Hi Puneet, all
You raise some good points.

> Ease-of-use from the POV of the general public varies from culture to 
> culture, context to context, time to time. Thinking that we can create a 
> universal code that everyone in the world will glom on to is just fanciful 
> and really a waste of time

Yes and no. Some of the limitations, like the digit span I mentioned are a 
fundamental tenet of how the human mind works. Across all cultures people are 
better at remembering short things than long things. You're certainly correct 
that the cultural and contextual aspects make it tricky though.

> Thinking that we can create a universal code that everyone in the world will 
> glom on to is just fanciful and really a waste of time. If it had been needed 
> badly, it would have created.

Respectfully, I must disagree. In this thread alone at least six different 
versions have been linked to, so someone is certainly creating them. I can 
think of several real-world advantages, of such systems, for instance if I type 
in "SW1A 2AA" to google, I (correctly) get taken to Downing Street, but that's 
because the UK have a unique format to their postal codes. If I enter "20500", 
I don't get taken to the vicinity of the White House because google doesn't 
know what to do with it. I need to enter "US 20500" for that. If I want to go 
to the Kremlin I must enter "103132" which does work - except it took me a 
while to find out that code because I don't know what they call them in Russia 
(it's not a "zip code" or a "post code") (seems there are lots of terms: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postal_code#Terms ).

Perhaps this problem could benefit from input from the Universal Postal Union?

Cheers,
Jonathan


-----Original Message-----
From: Mr. Puneet Kishor [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, July 27, 2015 11:01 AM
To: Jonathan Moules
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Discuss Digest, Vol 103, Issue 20

Hello all, hi Jonathan,

> On Jul 27, 2015, at 11:42 AM, Jonathan Moules <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
> These systems may fail from a GIS perspective, but that's because their 
> primary design goal is ease-of-use by the general public.



Ease-of-use from the POV of the general public varies from culture to culture, 
context to context, time to time. Thinking that we can create a universal code 
that everyone in the world will glom on to is just fanciful and really a waste 
of time. If it had been needed badly, it would have created. Those who 
understand or can use lat/lon, already do so, or just punch it in a device. 
Those who understand “200 feet from the wooden bridge to the right of the 
banyan tree” use that  and are happy with it.

And that mapcode site that someone mentioned is being considered as an ISO 
standard; first, mapcode is being filed by mapcode folks to become an ISO 
standard. That is not the same as “it is being considered as a standard.” 
Besides, what a confused jumble of instructions regarding its licensing:

"It was decided to donate the mapcode system to the public domain in 2008."
http://www.mapcode.com/aboutmc.html

"The Stichting Mapcode Foundation is a non-profit foundation, established in 
The Netherlands (Chamber of Commerce RSIN registration number 852726284), which 
holds all the patents, rights, brands, designs, properties, collateral, 
algorithms, data tables and IP related to map codes.” (which part of Public 
Domain do they not understand?) http://www.mapcode.com/aboutus.html

"The Mapcode Foundation is the only authorized entity that is allowed to 
maintain, change or adapt its software or tables.” (Oh, good! I should trust 
them to do the right thing forever) http://www.mapcode.com/aboutus.html

"The mapcode algorithms and data tables may not be altered in any way that 
would result in the production of different (and thus incompatible) mapcodes. 
The mapcode algorithms and data tables may not be used in any way to generate a 
different system that produces codes to represent locations. In order to 
prevent misuse, unauthorised alterations, copying or commercial exploitation, 
please note that the ideas and algorithms behind the mapcode system have been 
patented and that the term "mapcode" is a registered trademark of the Stichting 
Mapcode Foundation.” (so, this system meant for global use cannot be used for 
commercial purposes; which part of the world can subsist on love and free air?) 
http://www.mapcode.com/downloads.html#devsec

There are a bunch of interesting problems to be solved in the geo realm. In my 
view, a globally usable location system is not one of them. But hey, its a free 
world and there are many wheels to reinvent.

--
Puneet Kishor
Just Another Creative Commoner

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