30/07/2019-05/08/2019

Mapping

The discussion on Facebook’s RapiD continues on Twitter and the talk mailing list. For anyone seriously interested in the values of OSM the latter thread is recommended as it highlights many of the pros and cons. The controversy has been noticed by the MapRoom blog as well.

The proposal for connectivity relations has been approved. Help is sought to translate the wiki page into other languages.

Voting has opened on the proposals for: staff_count:doctors , staff_count:nurses , insurance:health , and healthcare:equipment .

, , , and . Tomas Straupis asked the tagging list if in a hierarchy of highway types for motorcars would track or service come first? As you would expect, there was a wide range of opinions.

Community

Roland Olbricht introduced (automatic translation) us to the user manual for the Overpass API. Although the manual is still a work in progress, the important chapters “Introduction”, “Spatial Data Selection”, and “Finding Objects” are ready for use. Roland welcomes feedback which you can give to him directly, on the mailing list, or on the GitHub issue tracker.

Harald Hartmann wrote a guide on how (automatic translation) to carve a map on a slate. He outlines how to take data from OpenStreetMap and convert it to a format that can be used to program a CNC mill; which then inscribes the slate.

Cepesko opened a very lively discussion on the existence, or not, of a Bavarian Spessart Nature Park. (automatic translation)

Ilya Zverev is once again organising the election for the OSM Awards 2019. He announced that voting has started.

Events

GeoForAll are holding a meeting on Wednesday 28 August 2019 from 18:00 to 19:30 (Bucharest time) at FOSS4G 2019 where ideas for the future will be discussed and planned. The meeting will be similar to the FOSS4G 2018 GeoForAll meeting and aims to bring together colleagues from around the world to plan ideas for expanding open principles in science and education.

Humanitarian OSM

Felix Delattre presented an update on recent work being to improve the HOT Tasking Manager. A user experience survey was carried out in February and March to better understand how users used the software and how users were spending time within the software. Based on the results of the survey HOT plans to better integrate the Tasking Manager with iD in order to improve the experience for mappers and provide user instructions in one tool. This will allow mappers to report back from a task directly from inside the integrated iD editor. Integration also opens the way to dynamically populate the iD editor with tagging presets and specific validation rules depending on the map features that are requested by humanitarian organisations in each of the different projects.

switch2OSM

Licences

Nuno Caldeira complained, in an ironic way, that neither Mapbox nor Facebook follow the attribution rules for OpenStreetMap.

Takayuki Ishino drew attention to a discussion taking place in the Japanese mapping community about proposed changes to the list of data sources suitable for using in OpenStreetMap. The main point at issue is whether we are allowed to use official websites that provide primary information or not. The answer would appear to be a matter of how many items you can copy before a website becomes protected by database rights. (automatic translation)

Programming

Jason Manoloudis gave us an update on the progress made on implementing 3D Traffic sign rendering capabilities for OSM2World, a converter that generates 3D models of the world from OpenStreetMap data. The completion of the traffic sign catalogues task brings a long-desirable feature in OSM2World: being able to define and configure materials solely through the configuration file, without the need for them to exist in Materials.java.

Wikidata, Wikimedia’s project to create a store of structured knowledge, has the potential to improve the calculation of importance scores in Nominatim. For instance, where real-world items have identical names, the ability to differentiate between OSM locations using properties not covered by OSM could help with returning more relevant geocoding results.tchaddad, who is working on a Google Summer of Code project, gives an introduction to Wikidata and how entries are stored and extracted using the Eiffel Tower as an example. How Wikidata could be used to assist Nominatim is described.

Releases

OsmAnd has released a new version of their OsmAnd Tracker app. The Tracker app allows users to share their location via Telegram. The new version has live track which shows real-time tracks of your contacts on an OsmAnd map.

Did you know …

… the various ref tags on public transport stops? ref typically gets the reference number of the local operator while ref:IFOPT is a (in continental Europe) international unique identifier. If the different platforms (in a bus, tram, metro or train station) have numbers or letters to mark them, this can be tagged as local_ref .

tags on public transport stops? typically gets the reference number of the local operator while is a (in continental Europe) international unique identifier. If the different platforms (in a bus, tram, metro or train station) have numbers or letters to mark them, this can be tagged as . … how to tag how visible a path is on the ground? The tag for this is trail_visibility . This property is independent of the other properties of the path like width , smoothness , surface – a way on a salt lake may be like a paved way, wide, smooth, but also hard to see.

. This property is independent of the other properties of the path like , , – a way on a salt lake may be like a paved way, wide, smooth, but also hard to see. …the LightningMaps? In real time, thunderstorms flash on an OSM-based map.

… the Regional Directorate of the Environment, a service of the Regional Government of the Azores, in Portugal, provides the website On My Island, where all citizens can report environmental occurrences (pollution, abandoned waste, noise, endangered fauna and flora, …). The geolocation of occurrences is carried out using OSM data and with due attribution.

Other “geo” things

Azavea has released an online comparison of the building footprints in the Microsoft Bing dataset with those in OpenStreetMap.

Mapbox is taking the price offensive by offering email support with guaranteed response times for $50 per month. Paul Ramsey comments on Twitter that Mapbox is burning money to increase its market share. There is some more speculation around this topic.

In 1969, two companies opened their doors and began their journey toward developing some of the most effective technologies used today. Intergraph, now Hexagon (but began operations as M&S Computing), and Environmental Systems Research Institute, now Esri, were launched in that year. Directions Magazine has a two-part article by Joe Francica in which he tells us the story of the development of commercial GIS over the periods 1969-1994 and 1994-2019 from his perspective.

Deep and machine learning are becoming more popular in the field of map making. Benjamin Herfort reports on work undertaken to combine crowdsourced data from MapSwipe, with data derived from deep learning applied to satellite imagery and OpenStreetMap data, to delineate human settlement areas. The combined method produced maps that were more accurate than the crowdsourced only version but reduced the volunteer efforts needed by at least 80 percentage points for all study sites.

In March this year at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the Australian government joined The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust to announce a funding scheme to establish a Data Cube for Africa reports Space in Africa. The Data Cube, developed by Geoscience Australia, is a cloud-based, open-source platform for processing and analysing earth observations.

The Polish company TatukGIS is now providing their own hosted OSM (world map) web tile server as a free service for use with their software. The map tiles are available as four different styles: standard with native language name labeling, standard with English name labeling, hillshade with native language name labeling, and hillshade with English name labeling.

The German city of Wuppertal’s hanging train, or Schwebebahn, which had been shut down for almost nine months has reopened. With a 24-hour ticket for €7.10 you can once again take an airy flight on the back of a “steely dragon” along the Wupper River.

Upcoming Events

Where What When Country Stuttgart Stuttgarter Stammtisch 2019-08-07 San José Code for San José Summer Mixer [1] 2019-08-08 Cottbus 134. Brandenburg-Berlin Stammtisch 2019-08-09 Fortaleza 15th Birthday in Fortaleza-CE 2019-08-09 Salt Lake City 15th Birthday Salt Lake City Mapping Party 2019-08-10 Taipei OSM x Wikidata #7 2019-08-12 Bordeaux Réunion mensuelle 2019-08-12 Salt Lake City OSM Utah 15th Birthday Drinks 2019-08-13 Zurich OSM Stammtisch Zurich 2019-08-13 Hamburg Hamburger Mappertreffen 2019-08-13 Munich Münchner Stammtisch 2019-08-14 Wuppertal OSM-Treffen Wuppertaler Stammtisch im Hutmacher 18 Uhr 2019-08-14 Osaka みんなで東淀川区の魅力を発信しよう！ 2019-08-18 Melbourne Indigenous name mapathon 2019-08-20 Cologne Bonn Airport Bonner Stammtisch 2019-08-20 Lüneburg Lüneburger Mappertreffen 2019-08-20 Lübeck Lübecker Mappertreffen 2019-08-22 Kameoka 京都！街歩き！マッピングパーティ：第11回 出雲大神宮 2019-08-24 Bremen Bremer Mappertreffen 2019-08-26 Salt Lake City SLC Map Night 2019-08-27 Düsseldorf Stammtisch 2019-08-28 Minneapolis State of the Map U.S. 2019 [4] 2019-09-06-2019-09-08 Edinburgh FOSS4GUK 2019 2019-09-18-2019-09-21 Heidelberg Erasmus+ EuYoutH OSM Meeting 2019-09-18-2019-09-23 Heidelberg HOT Summit 2019 2019-09-19-2019-09-20 Heidelberg State of the Map 2019 [5] 2019-09-21-2019-09-23 Dhaka State of the Map Asia 2019 2019-11-01-2019-11-02 Wellington FOSS4G SotM Oceania 2019 2019-11-12-2019-11-15 Grand-Bassam State of the Map Africa 2019 2019-11-22-2019-11-24

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This weeklyOSM was produced by Nakaner, Polyglot, Rogehm, SK53, TheSwavu, derFred, geologist, jinalfoflia, keithonearth, mueschel.