AlaskaDave's Comments
Changeset | When | Comment |
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28393645 | 7 months ago | I only tag a maxspeed if I see one posted. However, ten years ago I might have tagged a few familiar roads that had no posted speed limit with a maxspeed I thought was reasonable. Hard to recall now some of the tagging habits I had when I was just starting out. Sometimes I see an object I tagged long ago and wondered WTF? I did that? |
31411596 | 7 months ago | Okay, I deleted it. Thanks Russ. |
31411596 | 7 months ago | Hi Russ, I'm editing stuff in the Doi Ang Khang Project area (I was just there a few days ago) and came across the Lao Ting Hotel you added back in 2015. AFAIK all the resorts and guest houses in the neighborhood have been closed for a number of years (by King #10 I'm told). Google Maps now lists this place as อ่างขางแค้มป์ปิ่ง, which means Angkhang Camping.
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157884613 | 7 months ago | This way has no tags at all. It runs through a wooded area where satellite imagery shows no road. I'll remove it. |
157884613 | 7 months ago | Hi Julien,
19.1910203, 98.8969731 I wanted to ask before deleting it. Cheers,
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125986430 | over 1 year ago | Hello again, I checked my journals and came up with 60 miles west of Paxson as the extent of the pavement. So as I checked along the highway, I discovered a 60-mile milepost that I had conveniently added when I was there in 2021 I changed the surface of all the highway segments from Tangle Lakes west to that milemarker to surface=asphalt, added lanes=2 and uploaded the data. |
125986430 | over 1 year ago | Unfortunately, it is not easy. I used a GPS and camera images correlated with my trace when I drove the Denali Hwy back in 2021. I did not save those images. All I can recall is that the recent new pavement extended approximately 60 miles from Paxton almost to the Susitna River bridge. I might be able to determine where that point was if I carefully check over your changeset to see which segment you changed and revert it, |
125986430 | over 1 year ago | Hello, I noticed that you changed the surface of the Denali Hwy west of Tangle Lakes from "paved" to "unpaved" I drove that road in 2021 (and several times before that) and I updated the tagging that section to paved because the pavement had been extended to about mile 60 from the Paxton side. Did the pavement disappear, or revert through weathering to unpaved again? |
117469089 | over 1 year ago | Okay, thanks, Julien! |
117469089 | over 1 year ago | The Thai Topo I mentioned is available as an imagery layer in JOSM. I have been using the OpenTopoMap layer for some time but the Thai Topo layer has details the other doesn't have, for example, boundaries. However, they must be hand-traced from the imagery, just as you would need to do if it was a satellite image. Tedious but better than nothing. It also contains the names of many residential streets, temples, schools, towns, routes, waterways, etc. The route refs, however, are sometimes out-of-date so I presume the data isn't all that fresh. But for the rest, names of towns, rivers, and temples etc., don't usually change over time and the checking I've done shows mostly good agreement with current names. Please give me some tips about the GITSDA data. I went to the site Paul_012 provided in Discourse and could get only KMZ data for boundaries. PS: should we move this discussion to the existing Discourse discussion of this topic: "Looking for More Sources on Official Boundaries"? |
117469089 | over 1 year ago | Sorry, the second sentence above should read: "In the Wiki, it states that there is no admin level 5 in Thailand." |
117469089 | over 1 year ago | Hi Julien. Today I came across this boundary you mapped or adjusted and I have a couple of questions. In the Wiki, it states that there is no admin level 6 in Thailand. This boundary between Mae Taeng and Chiang Dao, both being districts (amphoes), would seem to fit into the admin_level 6 category. In addition, I have zero experience with naming or assigning boundary tags so I'm unsure about how to name this one, or even if I should. I've been using the Thai Topo map in JOSM to adjust boundaries in my area of Saraphi and it seems to be fairly accurate. You quoted WorldTopoMap as your source here but JOSM doesn't offer that imagery. Is it still available in the iD editor? The Saraphi boundary I mentioned always defines two sub-districts. Saraphi itself of course and the various bordering subdistricts. The name of that one is Saraphi in OSM. But perhaps naming such a boundary would be incorrect Moreover, the Wiki definitions are always suspect because so many contributors and editors are clueless or don't know how to write, or both, but it seems clear that admin_level 5 is not in use in Thailand. What are your feelings about adding a name and/or changing the admin_level of this boundary? Dave |
148769869 | over 1 year ago | Actually, it was the Mae Taeng River I aligned |
140615529 | over 1 year ago | Hello, Where did you get the name "Chamadevi Road" for route 1015 in Lamphun? I cannot verify that as the name and
Sorry if this translation is bad: สวัสดีครับ
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147312260 | over 1 year ago | I appreciate your feedback, silversurfer. I must say, I felt a bit as though I was being scolded for my oversight. The thing with the saved session shocked me because I had just told the commenters that I would be more careful next time and then, I accidentally did it again. I use like 6 different imagery layers when I'm mapping in Alaska and the idea of a saved session that reloads all those layers the next day seemed like an excellent idea. But there are drawbacks, as I learned. Thanks again. |
147312260 | over 1 year ago | In further response to the concerns about the size of my changesets. I carefully used new layers when moving to another area of interest today (2024-02-13) yet the bounding box of my changeset remained overly large, extending from Alaska to Sloan NY. I just now discovered the reason for this, I had saved my session to enable a quick return to my earlier editing area in Alaska. However, unbeknownst to me, that huge bounding box came along with the restored session. So when I opened a new layer in NY, that data became part of my Alaska-based changeset. I had never used the Save Session feature before and hadn't known about this aspect. |
147389303 | over 1 year ago | I have received some messages about the size of my changesets. I carefully used new layers when moving to another area of interest today yet the bounding box of my changeset remained overly large, extending from Alaska to Sloan NY. I just discovered the reason for this, I had saved my session to enable a quick return to my earlier editing area in Alaska. However, unbeknownst to me, that huge bounding box came along with the restored session. I had never used the Save Session feature before and hadn't known about this aspect. |
147312260 | over 1 year ago | I have nade something like 16,000 edits in the 12 years since I started mapping with OSM and this is the first time I've ever gotten comments about the SIZE of a changeset. I had no idea people would be so concerned about such things, or that people actually monitor changeset characteristics. I promise I'll never do that again! LOL |
147312260 | over 1 year ago | I am in Thailand during the winter but I've been doing a lot of mapping in Alaska. I went away for the afternoon, made some mappable observations locally and merely forgot that the changeset was still open in Alaska when I added the new data to OSM. |
147288913 | over 1 year ago | Yes, I did that earlier today. I simply forgot to close the one I'd been working on in Alaska before adding my Thailand updates. |