(English) weekly 238 – 03.02.-09.02.2015

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03.02. – 09.02.2015

Screenshot Taglocator
HOT activity map from @dekstop [1]

Mapping

  • Toby Murray has integrated OSM Notes in JOSM. There are details in his blogpost.
  • DougPeterson describes his workflow for generating GPS Tracks on a separate map with a GPS logger, Locus Map Pro, Osmosis and Mapsforge.
  • The voting for the proposed feature “Traffic Signals” is ongoing.
  • Sander17 shows  statistics concerning the number and mapping type of address in Belgium in his user diary. In Brussels, the addresses were imported automatically, while in Flanders a manual address import is currently running , as the data source does not meet the OSM-quality standards.

Community

Imports

Humanitarian OSM

Maps

  • It looks like that in the next few weeks a “routing” add-on to osm.org could be deployed (with various external routing engines,includingGraphhopper,MapquestandOSRM)
    • UPDATE: The rounting add-on is online. 🙂
  • … and yet another openstreetmap-carto style update v2.28.0.

Open-Data

  • Esri offers an OpenData solution as well – very commendable.  We find, however, that open source solutions are more suitable for open data, for example ckan.
  • By request of the SunFoundation a list of all records that exist in authorities (EDI – Enterprise Data Inventories) will be released in the US. (via @SunFoundation)
  • The French tax administration (DGFIP) has released their WMS service for viewing the cadastre. Cadastre can be used more easily, but only in areas where the cadastre is available as vector images.

Software

  • Daniel Kirstenpfad has published a location tracking solution named Miataru in open-source format.
  • Sean Brady recommends using the OpenGeo Suite instead of Google Maps Engine; we also suggest that CartoDB could be used
  • Overpass turbo, the graphical interface for the Overpass API has become two years old, recently. tyr_asd shows some graphics illustrating the spatial distribution of queries, the language used and the total views.
  • The new Android app QField is now QGis compatible. The software is open source and free to use. To support further development, you can buy the “QField for QGIS Karma edition app”.
  • Tom MacWright has published his presentation of Turfjs.
  • L.Line3 is a plugin for the Leaflet that produces three-dimensional lines (one could also say walls).
  • The American Red Cross has released OpenMapKit a toolset to exchange data with the OSM API with an Android app, server, and other tools.
  • In his user diary, Joost Schouppe reflects on permanent user IDs and linking external data with OSM objects.

Have you come across …

Other “geo” things