--- On Fri, 31/7/09, Roy Wallace <waldo000...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I'm guessing you've already checked out the links from
> http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Recruitment_Poster
> ?
> 
> e.g. http://ajr.hopto.org/osm/pr/OSMFlyer-English.pdf

Yup, but I've sort of have 2 conflicting goals here, on one hand I need to 
explain what OSM is, on the other I need to tell them that there is a mapping 
party in Nambour on the 15th in the most terse way possible, so that people 
will actually read it.

I pieced together the following, but it is much too verbose at present.

=======

We would like to bring to your attention, an informal social meetup for GPS and 
OpenStreetMap enthusiests on the 15th of August at Nambour.

This is an informal social event, there is no hard and fast rules about what 
you can and can't talk about but there will be people on hand if you wish to 
ask questions.

Until recently the coverage of Nambour in OpenStreetMap was very poor so a 
meeting was proposed to try and rectify the situation.

So why do we do we go to the trouble of making street data when google maps is 
free?

There are many free maps on the Internet,most of them are only for private use 
and must not be re-distributed. They are often not up-to-date and incomplete or 
contain errors which are only corrected slowly.

In all those maps you don't have the original data to create them, only images 
of the data. There are all kinds of fantastic things you can do with map vector 
data but unfortunately mapping companies usually stifle this kind of innovation 
due to restrictive licensing of the data.

OpenStreetMap has people like you and me collecting raw data themselves, all 
over the world, sometimes as a team. With our own data an our own software we 
are independent from commercial providers. As in Wikipedia, everybody can take 
part.


      

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