If you can't find someone with experience locally then I seem to recall that there have been some training sessions using Google+? The advantage is that you can see the remote area and how its mapped but I don't recall the software exactly. I do know you have to be in the software continuously from the beginning or you don't see the updates on the screen.
I think one or two people are on Skype as well. Cheerio John On 1 February 2015 at 13:52, Stacey Maples <stacemap...@stanford.edu> wrote: > Are there any experienced HOT mappers in the Stanford University area, who > might be willing to meet/help/ do a training for us on a project to map a > sub-district in Bangladesh? We've made great contacts in-country, but I > think it would be good to build a core of remote mappers, here, too. > > > In F,L&T, > Stace Maples > Geospatial Manager > Stanford Geospatial Center > @mapninja > staceymaples@G+ > > Skype: stacey.maples > > Get GeoHelp: https://gis.stanford.edu/ > > "I have a map of the United States... actual size. > It says, "Scale: 1 mile = 1 mile." > I spent last summer folding it." > -Steven Wright- > > > _______________________________________________ > HOT mailing list > HOT@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot > >
_______________________________________________ HOT mailing list HOT@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot