Yeah, Graphserver is a powerful tool.

If anyone want to see a working demo using the ruby bindings -not the 
python ones described in the sourceforge site-, using OSM and Google 
Transit data, visit:
http://demo.intermodal.es/

Juangui

> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 28 Jul 2008 04:09:53 -0400
> From: "Brandon Martin-Anderson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [Routing] Yet another OSM routing tool
> To: [email protected], osm-dev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Message-ID:
>       <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> Morning Everyone,
>
> A lot of folks have done a lot of interesting work on routing on OSM data.
> Over the last year I've been developing a multi-modal trip planning engine,
> and one of the modes currently supported out-of-box is OpenStreetMap
> walking. Graphserver has undergone a lot of new development in the last few
> weeks, and OSM routing has taken an increasingly central role. I just
> updated the main project page to reflect the new changes, and a super-quick
> OSM "hello world" routing example is on the front page.
>
> Check it out here:
> http://graphserver.sourceforge.net/
>
> And scroll down to the bottom of the page to the "Loading OpenStreetMap
> Data" section.
>
> Please keep in mind that Graphserver is not a trip planning website, graph
> database, or broadly-scoped toolkit. It is a library into which one can load
> large amounts of graph data and route across it very quickly. All the other
> components of a trip planning webite are left, as the GS page says, as an
> exercise to the reader.
>
> Anyway, I'm proud to show off where things have come, and hope to get a bit
> of feedback from everyone.
>
> -B
>   


_______________________________________________
Routing mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/routing

Reply via email to