On 2 September 2017 at 05:07, Éric Gillet wrote:
>> Well it seems as if exactly -that- wasn't happening which is why this
>> thread was started in the first place. Seems however that the brakes have
>> been put on now, see
the brakes have not been put on; every day,
On 1 September 2017 at 02:55, Simon Poole wrote:
> Sorry for responding to this late.
>
> Just because a specific source has been legally "OK"ed doesn't imply
> that an import of all the data from a specific source is warranted and
> should continue on for all times. The import
On 17 August 2017 at 01:29, Richard wrote:
> soneone else has to answer that but I was under the impression that
> the LINZ has been looked at in detail. It seems to be an import effort
> that is underway since many years.
yes, but they keep adding more and more detail to
On 16 August 2017 at 06:31, Oleksiy Muzalyev
wrote:
> I see that these buildings have got one author who has on his statistics
> page about 6 thousand edits. How do you know that these buildings were
> actually imported and not drawn manually in an editor? Was there a
Before I ask for assistance, please note this: I've already brought
this up on osm-imports and got nowhere useful.
There are a number of users in NZ doing mass imports of building data
in Auckland (I estimate 500,000 buildings), while wilfully ignoring
community guidelines.
I have asked numerous
hi all,
i've had a coastline problem for a few weeks now, i can't figure out
what it is, perhaps someone here can help.
when i view osm data in osmand, i get a lot of leaks around the
waitemata harbour in auckland, new zealand: land rendering as sea/sea
rendering as land. the data is
On 2016-01-08 06:46, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
You could even see it the other way round: any website is a kind of
database (structured information). Has google a right to copy this, or
index it (i.e. create a derivative database)?
maybe, maybe not. they could argue that most web sites want
On 2015-04-24 17:37, Clifford Snow wrote:
Is this work part of what is described on the wiki [1] for importing
no, this isn't linz data, it's a new set from auckland council. the page
below hasn't been touched in 3 years.
Linz data? Have you discussed this on the New Zealand mailing list?
hi,
i live in auckland, nz. a mapper [1] here is currently importing a giant
data set of building outlines for auckland, by my estimate 300,000+
ways. until yesterday, on my insistence, he'd made no mention of this on
any of the relevant discussion lists (local nz chapter, osm imports
list)
hi folks,
auckland, new zealand has a council-controlled website which is used for
route planning on public transport. having done a lot of editing on osm
over the years, i know the osm data pretty well, and can spot its use
quite easily [1]. from what i can see, the transport routing site
i'm not one hundred percent, but this looks a lot like a static image
taken of osm. the area is the cook strait, between the two biggest
islands of new zealand. the only attribution on the image is to
Geonet, which I presume is some organisation which studies earthquakes
(for those not in the
On 2013-04-20 09:49, Clifford Snow wrote:
I think I understand that the existing administrative levels dont
work. In the US at least, the reservations have a domestic
dependent nation status. They are not States, Counties yet contain
cities. The often extend past state boundaries, and
On 2013-04-01 04:57, Clay Smalley wrote:
This seems silly and useless. The imagery is subject to change and
the
way will become obsolete. I dont see a point in mapping this, and Im
all data in the database is subject to change and will become obsolete,
there is nothing unusual in that
On 2013-02-23 09:05, Simon Poole wrote:
A trademark and other IP use policy is one of the things the new OSMF
How do we reconcile relatively permissive use of the OSM database, with
relatively restrictive use of the Open Street Map name? For the moment,
I put to one side Stallman's argument
i've been thinking about this for a while and it's bugging me, so i'd
like to hear what the rest of you think.
the way we map bridges at the moment is by adding tags to the
road/railway/footpath/etc., something like this:
bridge = yes
layer = 1
which seems a bit clumsy, and doesn't reflect
On 2013-02-07 11:08, Robin Paulson wrote:
On 2013-02-07 09:32, Stephan Knauss wrote:
Hi,
the new iD editor allows to supply a custom imagery layer.
is the new editor live? i understood it was only in use on a dev
instance at the moment?
sorry, ignore the noise, i found the answer
On 2013-02-05 19:36, Bryce Cogswell wrote:
Indeed. I suppose if one joins a project on the assumption that there
is no direction and no goals, at least you'll never be disappointed
in
how it turns out.
that's not what i said at all, or what i was implying. and your point
is a straw man
On 2013-02-05 20:15, Clifford Snow wrote:
Yet Google gets the press that thanks to them, North Korea has now
been mapped. In an ideal world, the local
community should be the lead communicator. But having a PR staff for
OSM is just smart. Good press is going to
help us raise money for new
On 2013-02-04 07:02, Michal Migurski wrote:
which concerns me no end. what position of authority does simon
hold? over whom?
Simon is the elected chairman of the OSMF board, and can speak on its
behalf. He holds a position of authority over the Geocode Inc. issue
because apparently the
On 2013-02-05 06:56, Simon Poole wrote:
participated it has always struck me how little alignment of goals
there
is in the community as a whole (I'm not saying it is surprising,
just
that is so). Outside the very generic mission that OSM creates and
distributes free geographic data for the
if there are any problems, such as poor
representation. so whether the other successful OS projects are
representing everyone or not is difficult to judge
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 12:57 AM, Robin Paulson ro...@bumblepuppy.org
[4] wrote:
On 2013-02-03 07:41, Jeff Meyer wrote:
was: geocoding
On 2013-02-03 13:29, Tom Taylor wrote:
I'm interested in OSM. I do mapping. I subscribed to Talk after a few
weeks on Newbies, but all these political outcries strongly tempt me
to unsubscribe. They don't contribute to the mapping that is
presumably our primary interest.
maps are inherently
On 2013-02-03 07:41, Jeff Meyer wrote:
was: geocoding trademark thread
I think Paweł has hit on a key question: does the OSMF have plans to
operate and lead OSM in a more efficient, organized manner or not?
what makes you think anyone wants to be lead, i certainly don't? or
wants to be
On 2013-02-03 10:23, Chris Hill wrote:
Maybe a few of you braver than the brave, loud-mouthed, armchair
lawyers should just STFU and give the board a break.
this is an ad hominem [1] and thus an irrelevancy, it aims to discredit
the people, while ignoring what's being said. can you stick to
On 2013-02-03 12:14, Michal Migurski wrote:
Communication is hard, and there are ways to do it that make people
feel like they're getting a complete story instead of a confused
glimpse through an accidentally-open door. Simon's mail left out a
lot
of important things, most notably that he's a
i was looking for unusual uses of osm data, and found this:
http://store.axismaps.com/product/boston-blue
osm is mentioned on the web site, but not on the poster itself.
suggestions, comments, etc. requested please.
--
robin
http://universitywithoutconditions.ac.nz - Auckland's Free
On 2013-01-02 23:46, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2013/1/2 Robin Paulson ro...@bumblepuppy.org:
i was looking for unusual uses of osm data, and found this:
http://store.axismaps.com/product/boston-blue
Oops! We couldn’t find that page.
are you sure?
try from here::
http
, more tools,
perhaps what they need is someone talking with them?
maybe they are the types that don't read help guides, that if they
can't understand it straight away give up, rather than search for help
or advice?
On Tue, Jan 1, 2013 at 8:58 PM, Robin Paulson ro...@bumblepuppy.org
On 2013-01-02 07:26, Jeff Meyer wrote:
I agree that rules can be tricky. Would it be possible, to play
around with the code youve written, to see what results it generates?
The issue Im trying to address is this: people who sign up for OSM
then make 0 edits. Why? Is it because they cannot
On 2012-12-31 18:54, Jeff Meyer wrote:
Are there any tools that can tip users to what they could do in a
particular map area?
For example, for a given bb(zoomsome min) in a browser window, is
there anything that says:
- Hey, relative to other (or selected best-practice examples) areas
like the
tens, possibly hundreds in fact.
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=-51.8629lon=-58.2445zoom=13layers=M
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=-51.8315lon=-58.9263zoom=12layers=M
perhaps an import gone wrong?
--
robin
http://universitywithoutconditions.ac.nz - Auckland's Free University
i've done some quite detailed editing near where i live, i'd appreciate
anyone who is interested taking a look and responding.
i'm not sure what to make of the result. for one, my partner, a
non-mapper, has told me she finds it very confusing, which potentially
raises questions
On 2012-11-04 19:08, andrzej zaborowski wrote:
2(e) use the Products in a manner that gives you or any other person
access to mass downloads or bulk feeds of any Content, including but
not limited to numerical latitude or longitude coordinates, imagery,
and visible map data;
so checking the
On 29 July 2012 21:21, Jesse Davis eccent...@slavery.cx wrote:
I'd like to import some canvec data for the area just north of Plevna,
Ontario, Canada (NTS 031F02), which has not been imported and for the
most part is completely blank. I have downloaded the most recent canvec
10 data and it
given a major deletion of osm data occurred in the last week or two,
there are now possibly millions of roads and other items which will be
re-mapped. it would be very useful to get the NoName layer back on the
front page, to assist with this. could i most humbly request that
happen please?
--
On 26 July 2012 08:17, Simon Poole si...@poole.ch wrote:
Imports are by their intrinsic nature never urgent (it is not as if the
3rd party data is going to vanish if you don't import it today). I would
strongly suggest doing something more useful, like helping with
remapping Australia or
http://www.openstreetmap.org/edit?lat=-36.878407lon=174.741523zoom=19
the landuse polygon has an orange highlight on it, why does it do that?
--
robin
http://fu.ac.nz - Auckland's Free University
___
talk mailing list
talk@openstreetmap.org
On 16 November 2011 07:16, Michael Collinson m...@ayeltd.biz wrote:
In the UK, issues due to the use of national mapping agency data have been
resolved and in Australia we have had explicit permission to use the bulk of
government-derived imports. That mostly completes our list of known
Please don't comment on this if you don't know what an XML database is
or how it functions. It is not a simple documentstore analogue to a
filesystem.
ok, cheers.
--
robin
http://fu.ac.nz - Auckland's Free University
___
talk mailing list
On 19 October 2011 20:58, dre . gwen...@hotmail.fr wrote:
Considering an OSM data fragment representing a town as Paris, London, etc,
I wonder assets and drawbacks of using a XML file (myTown.osm) against tools
as pgRouting or another PostgreSQL based database for routing,
visualization,
On 8 September 2011 10:03, Stephan Knauss o...@stephans-server.de wrote:
I thought about user rankings some time ago as well. I have mixed
feelings.
On the one hand it might be a way to motivate users to contribute more and
to reward users having contributed more useful things than others.
On 5 August 2011 11:31, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org wrote:
I'd like to use my netbook to show a moving map. Assuming that I somehow
get gpsd hooked up and delivering position reports[*], what software can I
use?
which distro are you using frederik?
i use ubuntu and debian on my hp
On 30 July 2011 01:19, Nathan Edgars II nerou...@gmail.com wrote:
I'll leave it for a few days so others can see it in all its glory :)
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/way/31408390
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/way/31408400
gah, i see this all the time in akl
name='Public car park
On 27 July 2011 12:40, Ed Loach e...@loach.me.uk wrote:
like S St N on Google where they've abbreviated South Street North,
for example, which just looks silly). This seems to agree with
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:name#Notes
ha, there's a road near me labelled on sign posts as:
Grt
On 28 July 2011 10:45, M∡rtin Koppenhoefer dieterdre...@gmail.com wrote:
2011/7/28 Richard Mann richard.mann.westoxf...@gmail.com:
name is what is on (the majority of) the signs
name is the name. Or what would be the name if the sign-majority was
defined and there were 2 differing signs?
On 28 July 2011 12:06, Joseph Reeves iknowjos...@gmail.com wrote:
name: Magdalen Road
pronounced: More-da-lin Road
?
That's ridiculous if you ask me. If you're making sat nav software for a
market (the UK, France, America, etc.) you should be able to work out these
things yourself.
why?
On 21 July 2011 04:54, Richard Weait rich...@weait.com wrote:
Color-coded map of ODbL status
http://osm.informatik.uni-leipzig.de/map/
accepted the odbl? has anyone voted on that yet?
or do you mean accepted the CT?
--
robin
http://bumblepuppy.org/blog/?p=237 - government bill to remove
On 11 July 2011 13:32, M∡rtin Koppenhoefer dieterdre...@gmail.com wrote:
2011/7/7 Jochen Topf joc...@remote.org:
On Thu, Jul 07, 2011 at 03:35:07PM +1200, Robin Paulson wrote:
is there any consensus on shortening of parts of names?...
i was under the impression consensus was to type the full
On 18 July 2011 23:15, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org wrote:
I'd be tempted to delete them all if they're older than 3 months or so. Some
of you said that it might have been something valuable accidentally deleted,
but if nobody noticed that within 3 months then it cannot have been *so*
is associating it with. So I guess this is correct
but perhaps a little confusing in how it is displayed. Perhaps you
should rename your continent to avoid this confusion!
yes, we're in oceania now
On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 10:42 PM, Robin Paulson the search result for 'new
zealand', it zooms me
On 7 July 2011 23:02, Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com wrote:
You don't actually say what the problem is.
err, what? the problem is managing the ways inside the editor
(potlatch 2). it gets very messy and is hard to keep track of. i find
at later dates i have made several mistakes that need
On 7 July 2011 23:59, Richard Mann richard.mann.westoxf...@gmail.com wrote:
With P2 the easier way of working is to select a whole series of ways
(ctrl-click to add a second way while maintaining selection of the
first), then add all of the ways to a relation (or multiple relations)
at the
i'm currently adding house numbers to some properties in my locality
(and using this to prepare for an import).
the problem is this: some blocks of houses have both a street address
and a unit number. so we might have the situation of 12/8 mount eden
road, auckland
which means:
property number
On 6 July 2011 22:39, Pieren pier...@gmail.com wrote:
Detaching intersection nodes is not something usual. At the moment, the
complexity is more on managing ways with an increasing amount of relations
and an increasing amount of segments within the relations for a single
street.
hmm, all
i did a search for new zealand, and was heartened to find we are now
part of australia. at last, we have come to our senses and joined as a
nation!
slightly more seriously, could someone help with the labelling of the
node for nz? apart from somehow being part of australia, if i click on
the
hi,
I'm currently adding a lot of bus routes to roads in central Auckland.
problem is, it's getting hard to manage.
some road segments have 40+ routes on them, which gets complicated.
here is an example of one which I've added 12 routes to; there will be
lots more
On 4 July 2011 12:09, Josh Doe j...@joshdoe.com wrote:
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=38.76211lon=-77.29749zoom=15layers=M
(Burke Lake Park)
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=38.77389lon=-77.10726zoom=17layers=M
(Lee District Park)
I'd appreciate any links to well mapped parks, and
mappers in NZ have recently imported a lot of grass airstrips into
OSM. it appears the airstrips only render at zoom 10 on the mapnik
render of the map at osm.org, which looks like this:
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=-37.243lon=175.014zoom=10layers=M
is there any particular reason for this,
On 20 June 2011 05:12, Richard Fairhurst rich...@systemed.net wrote:
I'm pleased to announce Potlatch 2.2 is live.
when i try and save edits, i get 'saving changeset NaN' and then it
refuses, giving:
Couldn't upload data: HTTP request error
also, the bing imagery is not showing, even when i
a few weeks back, i was forced to either accept or decline the CTs.
from what i recall, i declined. i've been editing in potlatch ever
since, but today tried out josm, as potlatch 2 is broken.
apparently, i now can't edit, as
Authorisation at the OSM server failed
The server reported the
On 20 June 2011 16:20, Toby Murray toby.mur...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 10:51 PM, Robin Paulson robin.paul...@gmail.com
wrote:
i can still edit ok in potlatch 1
what's happening?
I believe the next phase of the license change went into effect today.
You must accept
hi,
does anyone know who maintains the open bus map?
i discovered it earlier - fantastic work, something i'd looked for for
a while, but wanted to make a suggestion about rendering the bus
routes based on the colour stored in the relation details.
any ideas, the website has no contact details
does anyone know anything about this?
http://3liz.fr/public/osmtransport/index.php
it's rather useful, but it doesn't look like the data set's been
updated in a while. is the owner here?
cheers,
--
robin
http://bumblepuppy.org/blog/?p=237 - government bill to remove basic
human rights in NZ
i live in nz, a country with two (three if you count sign langauge)
government-approved languages: english and maori.
lots of items are named in both, for example the highest volcano in
auckland is called Mount Eden/Manugawhau - the latter literally
translates as hill of the whau tree
so, when i
i'm getting more into tagging bus routes in auckland, and wonder if
there is a tagging scheme to cover the times of bus
arrivals/departures? i have a few ideas of how it might work, but want
to check out the existing system first. i can't find anything on the
wiki
cheers
--
robin
from slashdot:
the polish prime minister announced a bill to ensure all government
data will be released as public domain.
On 25 May 2011 02:32, Ian ian.d...@gmail.com wrote:
Everything I've read about XAPI and JXAPI has said that only one predicate
is supported, aside from the bbox predicate. It's possible that you're
getting all the bus routes within that bbox.
JXAPI allows multiple predicates, but they are
On 26 May 2011 14:57, Ian ian.d...@gmail.com wrote:
JXAPI allows multiple predicates, but they are currently OR'd rather than
AND'd like I meant them to be. The above query is akin to saying give me
all relations with route=bus OR ref=010 OR in bbox=
I just pushed some code out (and
On 24 May 2011 20:10, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org wrote:
Say you see a way in Potlatch which is a member of relation X (in Robin's
example, the Auckland coast to coast trail), and you want to add this
relation X to another relation, Y, which already exists (in Robin's example,
the 'te
hi,
based on the issues with the current xapi servers (i.e. almost always
overloaded/down), i'm looking at running a separate instance, on the
osm new zealand site - purely for serving data nz at the moment.
this won't be a huge amount of data - the whole country is around
250mb uncompressed
On 17 May 2011 17:29, Michal Migurski m...@stamen.com wrote:
By my colleague Aaron Cope:
building=yes is a searchable and linkable index of every singleway
tagged building=yes in OpenStreetMap (OSM).
A web page for every building in OpenStreetMap!
i love it. excellent, and very
On 24 May 2011 10:34, Toby Murray toby.mur...@gmail.com wrote:
Do you know about the new jXAPI servers being run by both OSMF and
Mapquest open? I haven't used them recently so I'm not sure if they
are always overloaded as well or not.
i got the impression from the xapi page that relations are
On 24 May 2011 11:17, Robin Paulson robin.paul...@gmail.com wrote:
i got the impression from the xapi page that relations are not fully
supported on the jxapi servers, either osm or mapquest.
i tried to download a relation yesterday, with probably 50 members,
and killed it when my firefox
i am mapping walking tracks in new zealand, and have recently added
'te araroa' - the walking track from the top of the north island to
the bottom of the south.
it is made up at parts of the way of other walking tracks, such as the
'coast to coast' walking track in the auckland region.
problem
On 27 April 2011 00:11, Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com wrote:
I don't think this is directly P2 related but...
Using Win XP, SP3. Flash 10.2.153.1
I've just upgraded to Firefox 4.0.
I have multiple tabs open, one with P2 in edit mode. When I have another tab
active use the middle mouse
On 30 March 2011 01:12, john whelan jwhelan0...@gmail.com wrote:
I shall simply agree with you that a sociological study based on 16 people
falls short of accepted scientific study.
My personal view is much of sociology would like to be accepted as science
but is for the most part subjective.
On 29 March 2011 10:09, Elizabeth Dodd ed...@billiau.net wrote:
I didn't find the abstract meaningful as it was full of politically
correct speak.
well done, an entire scientific study dismissed with a meaningless
piece of jargon. perhaps a more in-depth analysis would be more
useful?
--
On 29 March 2011 12:26, john whelan jwhelan0...@gmail.com wrote:
Speaking as someone with a background in science I think I agree with
Elizabeth's interpretation.
I get the impression the study is much more subjective than solid, the
sample size far too small to get any meaningful results
i've recently been doing some mapping around auckland, adding coastal
walkways. one in particular i walked on sunday has two routes: one at
the foot of the cliffs, one on the road at the top of the cliffs. the
lower route is under water when the tide is in, so walkers are advised
to follow the
On 9 March 2011 06:58, Tom Roche tom_ro...@pobox.com wrote:
I like the sound of the latter option, since I'd prefer not to hafta
setup a separate system. But again, I don't know enough about OSM to
implement that. Where would I go to learn?
a good start for all development-related items:
On 3 March 2011 03:22, Richard Weait rich...@weait.com wrote:
Bounding box contains ~53,000 objects and 94 users, extends roughly:
Canon Street in the north, Coleridge Street in the south, Tui Street
in the west and Bracken Street in the east.
don't forget the equally incredible work in sumner
On 2 March 2011 00:42, M∡rtin Koppenhoefer dieterdre...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes, you will not need a very big machine. I am currently rendering
Italy (similar in size to NZ) and it takes around 2 days with a really
haha. italy has 14 times the data of NZ, so i guess we can reduce that
time
we at OSM New Zealand are looking at rendering our own (NZ-only)
tiles, and we'd like to get a rough idea of the hardware requirements
we will need
are there any rules of thumb for how long it would take to render a
given lat/lon bbox, using mapnik?
i assume lat/lon is the independent variable,
On 28 February 2011 05:26, Richard Weait rich...@weait.com wrote:
the other areas badly hit were mosgiel, lyttleton and sumner (all
suburbs in/close to christchurch) - if anyone could add data there,
that would be fantastic also
This Mosgiel seems further from CHCH (near Dunedin) Do I have
On 28 February 2011 12:45, Robin Paulson robin.paul...@gmail.com wrote:
well spotted richard - you're right, there is only one mosgiel and
it's not near chch. my mistake, please ignore that. i've checked and
sumner, lyttelton and central city are correct though
also, Redhills, Mount Pleasant
On 28 February 2011 14:37, Hendrik Oesterlin hendrikmail2...@yahoo.de wrote:
I created a Garmin gmapsupp.img with OSM data and additionally the
map from www.nzopengps.org as extra layers as it has good data too.
it does indeed - this is government-derived data, originally sourced
from LINZ, and
On 25 February 2011 13:42, Robin Paulson robin.paul...@gmail.com wrote:
NZ mappers have been discussing how they can help, and we have decided
it would be useful to trace as many of these pieces of infrastructure
update: chch building mapping is going very well, thanks to whoever is helping
Hi OSM mappers,
As most of you are probably aware, we had a severe earthquake in
Christchurch, New Zealand this week, killing over 100 people and
demolishing or damaging hundreds, possibly thousands of the following:
buildings
roads
bridges
water mains
electricity supplies
sewage drains
other
On 25 February 2011 13:42, Robin Paulson robin.paul...@gmail.com wrote:
High quality post-earthquake imagery will be available in the next
24-48 hours [1], to enable further tracing [2], to show the current
situation.
snip
[1] we're not sure where or how yet - perhaps someone can assist here
On 19 February 2011 12:06, Richard Fairhurst rich...@systemed.net wrote:
David Murn wrote:
If the service isnt designed to be portable (it only runs on one
system currently, in the world), then who cares about java,
why isnt it written in optimized C or some other similarly
lowish level
On 17 February 2011 12:21, David Murn da...@incanberra.com.au wrote:
Ive fixed quite a number of spots where keepright has picked up a river
and highway on the same layer (=0), generally without a junction node.
i wonder what would be the consequences of scripting this?
if layer does not exist
On 15 February 2011 10:26, Andrew Guertin andrew.guer...@uvm.edu wrote:
I have a few buildings that are not simply at ground level, and I can't
find how to map them on the wiki.
First off, a skywalk between two buildings. Nothing fancy, although it
does go over a road.
building=yes
On 7 February 2011 17:11, Richard Weait rich...@weait.com wrote:
How do i get meetings included in the wiki front page?
1) Log in to the wiki. The wiki account is separate from your api account.
2) Add your event to the wiki calendar. [1]
[1]
On 8 December 2010 11:14, David Murn da...@incanberra.com.au wrote:
Once all the licence issues are resolved and we know whether projects
will be forked or our data removed, then Ill start dumping all my edits
back in. Ive also tried working on parts of New Zealand, but have come
up against a
Hi all,
OSM New Zealand have recently launched their website, and announced
meetings beginning this month:
http://www.openstreetmap.org.nz/
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/WikiProject_New_Zealand#OSM_Auckland_meetings
Other than this list, is there any particular place in the world of
osm
On 26 January 2011 06:42, Juan Lucas Domínguez Rubio
juan_lucas...@yahoo.com wrote:
Is there a better mailing list than this to get help about this?
osm-dev?
http://lists.openstreetmap.org/pipermail/dev/
--
robin
http://tangleball.org.nz/ - Auckland's Creative Space
On 26 January 2011 11:22, Steve Doerr steve.do...@blueyonder.co.uk wrote:
Whether a similar error regarding the Equator has crept into WGS84, I'm not
sure. Lines of latitude are not arbitrary in the way lines of longitude are.
is this entirely the case? i was under the impression the earth is
On 25 January 2011 09:57, Milo van der Linden m...@dogodigi.net wrote:
You have some javascript errors. Missing ; or )
Please go to http://www.jslint.com/ and paste the content of site.js there.
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The biggest problems are:
Problem at line 31 character 3:
hi all,
i put together the osm new zealand site the last week - i learnt a bit
of javascript along the way, but unfortunately not enough. could
someone take a look, and help with the problem i'm having?
http://bumblepuppy.org/osm_nz/
(this address is temporary, until i figure out virtual hosts
hi all,
after much discussion, deliberation and planning, the NZ OSM crew are
building a tool to help users import data from LINZ to OSM. there are
only a small number of users (perhaps 50) in NZ, and a tiny number of
coders - 4 at last count. so we are looking for help if possible.
if there is
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