(English) weeklyOSM 482

Desculpe-nos, mas este texto está apenas disponível em English, Čeština, Deutsch, Español, Français, 日本語, 한국어 y Português.

08/10/2019-14/10/2019

lead picture

Proposed feature “Utility Markers” – voting until 2019-10-26 1 | © Pyrog – Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International

Mapping

  • The MapRoulette team tweeted about improvements to documentation. They are also seeking feedback and volunteers to help.
  • Frederik Ramm asked for opinions on various areas mapped as parks (including “micro parks”). The issue arose as part of a dispute in the US which has been referred to the DWG.
  • Michael Brandtner’s proposal to add cash_withdrawal= automatically to a supermarket chain in Germany received mixed feedback on the German mailing list (automatic translation) and forum (automatic translation).
  • John Kennedy published a JOSM Plugin RelationDissolve to simplify creating new boundaries from those already in OpenStreetMap. When merging existing boundaries it automatically dissolves away any shared borders.
  • Voting for ChameleonScales’ proposal for amenity=toy_library has started, and ends on 27 October 2019. Toy libraries only lend games and toys, not books.
  • Fanfouer’s proposal for mapping markers for utility services, such as gas and water pipes, service valves, power lines, hydrants and many more, is up for voting until 26 October 2019.

OpenStreetMap Foundation

  • Michael Reichert asked the OSMF Board why Microgrants have been implemented without consulting the community and received an answer from Joost Schouppe.
  • Draft minutes for the Local Chapters Working Group meeting on 9 October 2019 have been made available on the OSMF wiki.

Events

  • Ilya Zverev asks mappers to complete a questionnaire on regional mapping differences. He will present the outcome at the next local SotM conference on 25 to 27 October 2019 in Prizren, Kosovo.
  • Imagico wrote a detailed personal report about SotM 2019 with the following sections: venue, conference size, the talks, audience, scholarships, and the future of SotM.
  • On 29 October the 5th Vienna Geo Meetup will take (de) place. This Meetup is intended to enable interested people from the GIS sector to exchange information. Once more, scene-setting lectures are planned to stimulate further discussion.
  • On 12 October a “Missing Maps” mapathon was held (automatic translation) for the first time in Russia (Moscow). It was organised by “Doctors without borders” together with the “Greenhouse of social technologies”. MSF said that 36 participants in 2.5 hours drew 86% of the map of the Beitbridge area in the southern part of Zimbabwe.

Humanitarian OSM

  • At the celebrations of the International Day for #DisasterRiskReduction on 13 October, Heidelberg University’s GIScience Research Group posted a blog entry about the tools they have created for humanitarian aid during and before disasters and the resources they can provide for workshops, conferences and mapathons, or research projects and related activities.

Education

  • kaggle.com offers a free course titled Geospatial Analysis. The five-hour course includes lessons about GeoPandas, which is a library for working with geospatial data in Python, coordinate systems, interactive maps, geospatial data manipulation and proximity analysis.

Maps

  • Maps exist for almost every need, so it goes without saying that there is a map highlighting motorcycle parking using OSM data.

switch2OSM

  • 115.бел, a website for reporting issues with properties and public spaces, has been updated (automatic translation). Citizens and municipalities can report faults with roads, cycleways, street lighting, etc., and receive a response from the municipality or a property management office. OpenStreetMap is used as a background map, and address data appears to be OSM-derived. The main osm.org tile server is apparently used.

Licences

  • Facebook’s attribution of OSM data — or the lack of it — caused discussions on the OSMF mailing list. While some people want to see consequences for the ongoing violation of our terms, Frederik Ramm from the OSMF board as well as Simon Poole from the License Working Group are pointing to the drafted Attribution Guidelines, which should be agreed on, hopefully, soon.

Software

  • Andreas Bürki asks (automatic translation), on the mailing list Talk-ch, why skuettel.ch sets a third party cookie on umap.osm.ch for site visitors. The reason is the example maps on the start page, which use third party sites for data, and do actually present a security problem.

Programming

  • Brian DeRocher suprised the OSM developers with a large pull request (i.e., 64 commits in total) to add “Microcosms” to OSM’s website. “Microcosms” are intended to become a feature to support local groups of mappers and the events they participate in.

Did you know …

OSM in the media

  • Pokémon Go couldn’t be played on the Greek island of Salamis. The whole island was tagged with natural=bay, so the game treated it as if it were seawater. While this has been corrected in OSM, Niantic (developer of Pokémon Go) has yet to import the data and continues to interpret it as water. Action from the developer following the Reddit thread that brought the issue to attention has given hopes for a fix (via Eurogamer).

Other “geo” things

  • The Guardian reported on a project which plans to scan all the dry land on Earth with aircraft-based LiDAR. The object is to preserve a record of the world’s cultural, environmental and geological treasures. The resulting 3D map, with a resolution of 20 cm, is estimated to cost $15 million.
  • In his paper Creating, Managing, and Maximising the Potential of Large Online Georeferenced Map Layers, Chris Fleet reports on the georeferencing program and the use of the historical map collection of the National Library of Scotland, which also makes its holdings available to the OSM community.
  • Geospatial World published an article about the evolution of Google Maps. Although the article goes back to 2005, when Google started its map service, detail is rather scanty.
  • Pacific Gas & Electric provided shapefiles instead of a functioning map for power shutdowns in advance of fire warnings in California. This has received criticism, but the San Francisco Chronicle has created a user-friendly slippy map with Leaflet. The power outages affected more than 1 million people, and follow last year’s fatal Camp Fire which was attributed to faults on power lines.
  • Pratyush Tripathy and Teja Malladi (Geospatial Lab, Indian Institute of Human Sciences) write, on the website Mongabay, about the use of Sentinel-1 satellite imagery for mapping the extent of recent floods in Assam and Bihar. The results, which were presented on, unattributed, OSM base maps, are intended to provide an example of how such mapping can help during rescue missions.
  • Geoscience Australia has announced that it will no longer print and sell topographic maps from December 2019. Production of paper maps has stopped due to budget cuts and a large decline in the demand for paper maps.
  • pocketnavigation.de reviewed (automatic translation) the Garmin Overlander, an “all-terrain” SatNav, which comes with OSM pre-installed.
  • Massey University Press have published We are Here: an atlas of Aotearoa by authors Chris McDowall and Tim Denee. The work is a thematic atlas of New Zealand (Māori: Aotearoa). Of particular interest to map enthusiasts is that some notes, data, code (Python, R) and style sheets (Mapnik) have been published on their GitHub site.

Upcoming Events

WhereWhatWhenCountry
ArlonEspace public numérique d’Arlon – Formation Contribuer à OpenStreetMap2019-10-16belgium
BerlinMissing Maps Mapathon – Putting the Wolds’s Vulnerable People on the Map2019-10-17germany
Vienna63. Wiener Stammtisch2019-10-17austria
KarlsruheKarlsruhe Hack Weekend2019-10-19-2019-10-20germany
Salt Lake CityOSM Utah Mapping Night2019-10-22united states
NottinghamNottingham pub meetup2019-10-22united kingdom
ŽilinaMissing Maps Mapathon Žilina #62019-10-22slovakia
ArlonEspace public numérique d’Arlon – Formation Les itinéraires balisés et OpenStreetMap2019-10-23belgium
LübeckLübecker Mappertreffen2019-10-24germany
San JoséCivic Hack & Map Night2019-10-24united states
PrizrenState of the Map Southeast Europe2019-10-25-2019-10-27kosovo
Rapperswil11. Micro Mapping Party Rapperswil (OpenStreetMap Mapathon)2019-10-25switzerland
Yosano-chō京都!街歩き!マッピングパーティ:第13回 ちりめん街道2019-10-27japan
BremenBremer Mappertreffen2019-10-28germany
DüsseldorfStammtisch2019-10-30germany
Ulmer AlbStammtisch Ulmer Alb2019-10-31germany
DhakaState of the Map Asia 20192019-11-01-2019-11-02bangladesh
BrnoState of the Map CZ+SK 20192019-11-02-2019-11-03czech republic
StuttgartStuttgarter Stammtisch2019-11-06germany
WellingtonFOSS4G SotM Oceania 20192019-11-12-2019-11-15new zealand
EncarnaciónState of the Map Latam 20192019-11-14paraguay
Grand-BassamState of the Map Africa 20192019-11-22-2019-11-24ivory coast
Cape TownState of the Map 20202020-07-03-2020-07-05south africa

Note: If you like to see your event here, please put it into the calendar. Only data which is there, will appear in weeklyOSM. Please check your event in our public calendar preview and correct it, where appropriate.

This weeklyOSM was produced by Elizabete, Nakaner, PierZen, Polyglot, Rogehm, SK53, SunCobalt, TheSwavu, YoViajo, derFred, geologist, jinalfoflia, anonymus.