Sven Grüner wrote:

Frederik Ramm schrieb:
I've been critcised for not suggesting an alternative. So here's my suggestion:

* [...]

Okay, slowly I realize that I took all this for granted while you didn't.
While I'm not yet certain wether you seriously propose such a task force it's no good idea I believe. That would inevitably become a "closed" group at that others would point their fingers saying "It's all their fault". In contrast our current system is truly open: Anybody can drop by in the wiki write one or two lines to a proposal and leave again.

In this discussion, I find myself on their side: Our project is so open, and I have the impression that you are trying to *reduce* that openness by setting up a voting process. I have the suspicion that in the end you want a project where new tags aren't even allowed unless they underwent discussion and voting. And that's where my fierce opposition comes from.

Naturally I can only speak for myself but I'm almost certain this applies to others as well: I don't want to allow or disallow anything! When I spent time with proposals I consider that a service to others. Those others are free to chose wether they want to use my service of neatly structured and described tags or not.

I'm a mechanical engineer and see on a daily basis how industrial norms like ISO, DIN, etc. make things easier by allowing you to concentrate on your core business rather than worrying if other people will now what I mean by a M6x40 bolt. Take ISO 5457 for example: You are free to use whatever paperformat you like but isn't it also comfortable to walk into any shop and ask for DIN A4 paper sheets, that every printer and every desktop application will know what you mean without the need to say that it's a piece of paper with the dimensions 210x297mm? Even when there are several competing norms that's fine as long each one clearly defines it's meaning and one knows which one applies.

There are of course laws and alike which enforce people to meet such norms but it's false to blame the resulting hassle on those who created the norm. So we should try to scatter the illusion that tags as they can be found in the wiki are obligatory in any kind. I'll be glad to do so when you point me to such places.

regards, Sven

+1

Paul.

--
Paul Hurley     http://www.paulhurley.co.uk/
The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.
   Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

_______________________________________________
talk mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.openstreetmap.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/talk

Reply via email to