I very quickly found that Potlatch is rather limited. I'm thinking about adding some bus stops that are currently missing on my route to the centre of town. Not being able to easily import waypoints makes this difficult to do accurately, so I thought I would try JOSM -- and I'm impressed! As a test I added a few benches and a section of power line near my home. I do have a bit of a penchant for pylons, and it might be a nice day out sometime to follow and map a power line, if possible.
Discussion
Ulasan Richard terhadap 13 Mei 2009 pada 01:18
You can use waypoints quite easily in Potlatch - just click 'Edit' next to the track in your 'GPS Traces' listing.
Ulasan Claudius terhadap 13 Mei 2009 pada 06:01
Thanks, Richard. I was being lazy. I gave up when I was unable to import the waypoints file directly. I then read that Potlatch can use waypoints if you convert them to tracks first -- and I thought I would have to edit the XML manually! A bit more reading and I find out about MWaypoint.exe. This is the page I didn't read before:
osm.wiki/Upload_Waypoints
Ulasan Richard terhadap 13 Mei 2009 pada 09:29
Yikes. Fair play to the author of that page for his ingenuity, but that's a really complicated way of doing it. The 'official' way is much easier!
Potlatch itself will read any GPX containing waypoints. The OSM website, however, will reject a GPX if it doesn't contain at least one trackpoint.
So just make sure your waypoints are in the same GPX as your tracklog. Alternatively, copy-and-paste a tiny trackpoint into your waypoint GPX file.
You can then click 'Edit' by the track name, and the waypoints will show up in Potlatch.
Ulasan Claudius terhadap 13 Mei 2009 pada 10:12
Thanks. I'll give it a try. I was confused between Potlatch and the actual website uploader which is obviously not the same thing at all.
Ulasan RussNelson terhadap 13 Mei 2009 pada 13:33
The biggest problem with Potlatch is that it edits using the API directly. If the API is slow, or your network connection is slow, then Potlatch is slow.