OpenStreetMap logo OpenStreetMap

about 2020 and what I expect for 2021

Posted by Gustavo22Soares on 29 December 2020 in English. Last updated on 8 June 2021.

I’d like to start giving thanks to everyone who participated in our Mapathons, specially Qeef for developing the DAMN project and Karl Prieb for being that incredible person that keeps mapeia.space working!

Since the beginning of the year I wanted to map entire cities, starting researching fields, adding unclassified highways of my city and rural buildings, and, of course, I had plans, as some may know, to take this to another level but it turned out that the COVID-19 came. So I started to focus more on what I could do remotely and inf 4 months through our DAMN instance we managed to improve the map considerably, I wouldn’t say that it can be used for projects that need precision, besides the lack of data, satellite images are not the best way to map.

Before

senador-alexandre-antes.png

After

depois-senador-alexandre-costa.png

My goal in mapping these cities is to deliver a more humanitarian map of regions in my state that was forgotten or lacking data, mainly in rural areas, so with this data we can help generate vaccination campaigns, monitoring of families in need, rural settlements and much more… ELG-Iv-JW4-AAx-Kym.jpg graphic source (https://twitter.com/rebeccafirthy/status/1202952838722342912?lang=en)

What to expect for 2021

In 2021 I intend to continue with my work through mapeia.space and expand my work by looking for the city halls and show OSM to them and maybe be able to do more field researches.

Working with City Halls

Many cities in Maranhão don’t have updated records or digital records about their city and OSM can be useful with that. In Brazil we already have several examples of cities that work with OSM, I intend to contact those already mapped cities and the ones that still need to be mapped and create a strong local community.

Mapathons

If you already follow me on Mastodon, you may have seen these mapathons invites that I did in the last months. In 2021 I intend to keep doing online mapathons, but as soon as possible I want to do a mapathon with the local community.

my Liberapay

Location: Centro, Timon, Região Geográfica Imediata de Timon, Região Integrada de Desenvolvimento da Grande Teresina, Região Geográfica Intermediária de Caxias, Maranhão, Northeast Region, Brazil
Email icon Bluesky Icon Facebook Icon LinkedIn Icon Mastodon Icon Telegram Icon X Icon

Discussion

Comment from SK53 on 3 January 2021 at 17:08

I really like the levels graphic: I’ve been toying with similar ideas for a range of different use-cases (logistics, hiking, solar power) & the graphic expresses this very powerfully.

Comment from Strubbl on 3 January 2021 at 22:20

Wow, what a nice progress! Congratulations!

Comment from Gustavo22Soares on 4 January 2021 at 20:59

@sk53 I ended up not putting the source of the graphic, I had saved but not the link together… sorry but I wanted to learn how to make these graphics to show some of my progress thanks for the comment

Comment from Gustavo22Soares on 4 January 2021 at 21:00

@Strubbl thanks!!!

Comment from pedrito1414 on 8 June 2021 at 06:12

Hi, really nice post (I know I am late reading it!), thanks for sharing…

Be interested if you have links to examples of OSM use from any of the cities you mentioned…

By the way, I think the diagram came from Rebecca Firth originally… https://twitter.com/rebeccafirthy/status/1202952838722342912?lang=en

Comment from Gustavo22Soares on 8 June 2021 at 22:13

@pedrito1414 Hi, I don’t think you are late, always good to be able to share knowledge…. Unfortunately I had difficulties in contacting the governments, as I am not able to go personally to each city and there are no organizations that use the OSM around here the data ends up staying in the OSM bubble. I am thinking about how I can break through this bubble and take OSM to more people in the mapped cities, if you have any suggestions I would be grateful!

Thanks, I didn’t know who had made the chart, it has helped me a lot and served as motivation sometimes.

Comment from Enora Lecuyer on 28 October 2021 at 20:56

Well done! That’s some amazing progress!

Log in to leave a comment