@mvexel: Thanks. That’s what I had initially assumed but then I was confused as to why some roads go so far and then have gaps (especially true of the image of Mountain View). I wasn’t contributing to OSM in 2007 so hadn’t realised it started like this. I guess that was the best you could do without satellite imagery until someone actually got there on the ground to check that the roads did link up.
Discussion
Comentari de robert lo 26 de julhet 2014 a 10:42
Nice hat martijn.
Comentari de mvexel lo 26 de julhet 2014 a 22:35
Now available on the interwebs http://mvexel.github.io/thenandnow/#10/52.2644/5.2899
Comentari de robert lo 26 de julhet 2014 a 22:46
Ok that is very impressive.
Comentari de RobJN lo 26 de julhet 2014 a 23:37
Nice! Is the 2007 data complete or does it exclude the ODBL non-comliant data?
Comentari de mvexel lo 27 de julhet 2014 a 00:57
RobJN - this is the data from June 2007 as it was live then, taken from http://planet.osm.org/cc-by-sa/planet-070627.osm.bz2.
Comentari de chattiewoman lo 27 de julhet 2014 a 14:12
+1 Thanks for sharing.
Comentari de Luiyo lo 27 de julhet 2014 a 18:44
Wow!
Comentari de RobJN lo 27 de julhet 2014 a 23:01
@mvexel: Thanks. That’s what I had initially assumed but then I was confused as to why some roads go so far and then have gaps (especially true of the image of Mountain View). I wasn’t contributing to OSM in 2007 so hadn’t realised it started like this. I guess that was the best you could do without satellite imagery until someone actually got there on the ground to check that the roads did link up.
Comentari de PatrickCoombe lo 28 de julhet 2014 a 04:20
Very very cool, unfortunately my area still looks a lot like “then” but hoping to help change that