So the first few changes are now available to view online: http://leatherwood.herokuapp.com/
I'm not sure if I like the name (bit of a tongue twister). Is "Old Map Marker" any better than "Historic Map Marker"? Do you have any other suggestions? Regards, Rob On 15 June 2014 11:56, Rob Nickerson <[email protected]> wrote: > All, > > One of the first things is a name and introduction. The NYPL site goes > with: > > >The New York Public Library presents > >Building Inspector > >Kill Time. Make History. > > My initial idea is to use > > >Make your mark on history with the > >Historic Map Marker > >An OpenHistoricalMap project. > > We will also need a new set of images. These are available at the > following site. Feel free to send in your ideas. > > > https://github.com/OpenHistoricalMap/building-inspector/tree/master/app/assets/images > > Regards, > Rob > > > > > On 15 June 2014 11:51, Rob Nickerson <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi All, >> >> We are making good progress with launching our own version of the NYPL >> Building inspector [1]. So far we have managed to source some really high >> quality map scans from the National Library of Scotland. We've also got the >> map vectorisation process up and running. >> >> This leaves the website! >> >> Tim has forked the nypl code at [2] but and so far it's just a duplicate >> of [1]. We now need your help to restyle the website to match >> OpenHistoricalMap. >> >> If you have any ides, you can reply here or if you're familiar with >> github please submit pull requests. >> >> Best regards, >> Rob >> >> [1] http://buildinginspector.nypl.org/ >> [2] https://github.com/OpenHistoricalMap/building-inspector >> > >
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