For those interested in knowing what a "typical" bounding box size is,
check out my diary entry where I sample changesets over the last 8 years
and generate a heatmap of bounding box sizes over time.
https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/b-jazz/diary/393858
On Sun, Jun 14, 2020 at 3:21 AM wrote:
I’m really opposed to this idea of scaring people away from editing objects
with the “data freshness” boogie man argument. If someone really cares
about freshness, the entire history of an object is available to you.
On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 12:57 PM Kevin Broderick
wrote:
> I'm of mixed feelings
The wiki page for landuse=reservoir says:
"Description: Ambiguous and better alternatives exist, see water=reservoir"
So, is iD wrong to use this, or is the wiki incorrect?
On Sun, Apr 7, 2019 at 8:24 AM Tomas Straupis
wrote:
> 2019-04-07, sk, 17:47 Bryce Jasmer rašė:
> >
Can you give some examples of what the OSM normals are and how iD differs
from them?
Is there a bug against iD not showing semi-detached house? Can you provide
the link(s) to the bug(s) so we can read what the discussion/rationale is
for not showing it?
As for a building tool, is there any
Is this a problem that only a few are concerned with? Can I get a
geographic area where I can run a larger number of changes in a larger
bounding box? I could easily make some one-off changes on a per country
basis if that would help. And would fewer changesets of, say, 100 objects
be a good
The home page would be a curated list of the different maps and tools that
are built on OSM. Ones that are meant to be more for the end user, not a
reference implementation of what a map could look like. And it would detect
if you are on mobile and provide a list of apps that could be downloaded
I use the overpass library (I think it's the one you mentioned). The
resulting dictionary can be coerced to a string and written out and it
should be valid geojson.
#!/usr/bin/python3
import overpass
api = overpass.API()
result =
Thanks for pointing that out. I have fixed it by redirecting between the
two pages.
On Fri, Mar 8, 2019 at 4:28 AM Michael Reichert
wrote:
> Hi Bryce,
>
> Am 22/02/2019 um 08.02 schrieb Bryce Jasmer:
> > The wiki page is
> https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Automated_Edits
reload
> list, so modern browsers will do their job.
>
> On Tue., Feb. 26, 2019, 9:39 a.m. Bryce Jasmer, wrote:
>
>> The HSTS discussion is completely orthogonal to what the stated goal is
>> and any further discussion on it is really just muddying the waters. HSTS
>>
his applies to, possibly none! Hopefully you're script
> will be able to tell us :)
>
> Rory
>
> On 22/02/2019 08:02, Bryce Jasmer wrote:
> > I have written a script that will search for OSM objects that have a
> > website tag that explicitly states "http://.
The HSTS discussion is completely orthogonal to what the stated goal is and
any further discussion on it is really just muddying the waters. HSTS comes
into play after the user is already visiting over https.
If I’m mistaken, please help me understand.
On Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 6:30 AM Rory McCann
. It
will NOT guess that just because something is listening on 443 that it
should make changes.
On Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 5:12 AM Andy Townsend wrote:
> On 26/02/2019 12:34, Bryce Jasmer wrote:
> > Correct. No change will be made on anything other than the most
> > straightforward of redirect
How would you feel about bounding boxes that cross country borders but are
3 geohash digits or smaller? (Sorry I cant give you an example at the
moment, the power has been out so I can’t access tools on my computer.) I’m
not sure what your definition of enormous is and what would be an
acceptable
Correct. No change will be made on anything other than the most
straightforward of redirects. So even http://example.com ->
https://example.com/home.aspx will be ignored.
On Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 4:23 AM Frederik Ramm wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 26.02.19 12:47, Mateusz Konieczny wrote:
> > So when
is used and not on the
> provider end.
>
> Stephan
>
>
> On February 22, 2019 8:02:20 AM GMT+01:00, Bryce Jasmer
> wrote:
>>
>> I have written a script that will search for OSM objects that have a
>> website tag that explicitly states "http://...
I have written a script that will search for OSM objects that have a
website tag that explicitly states "http://...; or implicitly uses http by
leaving of the protocol specification. The script will then loop through
all that it discovers and asks the http site if it will redirect me to the
secure
to correct them.
*https://tinyurl.com/y8cyh7n7 <https://tinyurl.com/y8cyh7n7>* is a shorter
URL for the spreadsheet that the mailing list probably won't break.
On Wed, Sep 5, 2018 at 3:38 PM, Martin Koppenhoefer
wrote:
>
>
> sent from a phone
>
> > On 5. Sep 2018, at 22
[I'm resending this since it might be stuck in the moderator queue as I
wasn't a list member when I first sent it.]
On Tue, Sep 4, 2018 at 3:40 PM, Bryce Jasmer wrote:
> While doing a lot of edits in my area, I started to notice a pattern with
> a particular user's name coming up and
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