先日2/7にとったログデータと今日とってきたデータをアップしようと思っています。また、ほかにも2001年頃からとったものがあったと思うので、見つかったらアップするかもしれません。古いものでも大丈夫なのでしょうか?
先日2/7にとったログデータと今日とってきたデータをアップしようと思っています。また、ほかにも2001年頃からとったものがあったと思うので、見つかったらアップするかもしれません。古いものでも大丈夫なのでしょうか?
Who, what, where, and how are all open questions. Why is simple … OpenStreetMap has demonstrated incredible value in Haiti and we need to make sure we are prepared for the long run there, and for future disasters. A couple weeks ago, Nicolas and I started digesting the Haiti response, and years of thoughts and discussions in OSM, into something like a plan.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Humanitarian_OSM_Team/Haiti_Strategy_And_Proposal
The aim of this evolving document is to start to gather and prioritize major themes of needs and activities, for HOT organizationally, in documentation and processes, in technical developments, in relationships. As we are building the vehicle while already hurtling down the road, parts of this are already in play, parts are falling through the gaps, and overall coordination is a need.
Your review and comments on any facet of this are most welcome. Ideas to make this happen especially!
Large printouts of OpenStreetMap on the walls of the World Banks Situation Room for the Haiti Earthquake response.[1] These maps are serving as the basic infrastructure information for response and rebuilding activities.

CloudMade is going to have a busy MWC, we’re meeting with press, developers, partners, investors and if you’re game, you too! If you’d like to meet us come along to one of the below events or if you’re a developer why not come to one of our Developer Drop-In sessions we’re running daily where you can enjoy a coffee and pose your questions to our developer team. CloudMade will have a table in the restaurant ‘Buffet – R2′ which is located here:

or if you are a FourSquare user? Get an impromptu meeting by searching for one of the team:
http://foursquare.com/user/nick_b
http://foursquare.com/user/copetersen
Sunday, 14 February
19:00– late - Mobile Sunday – Come and socialize before the big event at the Mobile Sunday drinks evening. You’ll be able to recognize us from our CloudMade name tags and badges
Monday, 15 February
14.30-20:00 – Mobile Premier Awards – We’re presenting as a finalist but still want to catch up with as many people as we can after or during the event, so please come talk to use we’ll be wearing badges
11-12:30 - Developer Drop-In
Tuesday, 16 February
16-17:30 – Developer Drop-In
Wednesday, 17 February
16-17:30 – Developer Drop-In
Thursday, 18 February
11:00– 15:30 – WIPJam @ MWC – ‘Getting Cool Content from the Cloud’ (location: App Planet Auditorium (Hall 7))
16-17:30 – Developer Drop-In
Когда будет доступны пробки в Руссе?
99% что никогда :) Скорее уж доделают Покет-Гис :)
This month we interview Zsombor Szabo from IZE. Zsombor has developed OpenMaps for iPhone using CloudMade tools. The CloudMade Coder caught up with him to find out more.
Tell us about your company or application(s)
My partner, Csongor Nemes, and I founded IZE in September 2008. We’re both enthusiastic about making the world a better place like other entrepreneurs. Having graduated with engineering degrees we both believed we had the skills to do that. Since then we delivered a really compelling application called OpenMaps.

OpenMaps for iPhone is a fast and easy to use map application that uses open map data from OpenStreetMap.org. It’s intended to be used as a general-purpose map application, offering features such as: downloadable maps, navigation for car, pedestrian and cyclists and local search. We predict OSM will soon be the de facto map used by people around the world and so our goal is to make OpenMaps the best OSM application available.
How has CloudMade helped your development process? Which tools did you use?
We use two of CloudMade’s web services: CustomMap Tiles and Routing in OpenMaps. The custom map tiles gives users an option to view the OSM map in a different style if they aren’t satisfied with the default one. The Routing gives navigation data with turn-by-turn route instructions which OpenMaps displays elegantly to the user.
What new CloudMade products really excite you?
The soon to be released location based advertising service is on the top of my list. I am curious to find out exactly how it will work, what exact business model it will use and of course what the revenue sharing percentages will be.
The second is the forthcoming freeform search. Search is crucial for a data service to be successful. What is the point of having data if it can’t be searched properly? I applaud CloudMade for innovating with freeform search.
What impact do you think location based advertising will have on independent developers like you?
It wouldn’t be a wise decision to pass on that revenue stream in my opinion. Analysts predict it will be huge. I have the same opinion.
What do you think the next big thing will be in geo-enabled apps?
I honestly don’t know, but we have a bet on what it could be. We are building it now and it will be available as a feature in OpenMaps but we don’t want to talk about it until we will release it.
What will be bigger iPhone or Nexus?
I don’t think Nexus will be bigger than the iPhone. Maybe another Android handset.
Any tips for submitting apps to Apple or Google?
Yes. Follow Apple’s Human Interface Guidelines and be sure to handle Location Services Denied errors if you are submitting an app that uses the device’s location services.
What developer publications / blogs / Tweeters do you read / follow?
I am @zssz on twitter and I follow some Mac nerds and devs too. Usually they inform me about new and noteworthy stuff that I need to know about in the Mac scene. Here are a few examples: @pilky @fraserspeirs @mattgemmell @nikf @mdhughes @ericasadun @iamleeg @thekarladam @bbum @scottstevenson @majicdave @joericioppo @wilshipley @alanQuatermain @ravenme @SteveStreza @mzarra @iTod @jeff_lamarche
What advice would you give other developers looking to emulate your success?
Be ambitious and strive for perfection.
Where does your company go from here?
The next big version of OpenMaps will include basic OSM editing. We are very excited about this. Imagine how cool it would be to be able to edit OpenStreetMap while on the go, modifying a bar’s tags while at that bar.
We have other big features planned too for OpenMaps and one of them is the reason we made the application in the first place. We’ve been developing it for over ~1.5 years now. Unfortunately I can’t reveal any more about it at this time. Only that it is coming and it will be BIG.
I’m sorry, this is a post to say sorry for the lack of blog updates (and mapping activity). I thought I would carry on my project in Canada to make the map while I got lost. It’s rather boring when 90% of roads and buildings have been traced from good yahoo aerial photography and names added from public government data (they don’t know how lucky they are). So not having the excitement to explore, and a party on my (first year residence) floor every night, I got lazy and didn’t go out much. The roads did need lining up to, more accurate, GPS tracks, but that was a hassle on the computer working when it requires moving all the surrounding buildings into place too.
This semester I’m taking a GIS course (follow that link to another blog post about it) which made me quite excited. But I’m a bit of a know-it-all in the class so instead of putting my hand up all the time I open up JOSM and start tagging up the data I collected. It’s a great time to get the boring data entry done while half paying attention to the lecture and switching to a word processor when I want to take notes. Harry also tipped me off that the photo matching in JOSM is now much better, which I agree with (it seems the plugin I used is now obsolete).
I’ve gained an interest in surveying the blue pole emergency phones that connect to campus security (they display a reference number and name too), and there are loooads of cycle racks to be mapped. This week I didn’t get round to cycling about campus to collect more data, so I don’t have anything to in the lecture. Instead I thought about helping out the Haiti map (will I finally become an armchair mapper?!) before it lead me onto the IRC channel where some old friends happened to be lurking. I’m also wanting to think about SOTM 2010 and deliberately going via Barcelona. I’ve always wanted to visit the city to see the sights, anyone else going to stay there for a few days before or after?
Trying to build a routable GPS cycling map of the Netherlands with Mkgmap.
Based on the radkarte styles from http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Radfahrer but with a different layout.
Beta version (mapsource installer) from Feb 8 2010 can be downloaded here:
http://tinyurl.com/openfietsmap-080210
(note: google docs can't scan this file for viruses, click on 'download anyway' if you want to take that risk ;-))
Heute habe ich meine ersten Gehversuche mit meinem neusten Spielzeug, einem Tablet PC gemacht. Abgesehen von gewissen Problemen mit den Handschuhen, man neigt dazu eine der Maustasten zu drücken, ging es eigentlich ganz gut. Allerdings muß man seine Tätigkeit gut vorbereiten. So ist es zum Beispiel relativ schwierig, Gebäudegrundrisse zu zeichnen, insbesondere, da die Yahoo Bilder doch schlecht zu erkennen sind. Diese sollte man also besser zu Hause einzeichnen und dann unterwegs mit den Daten versehen. Das Gewicht ist weniger ein Problem, als ich gedacht hätte, man kann das Gerät recht komfortabel halten. Außerdem habe ich eine Tasche dazu bekommen .
Wirklich nett ist die Verwendung mit dem LiveGPS Plugin, man sieht immer genau wo man auf der Karte ist. Damit entfällt so manche Unsicherheit bei dar Nachbereitung zu Hause. Die nächsten Tage werden zeigen, ob meine ersten Eindrücke sich bestätigen.
The Washington Post attended a recent OpenStreetMap mapping party.
New York Times mentions OSM and Haiti. As does New Scientist.
The Guardian brings everyone up to date on OpenStreetMap’s progress.
Also, interesting article by Nat on opening up data.
In a joint project with the World Bank, USAID, and numerous other partners, there are now 6 TB hard drives on the ground in Haiti with mapping tools and satellite and remote imagery data being shared with the Haitian government. Read more about the project on the FortiusOne blog.
Schuyler Erle and Tom Buckley will be heading down on Tuesday to provide on the ground support between the government agencies and the community.
A tremendous thank you to the numerous individuals and groups that helped and provided tools or data: World Bank, San Diego State University / Calit2, Internet2, Georgetown University, DigitalGlobe, Delta State University, Sahaha, Crisis Mappers, OpenStreetMap, NOAA, Ushahidi, DevelopmentSeed, TelaScience, STAR-TIDES, CrisisCommons, USAID, GeoCommons, OpenSGI, GeoEye.
cleaned up Byron Ga area
本日2010年2月8日、OpenStreetMapのアカウント取得。昨日GARMINのetrex(2001年購入)で取ったログや、もう一台の腕につけるタイプのGARMINのGPSのログ(こちらはバイクでログとり)があるのでそれをアップロードしようかなと思っている今。よろしくおねがいします。OSMは以前より見てました。
C-5 Road is a major artery in Metro Manila and the project to extend it south is quite controversial since a senator, and presidential candidate in this coming May election, is accused of using his position to influence the project for the benefit of his real estate businesses. But here in OSM, we don't care about the ethics of the road construction but whether the road is accurately mapped.
A portion of the extension, from Quirino Avenue to Sucat Road, has already been opened more than a year ago and it is already mapped in OSM, but I didn't realize that the next phase, the one from Sucat Road to Multinational Avenue, was already passable until I saw this changeset by Al Silva. Since he was only able to map the northbound side, I really went out of my way last Saturday night to drive both sides and get a GPS trace. I then subsequently edited the road into OSM existence and also cleaned-up the C-5–Sucat interchange.
I wish I had a more accurate GPS device since the track my GPS phone got didn't quite match the track obtained by Al Silva and since I don't know his equipment, I'm not sure whose track is more precise. But at least the road is now in OSM and is routable. Somebody can refine it in the future.
021G10: converted and uploaded:
021g10_4_0_HD_1480009_1 - single line watercourse
021g10_4_0_HD_1480009_2 - waterbody areas
021g10_4_0_SS_1320049_2 - saturated soil a.k.a. wetland
Rules files used:
HD_1470009_1_Single_line_watercourseRULES.txt
HD_1480009_2_WaterbodyRULES.txt
SS_1320049_2_WetlandRULES.txt
Modified the HD_1480009_2_WaterbodyRULES.txt to uncomment the permanency translation. This allows intermittent water areas (i.e. seasonally exposed sandbanks) to be tagged as something other than plain natural:water.
I don't know the significance of the "french rules" and "outer rules" files.
Sam has added me to the list of viewers for the Google spreadsheets which detail the recommended approach to the Canvec features. I note that single line watercourse is a "don't" but I do not see why we should not add these, and I also noticed other tiles to N of London ON that have these; and very good they look too. So I think NB should have single line watercourses too!
Did a little bit of editing to clip a pre-existing bit of double-line river from 021G10, so learned a couple more JOSM commands.
There are closing lines remaining e.g. at W edge of 021G10, half way across Oromocto Lake. I think the best approach will be to put all the waterbodies in for all tiles, then do another pass to tidy up. I'll try that idea with an adjacent tile, when I have time.
Tomorrow? Maybe some "vegetation" i.e. forest.
Aggiunto Arengario e Duomo.
Modificata viabilita' via caronni, via cantù, via rivolta,
Auf der Suche nach dem nächsten Wanderweg, der in OSM einzutragen währe
erkannte ich, dass der Jakobsweg meinen täglichen Arbeitsweg kreuzt,
genauer: Der fränkische Jakobsweg bei Forchheim.
Eine gewaltige Aufgabe währe das, den einzutragen.
Zunächst habe ich mich bei Schnee und Kälte auf den Weg gemacht
um zu erkennen, das die Muschel tatsächlich alles gut markiert.
Aber alles selbst abzulaufen, das wird noch eine weile dauern.
Da Beschreibungen und Karten nie die Details zeigen
war ich froh, auch verschiedene GPX-Dateien zu finden.
Da sie nicht exakt die gleichen Punkte-Koordinaten habe,
aber ansonsten alle Details übereinstimmen, kann man denen wohl trauen.
Es gibt zwar gelegendlich Abweichungen, da geht man mal rechts statt links
um einen kleinen See oder eine Kirche herum oder anders über eine Platz.
Da kann man ja mal hingehen und sehen wo die Muschel-Zeichen kleben.
Nach ein bischen XML-Editieren konnte ich die GPX-Dateien sogar in OSM hochladen.
Bei fernwege.de steht ein (C), bei deutsche-jakobswege.de nicht.
Aber da sie mir ja nur zur Erstellung der Relationen dienen sollen
ist das sowieso kein Problem. Die Dateien von fernwege.de sind
besser gestückelt und mit (roten) Wegpunkten versehen; so ist der Weg
beim Editieren mit Potlatch besser sichbar als nur die (blaue) Weglinie,
die oft von OSM-Wegen und Relations verdeckt wird.
Eine [Projektseite] im Wiki gibt es auch, also kann es losgehen, fast.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Projekt_Jakobsweg
Potlatch, der Flash-Editor ist bei so vielen Daten schon zäh
und die Zuordnung von Wegen zu einer Relation eher umständlich.
Also habe ich nach längere Zeit mal wieder den JOSM benutzt.
Damit geht das Erstellen der Relation flot von der Hand.
Die beiden GPX-Tracks geben nette Einsichten und kleine Rätzel auf:
Obwohl die Wegzeichen ein keines Dorf umrunden, zeigen beide
einen Einkehrschwung in die dortige Gaststätte an.
Einer der Wandere hat geschickt den Weg durch einen Waldpfad abgekürzt.
Auch wenn OSM in Deutschland ja recht vollständig ist,
gibt es noch einige wenige Stellen, wo für den Jakobsweg kein "Higway" eingetragen ist.
Und genau da weichen die Tracks wieder ab. Da werde ich wohl mal nach Effeltrich müssen, nachsehen.
Zudem gibt es ja auch noch Luftaufnahmen (nicht nur von Googel)
und siehe da, das unbekannte Stück ist eine Art Park durch den beiden Track-Pfade gehen.
Auch in Neunkirchen am Brand und Röckenhof gehen die Wege benachbarte Gassen,
finden sich aber bald wieder. Wer schaut mal nach den Muscheln?
Etwas weiter muß man dann auch mal von einer Brücke springen
da der GPX-Pfad an dieser Nicht-Kreuzung abbiegt.
In Röckenhof "traf" ich dann auch recht überraschend auf einen anderen Jakobsweg.
Vom fränkischen Jakobsweg gibt es nämlich auch einen östlichen Zweig.
Und beide Zweige stoßen hier zusammen um dann richtung Nürnberg zu gehen.
Bevor ich in einer anderen Relation 'rumfummelte
schrieb ich doch lieber mal dem letzen Editierenden.
Er hat auch schon geantwortet und meinte, es ist ok.
Schließlich war der Weg bei wanderwege.de in Tage eingeteil
wobei ich für jeden Tag eine Relation geplant hatte, damit die nicht zu groß werden.
Nun treffen sich die Wege aber "Mittags".
Und die Relation des Ost-Zweigs ist nur stellenweise realisiert mit großen Lücken.
Na, wir werden uns schon einigen. Bis dahin gibt es Richtung Bamberg für mich ja noch genug zu tun.
Übersicht und Einteilung der Wege:
* ID 398554: Tag 5, Hallerndorf - Effeltrich
* ID 400066: Tag 6a, Effeltrich - Röckenhof (Treffen von West- und Ost-Zweig)
* ID 400067: Tag 6b, Röckenhof - ...
* ID 4595: Jakobsweg Hof > Nürnberg
** JOSM **
Kann man mehrere eigene, aber nicht alle GPX einblenden? Ja,
mit den Layern kann man beliebig mit der Sichtbarkeit jonglieren.
Das man mit der 2. Maustaste verschiebt ist schon sehr gewöhnungsbedürftig.
Am Abend spürte ich wiedermal eine aufziehende Sehnenscheidentzündung.
Dabe währe das garnicht nötig, zumindest wenn man NICHT auf ein Objekt klickt.
Die GPX-Linien sind mir zu unsichtbar. Aber man kann die Farbe ja ändern
und die Punkte vergrößern. Und da eine GPS-Datei eine eigene Ebene ist,
die man über die OSM-Daten legen kann, paßt das dann.
Nur wenn man Editiert sollte wieder das Angewählte sichtbar sein;
Da hätte ich gerne eine eigene Ebene für die Editierten Objekte.
Kann man per Tastatur den angewählten Weg der zuletzt genutzeten Relation zuordnen?
Es gibt keine Shortcut aber die Übernahme einer Mehrfachauswahl ist sogar besser.
"Mitgliederwege werden dann farblich unterlegt im Editorfenster dargestellt,
um die Zugehörigkeit zu einer Relationen anzuzeigen." geht bei mir nicht. Mistig!
Obwohl Wege-Relatoinen ja eine geometrische Reiheinfolge haben
müssen sie in der Relation nicht "sorteiert" sein.
Zur Übersicht währe das aber trotzdem gut. Ein Job für JOSM(-Plugnin).
Der Relations-Editor kann "zoom auf" per Kontextmenü;
bitte auch auf die Nicht angewählten Wege und auch mit Doppelklick.
Die Anwahl des Yahoo-Hintergrund bringt nur Fehler, dann halt nicht.
JOSM mag nur GPX-Dateien ohne Zeitangaben - man muß nicht alles verstehen.
Eine gewisse Scheu, die JOSM eventuell erzeugt ist nicht berechtigt.
Dafür ist der Gewinn an Handlichkeit enorm. Allenfals der finstere
Anblich des schwarzen Hintergrunds bereitet, ist Geschmackssache.
Gibt es Farbtabellen die man auch laden kann?
** Wunschträume **
Gibt es für das iPhone ein App, das abgelegte Tracks über die Karte blendet?
Ok, der Browser mit der passenden Seite. Aber die sind im iPhone schlecht handhabbar.
Im App MotionX-GPS konnte ich die Tracks des Fränkischen Jakobswegs importieren.
So kann ich jetzt nie mehr vom rechten Weg abkommen, solange der Akku voll ist.
-karlos-
OSM is wonderfull for peapele travalling on earth.
Does anybody know, where and how to find nautical maps for free downloading (e.g. the beautiful waters of the Aegais - Turkey)?
Se trata de dar distintos niveles de visibilidad a la interacción de elementos objetivos y subjetivos en la relación de los habitantes de las Localidades de Bogotá Colombia: SAnta Fé, Los Mártires, Candelaria y Teusaquillo, lugares destinados para la ejecución del Plan Centro.
Las primeras fases ya se han iniciado, con registros más evidentes en la demolición del Cartucho, construcción del PArque Tercer Milenio, escenario de la toma por más de 6 meses de la población en condición de desplazamiento, en el año 2009, la demolición del Barrio Santa Barbara en la localidad de Santa Fé y la emergencia de edificios de gran altura en la zona aledaña al Museo Nacional.
Entre otras, las obras de adecuación de la carrera décima, emblemática en la comunicación del resto de la ciudad con el elgendario barrio Veinte de Julio, hacia el sur, esta vía arteria se extiende alargándose hasta USme por la entrada nororiental de la locaidad de Rafael Uribe Uribe sobre las Lomas.
El ejercicio de georreferenciación, es uno de los primeros pasos para la construcción de sistemas de información inteligentes con el fin de obtener una mayor capacidad de respuestas integrales a nivel transectorial entre los habitantes de estas localidades, las instituciones y organizaciones sociales de base, ante posibles situaciones de emergencia y desastres naturales o humanos como es el desplazamiento forzado por la violencia.
Aplicación de Sistemas de Información Geográfica para la construcción y aplicación de políticas públicas en lo microterritorial.
GSI
Información:
HOSPITAL CENTRO ORIENTE
GRUPO DE APOYO A POBLACIÓN
EN SITUACION DE DESPLAZAMIENTO
desplazadoscentro@yahoo.com
http://desplazadosbogota.ning.com
http://sites.google.com/site/saluddesplazamientobogota/
I've been adding the missing bits and a few paths locally. One question is how to treat historic (listed) buildings.
I've added the watermill (which is derelict) and added tags to try to provide sufficient information to link back to the listed buildings register.
Not sure I have done them correctly though.
Suggestions on appropriate tagging?
Had an Admission Day visit with my son to Warwick University yesterday. Third son and felt like one to many Uni visits - all one big blur eventually. So missed the parents bit in the afternoon (Why Chemistry is fun!) and added some more detail to the mapping of the extensive campus. Concentrated on the halls area around Scarman road and the access to the Sports and other Uni facilities N of Kirby Corner Road. With aid of GPS added in loads of service roads and paths, plus the bicycle_parking that I came across. Didn't add buildings. Someone else will have to go back and do that - not quite sure how main campus buildings have been added. Did add an estimated version of the lake, by proximity to paths and other features, and interpolation. Need to go and add barrier=lift_gate to the mapnik rendering as there are many of them controlling access to parts of the campus. Good to do, and good exercise on a chilly afternoon.
Well the GPS device is not with me anymore :(
Hence have to utilise whatever traces I could obtain in that limited time .
Some of the mistakes I did were :
Points: I should have taken a camera to mark the points . Now I am just left over with routes.
leftovers: I had to leave many routes . Some were due to obstructions on roads due to construction . The others were due to my errors ( forgetting to go to routes)
Anyways now I got an abstract idea of my town and most importantly .. how to effectively use tools like JOSM,Potlatch .
There an activity on the OSM Wiki where every week there is a Featured image to be displayed on the main Wiki page. I decided to do a similar activity for images specific to the Philippines. One advantage of this activity, aside from serving as an inspiration to OpenStreetMappers in the Philippines and recognizing excellent work, is that the Philippine OSM community now has a selection of images that can be used for promotional purposes here in the country.
To all people that is "helping" on the San Salvador, El Salvador Zone, PLEASE stop using Google Street Maps as a reference since GSM has too much errors to make it a reliable source.
A toda la gente que esta "ayudando" en el area de San Salvador, El Salvador, POR FAVOR dejen de usar Google Street Maps como referencia, ya que GSM tiene demasiados errores para ser una fuente fidedigna.
Thank you, Gracias.
Currently the »Horizont OUTDOOR« fair takes place at Messe Karlsruhe:
As promised in my previous post, here is a how-to of using Bundler to generate 3D models for use in OSM.
My setup:
I used a fairly generic digital compact camera, a Pentax Optio S5i.
I'm running an up-to date copy of Ubuntu 9.10 (64 bit) on my Satellite L300 laptop, a really not very powerful machine.
I have followed these instructions on a 32 bit Ubuntu LiveCD to double check they work.
I'm posting this in the hope some of you may find it interesting/useful however I'm no guru on linux and if it doesn't work for you I probably won't be of much use to you in fault finding. For Windows users, I've read that this will work under cygwin but I've never tried, and, not being a Windows user myself I probably won't be trying.
Taking photos:
I went to Market Harborough town centre and took about 65 photos of the Church from various viewing points. It's best to stand well back and get as much of the object in view as possible with maximal overlap of images, not just lots of close ups where each photo overlaps a little with the next as you might do when making a panorama.
I read somewhere along the way that a photo every 15 degrees as you walk around might work well but I'm still experimenting with this and don't have any golden rules to follow. When you look at the final output of the program you can get an idea from the numbering of the ply files which photos were used and which ones weren't, this may be the best guide to you after a while.
Don't go overboard on photos though, from my experience so far, the cpu time in seconds to crunch a set is:
t = 2.5*n^2 + 90n
For 65 photos that equals about 80 minutes. In the end I think only 30-35 of my photos were actually used in the reconstruction so if I'd been more careful about which photos I used, I could have achieved the same results in under 10 minutes. This software isn't as optimised as Microsoft's Photosynth so don't dump 500 photos on it and expect it to finish processing in under a day. 5 well placed photos could well be better than 50 photos of rubbish.
Also think about scaling down the photos, mine were 2560x1920 but I later found that scaling down to 2048x1536 almost halved the cpu time while still getting good results. A handy command to resize images is:
for f in *.JPG; do convert "$f" -resize 2048x1536 -quality 100 "$f"; done
Bundler:
Go to http://phototour.cs.washington.edu/bundler/ and download v0.3 binary distribution. Extract this anywhere you like. All commands I run assume it is located on your desktop in a folder called bundler.
As the readme supplied with Bundler explains, the process is made up of a number of steps. The first examines each image and extracts focal length information where it can, it then identifies key-points in each image. Next, keypoints are matched between images to find any correspondences before finally performing the bundle adjustment and calculating the 3d positions of the keypoints.
To extract keypoints you will need David Lowe's SIFT binary from http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~lowe/keypoints/. Download the demo and from it, extract the file called sift into bundler/bin.
Now open a terminal and install imagemagick
sudo apt-get install imagemagick
This is needed to convert the images from jpg to pgm so sift can read them.
We will also need another library, libgfortran.so.3.
sudo apt-get install libgfortran3
I don't know what this is used for but the code won't work without it.
Before we run Bundler, we need to specify where the libANN_char.so library is by typing:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/home/user/Desktop/bundler/bin/"
I've read a couple of discussions on forums about how this shouldn't be neccesary and various solutions were talked about but that didn't work for me so I just accept that I have to do this each time I want to run Bundler. If anyone knows how to fix this please let me know.
Finally, go to the directory containing the images you want to run. Bundler comes with a few test images you can play with. Run:
cd /home/ubuntu/Desktop/bundler/examples/kermit
../../RunBundler.sh
I refer readers to http://binarymillenium.com/2009/07/building-bundler-v03-on-ubuntu.html to see what a sucessful run looks like. A folder called bundle will be created containing the output ply files, these are built sequentially as each photo is examined. Therefore the highest numbered file will contain all the data points, there's no need to combine files. Binary Milleniums blog also contains instruction on how to get bundler working under Ubuntu. He mentions installing various packages however, using a LiveCD just now I found almost all of these to be unnecessary. If my guide doesn't work for you, follow his instructions.
Many programs can open ply files but the easiest I found to use was Blender. This can be found easily enough through the Ubuntu Software Centre so I won't go in to detail on that. Once you've opened the program, click File>Import>Stanford PLY and select your file.
Assuming things ran as they should, you should see a point cloud that resembles the objects in the photos. Curiously, the photos provided with Bundler of kermit didn't process well and produced a ply file that looked nothing like the objects in question, however further testing with photos of my own confirmed bundler was working fine. That's just my experience anyway.
When you're ready to take a screenshot of blender, open the view menu and ensure the view is set to orthographic, not perspective. Now open JOSM, install the PicLayer plugin and import your screenshot. Assuming you got a good quality bundle you should be able to do some good tracing.
Note, while this software recovers 3D data from photos, it is only the relative positions of points that is recovered. Scale and absolute position are still unknown and you will need a gpx file and perhaps some reference dimensions to trace correctly.
This zip file contains some of the photos I took of the church along with the final ply file. (link to follow, it's still uploading).
Legality:
Bundler is licensed under GPL and assuming you took the photos yourself or have permission I can't see any reason this can't be used in OSM. However the SIFT binary is only a demo and doesn't appear to be free. Whether this has any impact on your ownership of the final ply files or terms of use for projects like OSM I have no idea. Even so, it's probably better than creating a photosynth on Microsofts website and then intercepting the data as it's transmitted. Personally, I would like to bypass the legal stuff by doing the keypoint matching by hand and modifying Bundler to use my keypoints rather than data generated using SIFT. The matching is not 100% and some sets of photos have failed to match properly despite being of reasonable quality.
(Arvika is a small municipality in Värmland, Sweden)
After a couple of weeks of mail correspondence I've been able to procure aerial photographs over Arvika city and surrounding areas from Arvika municipality (Arvika kommun).
The images where taken with the use of an airborne LIDAR sensors (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LIDA) during the summer of 2009.
I've got express written consent to use the images for OSM-mapping but unfortunately they insisted that we add a clause in the agreement to prevent the images from being shared. This means that the images can only be used for mapping by me (or under my supervision). I'm hoping that another round of emails will sort that out to so that the entire OSM-community can benefit but I really wanted to get an initial agreement done first.
The images was delivered as approximately 900 ECW[1] files with accompanying world files with coordinates in SWEREF 99 12 00 (EPSG 3007).
After consultation with far more experienced OSM-mappers in the #OSM irc-channel I decided to publish this diary entry and use is as a source reference for changesets produced with the help of this data.
A scan of the signed agreement (in Swedish) is available at Google Docs[2]
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECW_(file_format)
2. http://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B-eEb10tSoSUMWYxN2Q5M2YtNDAwNS00YTU3LWFiNmMtYmUzYmMzYTNkMzdm&hl=en
Ich war heute mal für zwei Stunden in Wissen an der Sieg. Habe ein paar Straßen eintragen können, aber dort wartet noch jede Menge Arbeit!
Dear OSM people,
I would like to suggest that we start working on a new application,
an global address database for all address data that is creative commons.
That database would be for staging into OSM. It would allow people to manage the connection to OSM , for example to find all the records by a criteria and then click on the map where they are.
This would be a great help, we could extend it to just have lists of cities, streets etc that are not there yet. Zipcodes as well. All types of tabular data that is georeferenced, but not in OSM yet.
mike
Discovered OSM today, and think it's a brilliant idea.
I've already fixed the name of the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, and tried to sort out a slightly incorrect road junction in Chepstow - hope I haven't damaged anything!
I've noticed that there is a whole set of tiny lanes missing in the village of Woodcroft just outside Chepstow, but don't yet feel confident enough to add them - maybe soon!
Today I learned a bit about multipolygon-type relations in the OSM data model. My understanding is that a multipolyon is a relation object, and it contains one or more other objects. E.g. it could contain a lake and a couple of islands. I have skimmed through the [[Relation:multipolygon]] page.
I have looked at Sam Vekeman's rules files for HD_1480009_2_Waterbody. There are actually 3 versions of the file but they all seem pretty well the same. Essentially the rules files filter on geometry, attribute and value of the shapefile and map to an attribute and value in the OSM file.
The shp-to-osm.jar is clever because it seems to split edges (ways) up to be a 2000 node maximum which presumably is some limit for OSM datatypes for ways. It also manages to deal with SHP file outer and inner types, and it creates relation:multipolygon objects for areas that have islands.
I found myself reading an ESRI tech description of SHP files: http://www.esri.com/library/whitepapers/pdfs/shapefile.pdf, briefly, just to get a better feel for how the outer and inner rings are done.
I ran the shp-to-osm jar on the HD_1480009_2_Waterbody SHP file. I get an .osm file out. I loaded that into Global Mapper 10 and it loads but it does not seem to know about the relations. Consequently picking on an edge just tells me attributes of that edge (and actually there are no attributes since shp-to-osm has put all the attributes on the relation).
JOSM loads the .osm and picking on an area object edge shows me that there is a relation:multipolygon object, and lets me see the members.
JOSM renders e.g. lake names using the name:en tag (if I have my preferences set to use English or default, which for me is English). Some of the waterbodies in 021G15 have names, while some waterbodies have multiple lakes and rivers massed into a single object, with no name. A cleanup phase could see me(?) go an close off lakes, give them names and remove the point toponymy names (see 2010-02-04 diary entry).
Looked at McGibbons Island (for example) in the St John River, where we have an inner ring, i.e. an island but there is another smallish water area that overlaps the island. These are sandbars (I can see from Toporama) but ... why is the area tagged as water? It's a 1480272 = waterbody in the SHP file. There must be some kind of product spec rules that dictate this in Canvec??
Enough for today. Friday night, time for a beer ... tomorrow's another day.
I recently experimented with using photogrammetry to do mapping for OSM and thought I would post the results on here.
I started by taking quite a few photos of St Dionysius church in the centre of Market Harborough using a cheap digital camera (Pentax Optio S5i).
Once I got home I spent some time experimenting with various pieces of software before settling on Bundler, http://phototour.cs.washington.edu/bundler/. It took a bit of messing, isn't exactly user friendly and the whole process can be slow, but produces some pretty good results.
The software outputs .ply files which can be opened with Blender to get an idea of how successful the bundle adjustment was. This video shows the point cloud that was created using my photos. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cApFzm4KHiU
I cheated a little to get the data into a usable format for JOSM by taking a screen dump of Blender and using PicLayer to give me a guide. I then traced the building shape and positioned using a GPS trace from a previous visit.
When time permits I hope to take this a little further and get a high detail map of the surrounding buildings of Market Harborough town centre done.
If I've got some time, I'll try and update Henndorf and surrounds as much as possible :)
Today added schools, police, fire and changed a few streets to be correct. Added the berg extension, but given it no name as I don't actuall know the name :)
Looks like quite a bit of editing is required, and a lot of (already) changed data has been incorrectly added. I'll slowly correct it block by block :)
Read about Openstreet map in Gruniad this am and decided to have a look. Have added 3 post boxes in my locality and am now wondering if they have already been added. Surely someone around here has already added a few post boxes - I cant see any on the map.
31.01.
- indicate the command prompt has focus
- added detection of changed OSM files
- implemented get-info command
- started working on the error reporting func.
02.02.
- implemented MailService
- implemented AppDiagnostics
- added error reporting form, but it still needs to be beautified
- support for polygons/polylines consolidated from relations
04.02.
- solved the problem: why is footway drawn ABOVE residential road?
- it's because the footway feature is defined AFTER the residential road
- fixed: bug with form disposing
- if a way is used in a relation, it should be ignored elsewhere
-written tests for this
05.02.
- TODO: the rules and features should be specified in the reverse order
- from the most important to the least important
- TODO: how to solve layering problem?
- TODO: beautify error reporting dialog
- TODO: find an icon for Maperitive
- TODO: implement multipolygon polyline rendering
- TODO: write tests for multipolygon rendering
This is an excerpt from Maperitive’s Todo.txt file. I use it as a log of the stuff I did for the current day and also as a “database” of the tasks I still have do. On various projects during the years I used Trac, Bugzilla, on Kosmos I used ToDoList for a while, but nothing beats the simplicity of a text file.
The history log is a recent “invention”: since Maperitive is a pet-project, the time allocated to it is very unevenly distributed – sometimes I do a lot of work in a single day (usually on weekends without find weather or hangovers), but then I have to leave it untouched for several days. So often it happens that I forget what I was working on – and this history log helps me to quickly refresh the memory. Also, it’s a good psychological tool: I take a look and the log entries and see that some work has actually been done and I’m (slowly) progressing towards the first release.
The added benefit is that I can copy&paste these log entries into SVN commit comments. And of course, Todo.txt is kept under the source control like the rest of the code.
I have a gpx trail and I noted some points which are at a particular time . I cant find editing with the help of time in potlatch editor.
Is this feature available in JOSM ? The default binary in ubuntu 9.04 is unable to fetch maps .. maybe I should download from the website .
Today I have looked through the Canvec documentation, which is here: http://geogratis.cgdi.gc.ca/geogratis/en/collection/28954.html
In particular, the Data Product Specifications http://ftp2.cits.rncan.gc.ca/pub/canvec/doc/CanVec_product_specifications_en.pdf
and the Feature Catalogue: http://ftp2.cits.rncan.gc.ca/pub/canvec/doc/CanVec_feature_catalogue_en.pdf
I want to understand these so that I can understand the rules files that Sam Vekemans has set up.
Incidentally Geobase or Canvec? From what I can see Geobase is an initiative, to bring in data from multiple authorities. There is a variety of types of geo data. Canvec is basically the NTS topo map data but it has been reformatted / remodelled. New editions of Canvec are brought out, apparently every 6 months. We are onto edition 4 for NB at least for Fredericton area. The actual spatial data rarely seems to change and some parts are just as out of date in the newest edition (well actually they're more out of date!).
NRN (National Road Network) has been incorporated into Canvec so there seems to be no difference in the data whether you get roads from Canvec or from NRN files.
How to figure out what SHP file some entities / objects are in? Two letter code indicates general theme e.g. HD is hydrography, TR is transportation, TO is toponymy. Within the theme, there is a 7-digit code that indicates the entity type (what I'd think of as "object class"). E.g. 1480009 is the generic code for a Waterbody. Geometry (point, line, area) is split out into separate SHP files. So we have e.g.
021g15_4_0_HD_1480009_2.shp for:
NTS tile 021G15
Edition 4
Version 0
HD for hydrography
1480009 for waterbody objects
2 for area geometry
Inside this SHP file there are all the waterbody objects for the area of 021G15.
To encode the particular types of waterbody object there are further 7 digit codes, stored as the value of the CODE attribute. E.g. a CODE 1480272 is an "unknown / non-isolated" waterbody. A 1480092 is a "liquid waste, isolated" waterbody (i.e. a sewage holding pond)
Hydrography: I thought it might be simple to get lakes and rivers out of Canvec, but some of the data is a bit strange. In 021G15 I have Mactaquac Lake and a big chunk of the St John River as the same area object. In Edition 3 it all had the name "Mactaquac Lake". Edition 4 has removed the name. Likewise for the Oromocto River, a bunch of lakes adjacent to the river are all bundled into the same area object as the river.
manage to get nice-ish looking lake and river names? Answer: there are TO (toponymy) theme point objects which have been digitized someplace inside the waterbody. As I mentioned above the waterbody could encompass multiple lakes and rivers. There is no relationship at all between the toponymy objects and the waterbodies.
TO objects seem to have a generic theme number 1580009. Each object also has a CODE but its value always seems to be 1580010, for all the names I've looked at. There is an additonal attribute, CONCISECODE, and this is the one which differentiates e.g. French Lake (the lake, CONCISECODE=150) from French Lake (the hamlet, CONCISECODE=80). Actually if you look at the Feature Catalogue you can see that 80 is an "unincorporated area).
How does OSM deal with area names? It seems it's all free and easy and varies depending on your mood. I looked at a lake or two in Maine and the area objects had no names but there were point names, like Canvec has. I also looked at a couple of lakes in Switzerland and saw that they had names as attributes of the lake edges. The Osmarenderer seems to pick up those attributes for display as names (if you zoom in far enough...) (Which raises another topic: where are the rules for the renderer? If I knew that, I could figure out what attributes are useful to include and what names to give them.. I think).
Back to the Canvec data. If I want to use the hydrography, I just don't like the approach of the unrelated point objects. I'd prefer to make the name an attribute of the area object. That would mean I had to split up those humungous waterbodies into separate lakes and rivers. More work. Should I do it the simple way first then make another pass later to improve? Seems like the better approach.
Maybe tomorrow I shall take another look at Sam Vekeman's rules files with a view to running the shp-to-osm.jar app to generate some .osm from one or two .shp files. Then I'll look at those in e.g. GM. I'll get a feel for what attribution the .osm is going to have. I should try to find whether there is any accepted standard for attribution for Canada at least.
Question (to myself, rhetorical!): do we want to
I asked John Mermin at Metro if they would be willing to share their data with the project, and below is the response I got. Expect much more complete bike data in Metro, Oregon soon.
From: John Mermin
To: Paul Johnson
Subject: RE: GIS data for Bike There!
Date: 02/04/2010 09:18:12 AM
Hi Paul,
Thanks for the message. It's very likely that the answer will be yes. I'm meeting with a few folks at Metro early next week, and one of the issues we'll be discusisng is Metro's role for providing bike data / maps for the region. Both myself and our cartographer are very supportive of sharing our data for open-source projects.
I should have more to say after our meeting on Tuesday.
Thanks!
John
My wife finally got a working computer today, and that is good news for the import of Planimetria de Vitoria. That means I get a lot more time to work on extracting layers.
I am currently working on the building layer, which contains more than 77000 objects (i.e. buildings). I am dividing the import in batches depending on available time. The first batch became too big, so the next couple of batches are fixes to batch one. I will try to have as much as possible done by 10th of February, where I probably go offline again for some time.
There are some layers I can work on while offline, at the same time I will contact the GIS department of a few other municipals to start import process from more municipals. (Most interested in Guarapari and Divino de São Lorenço).
Session cadastrale rapide pour ajouter les principales voies.
Warum ist Waldshut-Tiengen plötzlich in der Schweiz? Zumindest sagt das die AIO-Karte auf meinem Garmin und Walking-Papers (Full-Reuenthal, Canton of Aargau, Switzerland). Und vor allem: Wie kann ich es beheben?

I started mapping Khammam town thanks to a GPS reciever inside N82 . I am using Nokia Sports Tracker for recording trails. It also allows us to export in GPX format .
Can someone help me easily mark places ?
This generally splendid article is doing the rounds: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/feb/04/mapping-open-source-victor-keegan
But much though I might like the kind words for Potlatch's drag'n'drop POIs - and much though others might giggle at NickB's new surname - this is the really important bit:
Gordon Brown, the UK prime minister, has just rediscovered cooperativism as a way of galvanising people to vote Labour. He would have been much more in tune with the times if he had widened it to include the open source movement in all its different aspects. It is one of the most interesting phenomena of our times, a kind of global mutual society.
Absolutely spot on and not something that's written about enough.
""If you want to find an up-to-date map of Haiti, then there is only one place to go. It is not Google Maps or any of its competitors. It is the admirable OpenStreetMap.org (OSM), which is being updated even as I write by volunteers all over the world.""
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/feb/04/mapping-open-source-victor-keegan
попытался нарисовать телебашню - хотелось сделать ее максимально достоверной - а она у нас в питере выглядит как каркас (вид сверху получается ромбики вложенные друг в друга) - как выйти из этой ситуации, янарисовал один контур - сделал его внешним (outer) и два друг на друга накладываемых внутренних (inner)
правильно ли я сделал?
falls jemand einen guten und frei nutzbaren WMS für meine Region weiss, bitte her mit den Infos. Vorallem um die Wälder einzuzeichnen, wäre ein guter WMS sehr hilfreich (Yahoo und LandSat sind leider für meine Region nicht brauchbar)
Just thought I'd do the latest update for Texas. Am in the process of adding relations and cleaning up all US routes in Texas. All 2 digit routes are done, and am about half way through the rest. Have also been adding relations and cleaning up Texas Loops/Spurs. All spurs are complete, and maybe a quarter of the Loops are done.
Played with Potlatch "revert" function. Bit painful since you can't step quickly through versions or see easily what has changed between versions (e.g. attribute change or spatial change, or spatial but not in the area you're zoomed in on).
Spent more time assessing accuracy. I have been using Global Mapper (GM) v10.02 which can load and display .osm, .shp, .sid. I have overlaid OSM / NRCan (Geobase / Canvec / whatever), SNB's 1:10k topo, SNB's SID orthophotos. Findings, in no particular order:
- the SIDs are quite useful, very useful since a lot of the Yahoo imagery has too coarse a resolution to resolve roads. From what I recall of the SID technical documentation, the accuracy is supposed to be fairly good, well it says "+/- 6.0 metres for well-defined features" here:
http://www.snb.ca/gdam-igec/e/2900e_1b_i.asp
More tech. information here: http://www.snb.ca/topo/assistance/ORE1999R.pdf. It says 90% of well-defined features (i.e. not covered by vegetation) must fall within 4m of their true position. Whenever I've plotted GPS positions on these images I have been comfortable with the locations. I think I am going to have faith in the accuracy of the SODB (Soft Copy Orthophoto Database), as an underlay to vector data to support assessment or even for on-screen digitizing.
Currency: imagery dates from 1996 - 2002. Obviously some roads have changed since then but most have not.
Legality of using SNB's data: see e.g. http://www.snb.ca/gdam-igec/e/2900e_1b_v_.asp?OrthoNum=45756660. From my reading, it says: "do what you like with it but don't blame us if you have problems".
- the SNB Digital Topographic Database (DTDB) has data in SHP format. This is topo data at a nominal 1:10,000 scale. Excellent stuff but perhaps more detailed than necessary. There are 1894 map sheets.
- the NRCan Geobase has data in SHP format on NAD83. I am interested in roads, especially their accuracy. I am also interested in grabbing water, forest, swamp, to supply context.
A thought I am having: it may be best in general to use Geobase roads because the Geobase data all fits together well. Bad to use someone's hokey GPS trace for a road and find it crossing the edge of a Geobase forest or lake.
The Geobase roads (actually the NRN roads) seem to fit the SODB pretty well. A problem with the NRN roads is that they are too filtered, especially at curves: sometimes curves become too jagged and the straight segments get noticeably far from the true curved roads.
The NRN data for NB is relatively old (2003) and does not have a great deal of attribution. But it is pretty complete so very attractive for using.
Merging with existing OSM roads: fortunately there is not a huge amount of roads in OSM already, for NB. This makes merging less of a problem. On the one hand I am inclined to replace existing OSM roads with NRN ones, for consistency and possible accuracy. On the other hand it does not seem right to go knocking out other people's possibly good work just because "it wasn't invented here".
For roads, it makes sense to do the main highways first starting with the TCH. I need to find out what the preferred attribution is supposed to be for Canada.
Water: I am attracted to the idea of doing rivers and lakes first as these do not interfere with anyone else's work. Again I need to find out about the preferred attribution.
Some other attributes: we should really record source, accuracy, source date.
Tracy: looked at GPS trace + OSM road on rte 101 through Tracy. Hmm, GPS trace seems about right but OSM road is about 70m too far E.
How can I insert images into the diary ??
Oh yes - Yahoo imagery seems a bit off sometimes in Fredericton, a few metres, nothing drastic.
END
Fundacja Wikimedia przekazała swoje stare serwery innym organizacjom non profit m.in. OpenStreetMap
Żródło: http://techblog.wikimedia.org/2010/02/wikimedia-donates-servers-to-deserving-non-profits/
Habe in den letzten Tagen ganz Vordermeggen inklusive Wanderwege erstellt. Dazu die Strassenführung verfeinert. Der Vergleich mit google Satellite sieht gut aus: http://sautter.com/map Für Veränderungsvorschläge etc. kurze Nachricht bitte!
Wer ist in Vordermegge tätig? Kurze Nachricht an mich!
Hallo zusammen,
am 10.3. heben wir um 20:00 Uhr im "Edelweiß" den ersten Reutlinger
OSM-Stammtisch aus der Taufe. Wer bei diesem "historischen" Ereignis
dabei sein möchte ist gerne eingeladen.
Ich hab jetzt mal mit meinem Handy, Nokia N97 angefangen aber das liegt manchmal bis zu 100m daneben. Das Garmin etrex Vista HCx ist bestellt und müßte morgen ankommen.
Have all of the GNIS classes been imported? I have noticed at least two classes that do not show up in an area where other GNIS features appear. One is "Ridge", the other is "Pillar" (as in a rock formation). Perhaps they are just not being rendered? At the location associated with this post is "Twin Owls", a prominent rock formation (GNIS Class = Pillar), and "Lumpy Ridge." For those of us that spend time in the back country, these are important features to show on a map. I searched the Wiki, but it didn't explicitly say that some classes were excluded.