Openstreetmap

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Overview:

Discussion on the Openstreetmap service that has the most open map data that began in 2004.


Apps:

JOSM: Map editor

Organic Maps: Offline maps that's great for walking/hiking/cycling

Magic Earth: Great for driving


Related:

[email protected]

[email protected]


founded 6 months ago
MODERATORS
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Do you already contribute to @openstreetmap? You can start contributing to OpenHistoricalMap too in just a few clicks, without having to juggle yet another password for yet another mapping site. Once you have a taste of OSM #SingleSignOn via #OAuth2, you’ll never look back.

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Organic Maps doesn't have them.

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OC by @[email protected]

You may say this is basic or this is really nitpicking or micro mapping. But this is something that bothers me for a long time. So I'm currently mapping sidewalks in my village and according to this

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Guidelines_for_pedestrian_navigation#Sidewalks_and_crossings

What I should do, is to separate sidewalks from pedestrian crossings - so top and left of the blue dot is a pedestrian crossing and bottom and right is a sidewalk. Got it.

Now things start to be complicated (at least in my head) when StreetComplete starts asking me for the surface of that crossing. An example:

Now my mind starts to go to crazy and I'm not sure which option is correct:

  1. Set the surface of that pedestrian crossing to paving_stones since that's the actual surface of that path. The fact that it crosses the asphalt road doesn't matter as that's the surface of the road

  1. Split the pedestrian crossing into 3 parts, set their surface accordingly so paving_stones, asphalt, paving_sones. But all are still pedestrian crossings.

  1. Split the pedestrian crossing to 3 parts, set only middle of that to be the pedestrian crossing as that's the actual crossing, set the other parts to be a sidewalk. Set surfaces accordingly

  1. Similar to 3., split the pedestrian crossing into 3 parts, set only middle of that to be the pedestrian crossing as that's the actual crossing, set the other parts to be footways (so no sidewalks), since those are just separate footways connecting the sidewalk and the crossing. Set surfaces accordingly

All of those have some logic in my mind but I won't go to details as it'd be very long post. But I guess the number 2. is correct? Although I then start wondering what to do in case the sidewalk is right next to the road? Just setting it to asphalt?

Anyway, please help me bring peace to my mind - which one is correct?

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You can sponsor our student mapping stars to attend SotM LATAM here.

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A powerful video showing how Oaxaca communities document informal transport networks. We’ve added English closed captions so more people can appreciate this grassroots effort in action.

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I want to contribute more to OSM and I understand that changes need to be authored to prevent abuse. Is there any way to contribute (especially via "on-the-go" clients such as Street Complete) without essentially creating a public trail of my exact movements?

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The Duitama Mapping Stars—a group of Colombian high school students—have digitized informal transport networks from East Africa to Southeast Asia to Latin America. Their work powers apps and planning tools that make cities more inclusive and mobility more equitable. Their edits and mapping efforts have powered our open source apps and improved the mobility experience for countless people.

Let’s make sure the world sees what community-driven, youth-led innovation looks like

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