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robert erabiltzailearen iruzkina 22 Urtarrila 2015 23:39-eann

Ew.

Linhares erabiltzailearen iruzkina 23 Urtarrila 2015 11:42-eann

I think it is because they mapped all the roads and then moved to the details of the country.

okilimu erabiltzailearen iruzkina 23 Urtarrila 2015 18:27-eann

They made a lot of imports, too. Before 2011, they imported forests. In 2011, after the tsunami and fukushima desaster, Yahoo Japan gave OSM the ability to import a streets in Japan. But the japanese OSM Community is very active, too.

malenki erabiltzailearen iruzkina 27 Urtarrila 2015 08:22-eann

Like a lot of things the visualized data of Japan may look beautiful – but a close look makes you shiver. I am thinking of the imports I had a look at and for which I assume the most errors still won’t be fixed.

joost schouppe erabiltzailearen iruzkina 27 Urtarrila 2015 16:00-eann

Because of population density? This is what Japan looks like at night, a good proxy for population density within a country (actually population density * prosperity * measures to decrease light polution). Striking similarity, no. It could be interesting to overlay both images and look for outliers. A bit like I believe members of your team did some time back, but using image complexity in stead of population density as a predictor of expected data density.

pnorman erabiltzailearen iruzkina 27 Urtarrila 2015 21:00-eann

When did you ship Eric off to North Korea? ;)

enf

lxbarth erabiltzailearen iruzkina 28 Urtarrila 2015 01:57-eann

When did you ship Eric off to North Korea? ;)

Haha, yeah, bad photoshopping :)

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