Attention OSM Bangladesh Community!
We are excited to announce that the first OpenStreetMap Bangladesh
Community Working Group meeting will be held this Saturday, May 11, 2024,
at 9 PM! The meeting will be conducted online, and we warmly invite all
community members to attend.
Join us to
Thank you, Arnalie
On Wed, 8 May 2024 at 15:46, Arnalie Vicario
wrote:
> Congratulations, OSM Bangladesh!!!
>
> On Wed, May 8, 2024 at 3:51 PM OpenStreetMap Bangladesh <
> info.os...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Greetings!
>>
>> We are thrilled to share some exciting news from OpenStreetMap
I am used to different procedures, towards the beginning of a construction
operation, a publicly appointed surveyor (Öffentlich bestellter
Vermessungsingenieur) defines a local coordinate system and marks it on the
ground (e.g. marks building outlines, site limits etc.), as well as relates
it to
John Whelan writes:
> I hesitate to say what is relevant to OpenStreetMap. For example many
> trees are mapped but locally we lost about a quarter of them in a
> recent storm. Is mapping all the trees in Canada relevant to
> OpenStreetMap? Keeping the number of trees up to date or even shop
>
I hesitate to say what is relevant to OpenStreetMap. For example many
trees are mapped but locally we lost about a quarter of them in a recent
storm. Is mapping all the trees in Canada relevant to OpenStreetMap?
Keeping the number of trees up to date or even shop opening hours for
that
john whelan writes:
> For some reason building sites, especially large ones, use GPS as a quick
> way to measure things rather than setting up a theodolite which needs a
> trained person to use it.
But this is not relevant to OSM, merely perhaps interesting to nerds
that care about positioning.
For some reason building sites, especially large ones, use GPS as a quick
way to measure things rather than setting up a theodolite which needs a
trained person to use it.
Cheerio John
On Wed, May 8, 2024, 05:39 Martin Koppenhoefer
wrote:
>
>
> sent from a phone
>
> > On 7 May 2024, at 23:56,
sent from a phone
> On 7 May 2024, at 23:56, john whelan wrote:
>
> So if you're building something in a remote location and not buried in the
> forest it might actually be useful.
in remote locations it doesn’t seem very relevant to get cm precision from
GNSS. You could just mark any
Greetings!
We are thrilled to share some exciting news from OpenStreetMap Bangladesh
(OSMBD). For the first time ever, the OSM Bangladesh community has
successfully formed an elected Executive Committee, consisting of a team of
dedicated individuals who will guide our community's activities and
Greetings!
We are thrilled to share some exciting news from OpenStreetMap Bangladesh
(OSMBD). For the first time ever, the OSM Bangladesh community has
successfully formed an elected Executive Committee, consisting of a team of
dedicated individuals who will guide our community's activities and
Greetings!
We are thrilled to share some exciting news from OpenStreetMap Bangladesh
(OSMBD). For the first time ever, the OSM Bangladesh community has
successfully formed an elected Executive Committee, consisting of a team of
dedicated individuals who will guide our community's activities and
Greetings!
We are thrilled to share some exciting news from OpenStreetMap Bangladesh
(OSMBD). For the first time ever, the OSM Bangladesh community has
successfully formed an elected Executive Committee, consisting of a team of
dedicated individuals who will guide our community's activities and
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