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Diary Entries in English
Recent diary entries
Hey guys! My first time giving diary entry in OSM!! Very incredible.
به مدت ۲۵ سال در مدارس مختلف استان البرز، خاصه در منطقه ساوجبلاغ با سمت مدیر فعالیت داشتم، باتوجه به حفظ ارتباطات عاطفی خودم در طول سالهای عمر، مخصوصا بعد از بازنشستگی، از ظرفیت بکار گیری و همراهی عده ی زیادی از شاگردانم در امور اطلاع رسانی، نقشه خوانی و نقشه برداری، جمع اوری اطلاعات دقیق اماری مخصوصا ازنقاط محروم و کمتر رشد یافته را دارم
I currently live in Chhattisgarh.
i left the city
Last time i was in the city, went for coffee and made a post here about it. Now i dont see any post…
digital hallucination
Now im writing from a remote location artist studio. Should i pin it on the map? kontajnerlab
In the upper-right corner of the main screen, you’ll see 3 buttons:
- Upload
- Looks like an “up arrow”.
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Layers
- This is the one we want!
- Settings
- Looks like “3 horizontal lines”.
(Note: This tutorial was created using StreetComplete v60.1 on Android.)
Tutorial: Adding Fire Hydrants
1. Click on the “Layers” button.
2. Choose “Things”.
- The icon will now turn into a green-and-white bullseye-looking symbol.
- (You can now see objects like benches / fire hydrants on the map.)
Street-level imagery
Since last Thursday, I’m touring the Netherlands with the band I’m in. I brought the GoPro Max sponsored by Meta, because I thought it would be a great opportunity to get lots of footage for Panoramax which has little coverage in the Netherlands so far. We’re staying in the same place all the time, near Epe in Gelderland and fan out for the gigs almost all over the Netherlands. We’ll be playing until the 31st of January.
Unfortunately, it’s been very foggy since we arrived, so the imagery is not the best. It is also very cold, and the third trip (to Zutphen, if I remember correctly), the metal on the holder hinge shrunk and the camera tilted back, so that footage was fairly useless.
I upload the images to mapillary first, after all, they sponsored the camera, so it takes a while to get them onto Panoramax, and the internet at the accommodation doesn’t seem as quick as what I’m used to.
OpenStreetMap is now 20 years old. Its community is contributing to complete a geographical database which fuel many activities, for instance useful for energy transition and power grids asset management. The increasing impacts of extreme weather phenomenons like storms or wild fires disrupt power grids and expose them to wider outages. Operators have to reinforce and adapt their assets for those upcoming challenges.
Overhead power grids asset management had suffered from disinterest since early 1990s for instance in France. It remains at least a significant challenge in developed countries. Important decisions that had been made to bury them and more generally because they are “highly visible infrastructure” don’t bring value to accurate knowledge about existing infrastructures. Nevertheless, several decades are required to completely hide a very capillary distribution grid. So we need to better describe them for sake of maintaining remaining overhead power grids, particularly ones that couldn’t be buried. In particular, very high voltage transmission lines will remain mainly overhead.
Producing and maintaining knowledge about utility networks assets is tedious and expensive without appropriate tools. I already had opportunity to explain how the “OpenStreetMap way” is helping for power transmission grid knowledge, back in 2020. Operators now face other challenges and are busy with bigger investments for transitions. Yet lesser time left for knowledge management as projects pace accelerate. Power grids inventory started early after OpenStreetMap birth in 2004. It began with most visible transmission grids. Tagging improvements are continuously made since 2010 and 15 years later we reach another step with a deeper experience in such activities.
Hello, I was wondering if there was a way to make your own personal edits to the OSM without sending it to the server.
# 64 NPC Area B Street,GSIS Hills Subdivision,Talipapa Barangay 164, Caloocan City, Metro Manila Philippines, 1400
For years, an issue with Kurdish language, Arabic script, and OpenStreetMap tiles has been on my radar. In 2023 I got OSM to update Noto fonts on the tile server, but Google has moved their latest changes to individual repos.
I’m continuing to workshop a PR for that.. but in the meantime, I thought to check if OSM needs more of the language-specific Noto fonts. Back in spring 2019 I did a mini survey of where Unicode blocks were used around the OSM world.
Today I added Python scripts to check Planet PBF files (specifically name and alt_name tags on nodes) and find usage across Unicode blocks.
There are names with Latin alphabet and frequently associated characters (superscripts and subscripts, dingbats, diacritics, IPA, half-width, old italic, runic, spacing modifiers, punctuation, emoticons/emoji, and symbols from math, music, currency, and maps).
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Africa has: TIFINAGH, ARABIC (supplements and presentation forms), CYRILLIC, ETHIOPIC, NKO, HEBREW, CJK, HANGUL, and GREEK.
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Asia has: CYRILLIC, GREEK, HEBREW, ARABIC, SYRIAC, COPTIC, ETHIOPIC, BALINESE, JAVANESE, CJK + YI + BOPOMOFO + KANGXI, HANGUL, MONGOLIAN, TIBETAN, THAI, MYANMAR, LAO, KHMER, ARMENIAN, GEORGIAN, THAANA, SINHALA, TAMIL, ORIYA, BENGALI, GURMUKHI, GUJARATI, DEVANAGARI, KANNADA, MALAYALAM, OL_CHIKI, and TELUGU.
For the Americas, OSM already includes fonts for Cherokee and Canadian Aboriginal Symbols.
Those two scripts and OGHAM, TAGBANWA, and BAMUM were misused in Asia. The instance of TAGALOG script was a little uncertain. I removed an Apple logo because it’s from the Private Use Area.
The current font download script is pretty good, and includes additional fonts (Adlam and Tai Viet) which aren’t actively used.
so the beach town is seeing growth again, after the primary developers went bust in 2007/8. A large amount of blank land between the shops and the harbour has been cleared, and given asphalt roads, concrete footpaths, and brackish ponds for the mosquitoes to grow in! I hope the new holiday home owners like mosquitoes!
My GPS accuracy is not great and my note taking while walking is worse; but I’ve drawn some new ways on the new footpaths; and verified some of the existing paths from Kenwood Drive to Waimarie Ave are still approximately where my GPS says they are. Good fun.
Need to go back with a laptop next summer to add/tweak more. Hopefully LINZ has updated by then to provide even better coverage
The State of the Map Asia 2024 conference wasn’t held in a main travelers’ hub like Thailand but rather chose a much, not that well-known country Bangladesh, and its previously unsettled political situation, which ended with the Prime Minster fleeing to India. Summarizing all these factors might discourage most people from visiting this country, ended up most of the attendees are domestic, and plus someone like me who is a foreigner is lucky enough to obtain a VISA to pay a visit.
Bangladesh is a young country, during the conference we saw many attendees were students, who might help those international aid projects to gather map data. We can see teachers bring their students to attend the conference. And there are also various student clubs, like all Youthmappers in Bangladesh, publishing their project results. One day we might see when the country is prosperous, and students grown up, there is a chance that they will map shops and buildings in the city where they live.
I want to write something about the general participant situation here in the Asia Pacific area. In developed countries like Taiwan, there are individuals who launch interest groups to map specific map features or netizens with enough motive to contribute to OpenStreetMap project. There are other countries that rely on aid projects to map local map data, and sometimes there are sone who will map modern map features. I have heard a talk about solar pannels in Dahka.
The State of the Map Asia splits its session into quite strange 10-minute parts. I accidentally submitted two talks, and did not get rejected. I had to give a talk on the first and second day, one I introduced the community in Taiwan, and the other day I introduced some interesting projects hosted by individual mappers.
See pt1 of this series here.
See pt2 of this series here.
See pt3 of this series here.
How Does This Relate To OSM Again?
If you have been following the articles listed above, you will know the Field Mapping Tasking Manager (FMTM) is a tool developed by HOTOSM to improve the quality of field verified data associated with geometries.
In the OSM world, this means adding and improving tags for OSM geometries.
A key element of this work flow is conflation of newly collected data with existing data in OSM. Some preliminary work was done on this, but for now the team decided to pivot and focus entirely on improving the usability of FMTM from the perspective of mappers.
The conflation work will be continued further down the line.
Currently, Rob Savoye is also continuing some work in parallel for conflation of roads in the USA, with OSMUS’s osm-merge project.
The roadmap for FMTM can be found here.
Easier Field Mapping
Since release 2024.5.0, we have be focusing on what we have dubbed the ‘Mapper Frontend’.
Our primary goals:
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Mapping should be as intuitive as possible for users, requiring minimal training or existing knowledge (with prompts).
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The application should be fast and responsive, tailored to field mapping needs.
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Data should load real-time, significantly improving the collaborative team experience. Joe wants to know where Jim is mapping currently, to avoid overlap.
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A secondary goal is the potential to package it up in a mobile app wrapper, allowing for easy distribution via mobile app stores.
Had to move the summit as it was in a random place. It’s really cool up there.
Youth Mappers University of Nairobi chapter
Hey hey. We at the Yerevan Tree Map project were pulling to our database new nodes tagged as natural=tree
for a while now, without actually pushing changes back. Now we are starting to do so. The OSM API is not quite straightforward, so we’re learning on the go. We have some 4k plus trees to push, we’ll be adding them in small batches. Later we’ll start pushing updates to existing tree nodes (e.g. when someone measures the tree or updates its state).
(English below, thanks to Deepl.com)
Ce post a été initialement publié ici.
Des données OSM en anglais, mais aussi en français, accessibles dans l’IFL pour les pays francophones du Sud
Des données OSM téléchargeables avec des attributs dans une langue autre que l’anglais, non pas avec un service web, mais une plateforme dédiée au partage de données et métadonnées géographiques, où l’on peut comprendre, voir, interroger, filtrer avant de télécharger : c’est ce que permet cette approche ETL (pour Extract, Transform, Load, soit en français « Extraction, Transformation et Chargement ») dans l’Infrastructure de Données Spatiales des Libres Géographes. Dans ce billet, je reviens sur le contexte et l’historique de ce projet personnel mené sur mon temps libre, avant d’expliquer l’approche technique mise en œuvre et, évidemment, comment accéder à ces données.
Le contexte : sortir du « english fits for all »
Si l’anglais domine l’écosystème OSM et reste la langue de référence du projet, plusieurs initiatives permettent aux non-anglophones de participer au projet et d’en bénéficier : un forum multilingue, la traduction du wiki et de certaines plateformes d’auto-apprentissage, des interfaces utilisateur traduites pour les applications et les éditeurs, y compris les préréglages d’étiquettes OSM.
Mais quelle que soit la technologie ou le service utilisé, les données OSM brutes, une fois téléchargées, restent exclusivement en anglais, et toute recherche ou filtrage des données OSM dans un logiciel SIG ne peut se faire que dans cette langue.
Ayant beaucoup formé à l’utilisation des données OSM en géomatique (notamment QGIS) depuis 2011, j’ai été vite confronté aux difficultés qu’ont pas mal de francophones non anglophones à exploiter les attributs des données OSM. Difficultés d’autant plus frustrantes, dans le cas des pays du Sud, qu’il s’agissait souvent des premières données détaillées disponibles sur leur territoire. Une barrière se levait, mais une autre lui succédait.
I just discovered https://github.com/openstreetmap/tile-attribution And it seems like a great way to get involved with openstreetmap via GitHub - It doesn’t require any coding ability, one would need an active GitHub acount to add an issue to the issue tracker but basically find a site using your favourite search engines (lets say https//ddg.gg as an example).
Check any sites who are not providing attribution to openstreetmap when using openstreetmap and report the full hostname of website to the issue tracker :-)
What can we all share to people on social media we use to promote friends & family to support OpenStreetMap’s work?
Have a great day! Josh G of Australia.