Nice, but have you considered joining up with f.i. OSMand? Perhaps offline routing is more reliable in a crisis situation where first responders can download routing data in the basecamps and then use it during operations.
I have got the feeling that now is a good time to drop the "not invented here" tradition that seems so common at universities across the globe. No offense meant. I just hope for cooperations from which a larger audience might benefit. Kind regards, Milo Op 21 apr. 2016 10:54 schreef "Melanie Eckle" <[email protected]>: > Dear HOT team, > > I want to hereby inform you that GIScience group of Heidelberg University > <http://www.geog.uni-heidelberg.de/gis/index_en.html> set up an > OpenRouteService Disaster Map for Ecuador: > http://openls.geog.uni-heidelberg.de/disaster/. > The map and graph will be updated regularly. > As in earlier cases for the disasters in Nepal or Haiti the additional > *OpenRouteService* SOS - route profile currently considers passable and > impassable tagged ways and dynamically adjusts the graph weights of OSM > streets accordingly. > > ORS also provides an Accessibility Analysis Service for a given location, > the possibility to export GPS tracks to be used offline in mobile device > and the interactive Avoid Feature Area Tool (in case areas are severely > effected by debris and not accessible at all). These features are thus > potentially valuable for Search and Rescue (SAR) units. > > For more information also see: > http://k1z.blog.uni-heidelberg.de/2016/04/20/disaster-openrouteservice-for-ecuador/ > > Hopefully this resource will be useful and we are open to feedbacks > towards improvement. > > Kind regards, > > Melanie > on behalh of the GIScience group > > _______________________________________________ > HOT mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot > >
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