of the field is also a baseball diamond seasonally. In addition the area is shaped and sized differently than currently shown. Also, there are footpaths around it that are somewhat challenging to see on aerial imagery, so I suspect I will have to do some in-person GPS tracking to get better data. I am debating whether or not to map the pedestrian tunnel that passes beneath ORB/PA-65, as in the past I have been admonished that it is illegal to use. But it’s not physically blocked, nor are there posted signs indicating the access status. I just don’t want someone to wander through it and get into trouble, so maybe I’ll map it and tag it private or something to discourage public use until I can confirm.
I will probably bounce around between sidewalks and other features as I come across them.
Morocco and the western sahara is one entity there is nothing called Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic or western sahara as a state
https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/proposal-to-add-the-emoji-as-a-reaction/107167/1
this thread which is even has 2 DWG participants started off as a joke but has turned into coordinated harassment and trolling, they even praise “skillful trolling” I am going to let people read this for themselves. This is the backbone of OSM everybody.
I’ve begun to add sidewalks in Swissvale Borough.
This is my current methodology (just putting this somewhere so I can reference it later, and adapt to new information/methodology when necessary):
- add longest section of sidewalk possible (using clearest aerial imagery available, when in doubt, crosscheck with others; using PEMA, Esri, Bing for the most part), tag surface and smoothness where appropriate.
- add pedestrian crossing across intersecting ways, tag surface and markings.
- add crossing for intersecting ways (when prompted), tag surface and markings.
- tag all corners appropriately (curb height, wheelchair access).
- verify the above using street-level imagery and in-person surveys when possible.
- change tag for adjacent streets to sidewalk=separate to indicate that the sidewalk is mapped separately.
I’ve lately been doing some small fixes here and there, just trying to tie up some loose ends. This has included some in-person surveys of a few areas, which has raised as many (or more!) questions than it has answered. I still have a long list of other surveys I wish to conduct as my schedule allows. With the weather (generally) getting warmer every week, I feel like these will get more frequent.
I’ve added a few stop signs, but have paused doing that because I’m not entirely sure I was doing it correctly or the preferred way.
I’ve added some bus stops, but have paused doing that in a comprehensive way because I want to figure out how to assign them properly to routes / relations. That’s a whole new dimension of OSM that I don’t have a good grasp of yet, and need to do further research.
I think I’m going to branch out to other areas to work on sidewalks, because adding them is really satisfying. I’ve already gotten feedback from an IRL friend who uses one of the OSM-based apps that they appreciate seeing ‘new’ sidewalks popping up.
I operate StreetFerret, a site that shows runners, walkers, and cyclists which streets they’ve visited in a city or town. StreetFerret works by taking a user’s Strava activity data, and comparing it to OpenStreetMap map data to decide which streets they’ve completed.
For example, this is my StreetFerret map of Warwick, Rhode Island (USA):
OpenStreetMap is an awesome partner for StreetFerret because as the map gets updated, StreetFerret can update its street data too, within about a week. For someone trying to run, walk, or bike every street in their city, they don’t want to get their map to 99%, they want to get it to 100%! So, when they encounter a street that’s wrong in StreetFerret, they are motivated to edit OSM, which makes StreetFerret AND OpenStreetMap better at the same time. StreetFerret users have corrected OSM data countless times in pursuit of 100% completion.
Why are there two airstrips across the street from each other? Rich people being rich, I figured, and moved on mapping Forest Service roads in northwest Montana. While taking a quick break, I googled the names of airstrips — “searight and cimino.” The first result is a 1988 Montana Supreme court case. The case is an appeal related to a much earlier case, in which Murland and Virginia Searight sued Michael Cimino over the construction costs of an airstrip.
One of the things that I really enjoy while mapping is stumbling upon something mildly interesting or unique on the map or imagery and spending a few minutes googling it. This typically leads me to a local news story about the volunteers restoring a remote airport or someone’s blog post about bushwhacking into an abandoned mine marked on a USGS topo map.
After some time away, I am back at validating and helping map buildings in Ireland. The Fingal project is sitting at 30% complete (mapped + validated).
The Map Paint Styles by Jonny really help with the validation process.
Mapping on OpenStreetMap allows many things, like 3D mapping.
Having played Cities: Skylines, I was always intrigued by this game, and the idea emerged: “It would be nice if for Pyongyang I could come up with something nice like Cities: Skylines”.
Well, the reality is that it’s a lot of work (and yes, as always!) and OSM wasn’t designed for 3D… but there are ways of getting close and having a lot of fun! So I explored this topic on the city that interests me, and you guessed it: it’s Pyongyang, see it on DemoF4map !
Today, I estimate that there’s a third of the city “in 3D”, as well as a good proportion of the monuments.
I decided to end my 2,687-day non-stop editing streak today (1st March 2024), because my mental and physical health has declined to a point where I need to rest more.
A changeset or more per day from Day 1 may have been a good challenge back in October 2016, but maintaining a high-stakes daily editing streak has become too much for me to handle.
I don’t know how long this break will last: it depends on what I need to catch up on other things.
The first paragraph was corrected from 2,686 days to 2,687 days, to reflect the final tally on the How did you contribute to OpenStreetMap? service by Pascal Neis.
I’ve put up a demo page showing my work on minutely updated vector tiles. This demo is using my work for the tiles and the Versatiles Colorful stylesheet.
With this year being the year of OpenStreetMap vector maps I’ve been working on making vector tile maps that update minutely. Most maps don’t need minutely updates and are fine with daily or, at most, weekly. Minutely updates on OpenStreetMap.org are a crucial part of the feedback cycle where mappers can see their edits right away and get inspired to map more often. Typically a mapper can make an edit and see their edit when reloading after 90-180 seconds, compared to the days or weeks of most OSM-based services, or the months or years of proprietary data sources.
Updating maps once a week can be done with a simple architecture that takes the OSM file for the planet and turns it into a single file containing all the tiles for the world. This can scale to daily updates, but not much faster. To do minutely updates we need to generate tiles one-by-one, since they change one-by-one. When combined with the caching requirements for osm.org, this is something no existing software solved.
For some time I’ve been working on Tilekiln, a small piece of software which leverages the existing vector tile generation of PostGIS, the standard geospatial database. Tilekiln is written specifically to meet the unique requirements of a default layer on osm.org. Recently, I’ve been working for the OSMF at setting up minutely updated vector tiles using the Shortbread schema. A schema is a set of definitions for what goes in the vector tiles, and Shortbread is a CC0 licensed schema that anyone can use and there are existing styles for.
I have tentatively completed the sidewalks in Ben Avon, as well as pedestrian crossings, and some fire hydrants. I have added surface materials to most, if not all of the sidewalks and ped crossings. Some of the pedestrian crossings may have had their lines repainted more recently than the available street-level imagery I have access to, so I will update them as necessary.
For now, I’ve held off tagging sidewalks and pedestrian crossings with smoothness and slope data, partly because of the difficulty of adding that manually, but also because I’m not quite sure how useful this data is given that few renderers seem to use this data. Even Wheelmap.org seems to only pull the data on individual buildings/businesses, rather than the condition of the pathways that lead between them. So unless I come across a compelling reason to go back and add this data, this aspect is on pause for me.
One of my next goals was to be adding private driveways and walkways to connect with sidewalks and streets, but I am second-guessing this now. While many are easily visible from a combination of aerial and street-level photography, there are also quite a few that are difficult to see under heavy tree cover.
I am going to investigate how to properly map stop signs and other traffic control devices, and perhaps add speed limits to roadways as I am able.
I also ran into some trouble when adding a bridge area and modifying another bridge area, along with the associated ways that pass over and under it… so I probably need to brush up on how best to modify those for future use.
There are also a couple of areas that probably should be modified to be more in line with existing conditions. For example, there are a few blocks east of Dickson Avenue, between Perrysville and Church that are not included in the adjacent Residential Area when they really should be.
INDRZ is available at the WU https://campus.wu.ac.at Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien Welthandelsplatz 1, AD 1020 Wien
INDRZ indoor maps at the Technical University of Vienna (https://tuwien.ac.at/maps)
I’ve made a start at mapping the shops in Glastonbury - the result of which is that Glasto now has three quarters of all the places tagged with shop=esoteric
in the UK.
Some of these could be shop=herbalist
or shop=jewellery
; others may be better tagged as shop=gift
(although that implies most purchases are for other people, which I’m not sure is the case here). There are some that offer alternative medicine or services such as tarot readings. But many of them offer such a mix of items and services that “esoteric” seems the only proper description.