Minh Nguyen's Comments
Changeset | When | Comment |
---|---|---|
47241359 | about 3 years ago | Hi, I reverted this change as part of changeset 124155648 for consistency with other relations that nest each direction under the state’s route superrelation. Hope that isn’t a problem! |
104846286 | about 3 years ago | Changeset 124154479 restores the full U.S. 50 relation. |
105988407 | about 3 years ago | Hi, I noticed you’ve retagged many of the streets in downtown Knoxville as highway=living_street. Living streets are a largely European concept that rarely if ever occurs in the U.S. – very low-speed streets that tolerate cars but are primarily intended for pedestrians, who have the right of way. There’s a special sign for it and everything. osm.wiki/Tag:highway%3Dliving_street During the pandemic, some mappers did stretch this tag to include “slow streets” programs that encouraged outdoor dining on city streets, though most of those programs have since been curtailed. Has this been the case in Knoxville? |
123447364 | about 3 years ago | I traced these geoglyphs from South Africa CD:NGI Aerial imagery, which is the default imagery layer in this area. (I think it’s supposed to be an advertisement for a roadhouse.) |
123516291 | about 3 years ago | This change has been reverted for a second time in changeset 123539571. Your company’s data is outdated and contradicts newer information that I have gathered from repeated field surveys. For proof, please see the following: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Union_Pacific_Warm_Springs_Corridor_Quiet_Zone_-_Jackson_Street_facing_railroad_crossing.jpg
Please update your systems to stop flagging this crossing as a two-way road. Thank you. |
123055526 | about 3 years ago | The Bing and Esri imagery showing the fallen tree is from late 2020, according to the metadata for those images. None of the other layers offer such metadata but are most likely older. |
123055526 | about 3 years ago | Thanks for taking care of the retagging so quickly. The idea that a one-off trip could prove decisive against years of inactivity boggles my mind. There’s a parallel discussion in Slack about when to call a road under construction versus no-access with a very different conclusion. But with rail, I suppose any state of disrepair can be temporarily mitigated with enough resources, staff, and… intention. I retagged the fallen tree as removed in changeset 123344330 based on the understanding that this segment was the only way last year‘s demonstration train could’ve made it to Santa Cruz. I can’t find any timestamped imagery to corroborate it yet. These had been the only railroad=* ways in California with maxspeed not explicitly set to miles per hour, so at this point we can enter these values in mph without having to convert or worry about misinterpretation. I’m still genuinely curious about the best way to tag a wigwag. In this changeset, I used crossing:light=wigwag, but maybe it should be a separate node representing the device itself, since it’s so rare. |
123055526 | about 3 years ago | I’m happy to retag the specific portions that have had this occasional service. I thought I was merely acting on the note that was added in changeset 67040694. It wasn’t clear to me from my research that this occasional service extends all the way from Santa Cruz to Capitola. In fact, the TAMC document I cited above states that there is indeed an isolated segment of active rail from Santa Cruz north, with the segment from Santa Cruz to Watsonville being unmaintained and out of service. However, that was 2020, and I’m happy to hear that there have been developments since. Retagging the trackage all the way to Watsonville would raise some questions that hopefully you can shed more light on: 1. Is the old-school wigwag on Seabright Avenue still in operation? I have no idea how to tag it if so. 2. Does this tree still block the tracks south of the old county landfill? osm.org/way/1074882241 It would be surprising to tag an impassable railway as anything but disused. By that logic, any railbanked trackage would be railway=rail. 3. What are the speed limits on this stretch? It had been mistagged maxspeed=40, which presumably meant 40 mph, for Class 3. But FRA records for crossings along this stretch give limits of 10 mph freight / 15 mph passenger, in line with Class 1 and consistent with the TAMC document. |
115326073 | about 3 years ago | Hi, are you sure this Costco has solar panels on its roof? All I see in aerial imagery is the skylights. Separately, please try to provide more descriptive changeset comments when possible. It doesn’t have to be incredibly thorough, but for example here it would’ve been helpful to mention the giant solar panels. Thanks for understanding! |
123055526 | about 3 years ago | …added bridges, culverts; realigned roads, streams |
120992497 | about 3 years ago | Neat, mini runways! osm.org/way/1060140555 |
122942229 | about 3 years ago | The crossing had already been mapped; this changeset indicates that the crossing is uncontrolled. |
122531746 | about 3 years ago | More context in https://github.com/ZeLonewolf/openstreetmap-americana/issues/428#issuecomment-1159349224 |
122408186 | about 3 years ago | Only the end of this street is a one-way street, as demonstrated by the stop sign and other signs facing in the other direction. Reverted in changeset 122640545. |
69362839 | about 3 years ago | Hi, should the speed limit on this bridge be 10 mph, as opposed to 10 km/h as it’s currently tagged? |
106749106 | about 3 years ago | Hi, thanks for adding these speed limits. Remember to add a space and “mph” to the end of the maxspeed tag value so that routers interpret it as miles per hour instead of kilometers per hour. Thanks! |
122313748 | about 3 years ago | Also adjusted the position of various POIs. |
78419100 | about 3 years ago | Undone in changeset 122300376. |
103818501 | about 3 years ago | Thanks! |
121595808 | about 3 years ago | I mostly agree and have been pretty active in promoting that tagging scheme. However, I figured it wouldn’t hurt to humor the mapper(s) who suggested the more standards-compliant en-fonipa code on the wiki. osm.wiki/Key:name:pronunciation#Possible_synonyms If history had played out differently and I knew about the fonipa language subtag a few years ago, I would’ve chosen it instead and we wouldn’t even be talking about the :pronunciation subkey that seems to be surprising to various editors. 🤷♂️ But I don’t really have plans to do much with this redundant syntax. |