Michael Reichert suggests turning off OSM services or adding banners to protest against the EU plan to implement the new, controversial, Copyright Directive. However, the question remains as to why the protest against EU politics is more important than existing or proposed restrictions of freedom elsewhere.
About us
The transfer of weeklyOSM to the FOSSGIS server and the subsequent necessary maintenance work has been completed. Users might have noticed some minor interruptions in service last weekend whilst this was taking place. We would like to thank Peter Barth and Andreas Hubel for the transfer. We especially want to thank Anthony Bennett aka @internetgeog of www.internetgeography.net for many years of administration of the site, which he has maintained exemplarily since 2014.
Mapping
Jan S proposes better differentiation between various kinds of police facilities. Jan has drafted a proposal and is seeking comments.
Members of the Polytechnic University of Milan (Politecnico di Milano) created a deforestation mapping wiki page to improve the understanding and mapping of land coverage to make analysis and visualisation of environmental issues such as deforestation easier.
Paul Allen asks whether superroutes are good, bad or ugly. In his post on the tagging mailing list he mentions some pros and cons of the controversial construct. During the discussion it was also asked whether relations of type=route containing child relations should be preferred over superrelations.
Antoine Riche pointed to undiscussed wiki changes about cycleway tagging which resulted in a long discussion about how to deal with oneway restrictions.
German mappers are voting on the deprecation of relations of type associatedStreet in Germany.
Nick Doiron reported his findings after exploring local language hotspots in OSM data with a focus on letters falling into the unicode block system. Besides expectable clusters he also found outliers and some oddities which can be viewed on an overview map.
The OpenCage Geocoder blog published an interview with Laura Mugeha about her motivation to contribute to OSM, how OSM in Kenya works and where she sees OSM in 10 years’ time.
We recently reported about OsmAnd’s new feature to offer navigation for public transport. OsmAnd has now published a blog post with guidelines on how to map public transport routes.
The FOSS4G North America, an open geospatial technology and business conference, will take place from 15 to 18 April 2019 in San Diego, USA. The program is available on the conference’s homepage.
The next mapathon of MAMAPA will take place on 28 March at the Abendakademie in Mannheim. Beyond the humanitarian objective of the Mapathon, MAMAPA promotes the integration of new immigrants in Germany, in which locals and migrants map in tandem. Through the joint work prejudices and stereotypical thinking are reduced and mutual trust is strengthened.
The 7th (seventh!) annual conference organised by OpenStreetMap France will take place from 14 to 16 June in Montpellier (34), on the campus of the Paul Valéry University. Proposals for presentations in 5′, 25′, 55′ or even 2-hour workshops will be accepted until 15 April.
Humanitarian OSM
Russell Deffner calls for help with mapping flooded areas in Mozambique and Zimbabwe exacerbated by Cyclone Idai. More information about current tasks and how you can help can be found on the corresponding wiki page.
Nina Strochlic covers in National Geographic how the Bidibidi refugee camp in North Uganda is transforming into a permanent city. She points out how humanitarian mapping, HOT in particular, has helped in documenting the transformation and provided valuable data for planning and managing the quickly evolving area.
A story on MapGive, an initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Humanitarian Information Unit, details how updated aerial imagery has helped crowdsourced humanitarian mapping. MapGive helped mapping efforts of Missing Maps in Uganda and Bangladesh by providing support with current imagery. The blog post shows differences in aerial imagery over the years and a before and after comparison of OSM data around refugee camps in Northern Uganda.
Open Data
The regional conference and conference on Latin American Open Data Abrelatam19will be held at Quito from 28 to 30 August 2019.
Software
TriMet in 2009 launched the open source trip planner “OpenTripPlanner” that combines public transport transit with walking and biking. The tool, which can use public transport data in General Transit Feed Specification “GTFS” format and is based on OSM data, gained some popularity within the OSM community. The company announced a new version of its tool that can also incorporate data from Uber, SHARE NOW (formerly car2go) and BIKETOWN and uses real-time locations of vehicles and bikes to calculate routes. A beta version with data for Portland, OR, USA is available.
The Android app OSMTracker, which is popular with OSM mappers, no longer shows maps as a background to tracks. OSMTracker uses the generic user-agent from the osmdroid library which was recently blocked by the OSM Operations Team. The tile usage policy requires application-specific user agents.
Fabian Kowatsch, of HeiGIT, announced that the HeiGIT Big Spatial Data team published a public world-wide instance of the ohsome OSM History Analysis Platform including an API, an updated dashboard and the beta prototype map interface ohsomeHEX (OSM History Explorer). All this allows you to analyse the evolution of any OSM tag for arbitrary regions and time periods in a simple way. Several examples are given in earlier blogs which now can be adapted for arbitrary regions around the world. Ideas for further enhancements are most welcome.
Releases
Version 5 of Openrouteservice was published. The service, developed by The Heidelberg Institute for Geoinformation Technology, bears the name of the Jupiter moon Io.
… the tagging of a centre turn lane? This is described using the tags lanes:both_ways= 1 and turn:both_ways = left.
Other “geo” things
Dr. Michele M Tobias asked #gischat on Twitter “Can you tell your GIS/mapping career story in one tweet?” Read the nice stories and please tell your OSM story as well. 😉
As Marius Watz has tweeted, the Norwegian municipality Trysil decided not to name streets but numbered thousands of cabin buildings instead. The website nrk.no reported that the step caused chaos for tourists, desperate cottage owners and emergency services.
The Guardian reports on desire lines: “illicit trails that defy the urban planners”. (Note: there is a small amount of data in OSM identifying such paths, see 1 and 2).
In an article on Medium, Caitlin Dewey covers the story of the Fruit Belt neighbourhood in Buffalo, New York which had been replaced on Google Maps by something called “Medical Park”. The article follows the residents and their investigation into how Google may have acquired inaccurate neighbourhood data from Pitney Bowes and how that came to be. She also points out how little control the community had over the mislabelling. In comparison, the neighbourhood had only been added to OSM a few days ago with plenty of room for map improvements in the area.
Jorge Andres, a volunteer cartographer for MapAction, discusses, on their corporate blog, how to most effectively represent topographical relief when mapping volcanic hazards. He suggests that 3D visualisations are more effective, and in 2D contour lines tend to obscure significant details.
Tom Lee, Mapbox’s lead on policy, testified before the US Senate Judiciary Committee regarding privacy law reform.
Upcoming Events
Where
What
When
Country
Greater Vancouver area
Metrotown mappy Hour
2019-03-22
Tokyo
ミャンマーに絵本と地図を届けよう~ミャンマーに届ける翻訳絵本作り&自由な世界地図作り~
2019-03-23
Cork
Mapping Party @ UCC
2019-03-23
Bremen
Bremer Mappertreffen
2019-03-25
Joué-lès-Tours
Rencontre Mensuelle
2019-03-25
Graz
Stammtisch Graz
2019-03-25
Portmarnock
Erasmus+ EuYoutH_OSM Meeting
2019-03-25-2019-03-29
Zurich
Missing Maps Mapathon Zurich
2019-03-27
Montpellier
Réunion mensuelle
2019-03-27
Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)
National Mapathon
2019-03-27
UCL Louvain-la-Neuve
National Mapathon
2019-03-27
KUL Leuven
National Mapathon
2019-03-27
UMONS Mons
National Mapathon
2019-03-27
Montrouge
rencontre locale des contributeurs de Montrouge et alentours
2019-03-27
Lübeck
Lübecker Mappertreffen
2019-03-28
VUB Brussel
National Mapathon
2019-03-28
Mannheim
Mannheimer Mapathons
2019-03-28
ULIEGE Liège
National Mapathon
2019-03-28
UNAMUR Namur
National Mapathon
2019-03-28
UGENT Gent
National Mapathon
2019-03-28
Düsseldorf
Stammtisch
2019-03-29
UCL Louvain-la-Neuve
National Mapathon
2019-03-30
ULIEGE Liège
National Mapathon
2019-03-30
Bochum
Mappt die Innenstadt – Mappingtag für Einsteiger*innen und Fortgeschrittene
2019-03-31
Stuttgart
Stuttgarter Stammtisch
2019-04-03
Bochum
Mappertreffen
2019-04-04
Nantes
Réunion mensuelle
2019-04-04
Dresden
Stammtisch Dresden
2019-04-04
La Riche
La Riche (37)#Ateliers d’initiation à OpenStreetMap
2019-04-06
Kyoto
お花見!オープンデータソン in 京都
2019-04-07
Rennes
Réunion mensuelle
2019-04-08
Bordeaux
Réunion mensuelle
2019-04-08
Essen
Mappertreffen
2019-04-08
Taipei
OSM x Wikidata #3
2019-04-08
Lyon
Rencontre mensuelle pour tous
2019-04-09
Munich
Münchner Stammtisch
2019-04-09
Salt Lake City
SLC Mappy Hour
2019-04-09
Viersen
OSM Stammtisch Viersen
2019-04-09
Cologne
Köln Stammtisch
2019-04-10
Montpellier
State of the Map France 2019
2019-06-14-2019-06-16
Angra do Heroísmo
Erasmus+ EuYoutH_OSM Meeting
2019-06-24-2019-06-29
Minneapolis
State of the Map US 2019
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 (international conference)
2019-09-21-2019-09-23
Grand-Bassam
State of the Map Africa 2019
2019-11-22-2019-11-24
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.