At a lot of tool stores they sell a cheap little metal tab that is a key fob, and it has various tabs along its sides that are shaped for standard and phillips screws (a tapered tab to fit into one of the slots on a phillips screw).
Put it on your keyring and you can open a lot more sizes of screws than a dime or single driver ever could. Just be aware that getting spotted "tampering" with the outlets - especially now since modern airports have hundreds of outlets for personal use - could land you in a small security room for a couple hours, or on a list. And you allowed to map the location of the room while you're there ^_^ Javbw > On Jun 17, 2015, at 8:17 PM, Paul Johnson <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 7:23 PM, Bryce Nesbitt <[email protected]> wrote: >> One could tag every power outlet that seems to be in a public space. For >> many years I charged my laptop at >>> airports by finding the places the cleaning crew plugged in their vacuum >>> cleaners. But that sort of accidental >>> charging station is of a different character to a designated place. >> >> Why? >> A random outlet is unlikely to be well positioned, maintained or universally >> usable for device charging. People >> are free to map those outlets, but rendering should be able to choose if >> they are included. >> I don't see these as the same feature at all. > > Before it became disallowed, I used to carry a flathead screwdriver (or > multitool) for this task, as many floor mounted, and sometimes wall mounted, > outlets are covered by a device designed to protect it from foot or cart > traffic when not in use. Now that such devices are disallowed from many > public spaces where you're likely to be stuck busy waiting forever, I've > found a quarter, dime or the head of a key often gets the job done... > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
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