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StreetComplete: Fixing OpenStreetMap, one tiny quest at a time (streetcomplete.app)
wafflemaker 24 hours ago [-]
I was once on a trip in Åndalsness, one of the most scenic places in Norway. Fjords, mountains, you know it.

On the walk to our cabin, a little outside of town, I was checking something on OSM, might have been just learning to use it and read it (it has some learning curve when switching from G-maps).

To my surprise, I saw a shortcut/walking path exiting from the road we were walking on. Already used such paths twice that day for a nice shortcut that didn't show up on G-maps. But there was nothing there.

I told my friend that I'd like to check what this strange hacker map is showing. When we looked again, we noticed that there actually was a trail uphill, what at first sight seemed to just be a forested hillside.

As we went up, the trail started to be more evident. We climbed for a couple minutes, went past a cabin with no road leading to it (pretty normal in Norway), and a few more minutes after it we arrived at a semi-top, with a big boulder and a picturesque view out from that viewpoint.

Very cool memory on the last day of the holidays, made possible thanks to somebody marking that trail on OSM.

femto 18 hours ago [-]
I did something like that for my local area (in about 2012). It turned into a hobby, whereby I spent a couple of years on foot exploring the local bush in minute detail and used OSM to document what I found. There are features on OSM that exist on no other map, especially off-road. I know other people do this too, as similar obscure tracks have appeared in neighbouring areas.

I've been on a number of orienteering or rogaining events where the maps look familiar, and it turns out they have used my OSM data. It's been great to see something lasting come from that mapping effort. (It's also a nice bonus in such events to be that familiar with the map and its covered area!) I suspect some local bush fire brigade members might also be looking at OSM, as a number of the fire trails I mapped seem to have had names added.

m4rtink 10 hours ago [-]
Back in 2019 OSM helped us by showing a walking path back from the Shiroyama Park hill in Kagoshima, Japan. It has a beautiful view of the city of Kagoshima and the towering Sakurajima volcano across the bay.

Google Maps only showed some car only roads and tunnels leading back to the city. But OSM showed a walking path comming down from one of the parking areas.

And indeed, it was there and we arrived back down in the city in a few minutes, avoiding lengthy backtracking.

maelito 23 hours ago [-]
wafflemaker 23 hours ago [-]
Found it! It's on the southern exit from the Mjelva village. Viewpoint is not marked. It felt like a quite a private place, so I don't really want to post more details.

Someone dedicated can still easily find it.

TurdF3rguson 18 hours ago [-]
Too late. Plans to build a 7-11 there are already underway now, thanks to this post.
maelito 23 hours ago [-]
You're right. Last holidays, I went to beautiful place in Spain. A way covered in Ferns was marked as an OSM path. I guess it was, but did not get cut this year or the later. So we tried and failed 30 m after.

It's important to keep some mysteries despite precise maps.

That's why I'm at the same time fascinated by 3D "splats", but also worried to be spoiled.

They're great for places we already know (inspect your roof's shape for instance), but they spoil discovery.

a_c 22 hours ago [-]
Last week I discovered apple's own photogrammetry library. https://developer.apple.com/documentation/realitykit/creatin...

I used it to reconstruct a 3D mesh of a bouldering wall. It worked perfectly. No gaussian splatting involved. I think the boundary between virtual and real world does get thinner by the day

nkrisc 9 hours ago [-]
Not that thin. You can’t climb the virtual wall.
lapetitejort 1 days ago [-]
I got into OSM and StreetComplete to flesh out intersections, stop signs, and sidewalks in my area. I always felt like I was doing something wrong though. I created crosswalks, then OSM would prompt me to connect the crosswalk to the road via a crossing. In StreetComplete, it felt like I was filling in duplicate data. I had to add whether the crossing had crossing lights not only at the middle crossing, but on the sides as well. This probably doesn't make any sense.

Basically, I am never confident I am editing OSM correctly. Am I supposed to manually draw out sidewalks, or tag the road as having a sidewalk? After adding sidewalks in my area, StreetComplete is now asking me if roads have sidewalks, which I clearly see on the map. Reminds me of editing the various Wiki pages. There's several ways of documenting something, only one way is correct, and it's undocumented.

edit: after playing with StreetComplete more, I noticed you can mark sidewalks as displayed separately. This is tagged as "sidewalk:both=separate" on the road. Whether this is the right way to do things I do not know

Ajedi32 1 days ago [-]
Usually in OSM there are several different ways to map things, to varying levels of detail. (E.g. As you discovered, you can just tag a road as having sidewalks, or trace out the actual sidewalks themselves.) Generally, as long as the information you're adding is accurate, you're helping. Changing tagging schemes later is a lot easier than re-discovering that information from scratch. If you're really concerned, usually the wiki has good information on what is currently considered best practice.

Incidentally, I think for crossings StreetComplete now only asks about the actual crossing nodes, so no more duplicate quests.

ygra 23 hours ago [-]
> think for crossings StreetComplete now only asks about the actual crossing nodes, so no more duplicate quests.

It can be confusing for roads where both sides are separated or where there is a traffic island in the middle. There you have two crossing nodes (and sometimes even the footway leading over the road). But in general, I think it is very hard to actually cause trouble with StreetComplete. Furthermore, not every single quest has to be answered, although they typically only exist if there is an obvious correct answer the vast majority of the time (to not annoy users).

orbital-decay 1 days ago [-]
When in doubt, look for adjacent localities and do what the others are already doing. OSM is chaotic and (usually) driven by consensus that can be slightly different in specific communities.
pferde 8 hours ago [-]
The seemingly duplicate data on crossing is because there are different "parts" of the crossing, intended for different users.

There is the path across the road, usually from one sidewalk to the opposite, which is meant for pedestrians, and there is the node where this path touches the road, which is meant for car drivers.

Yes, the system could be improved by grouping these somehow, maybe using relations (https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Relation ), but that would add complexity to any navigation or rendering application using OSM data that wants to process information about crossings.

ryukoposting 22 hours ago [-]
The first time I tried using OSM's web UI to add stuff, my head was spinning. Bless you folks who do the intersections, speed limits, and whatnot.

I've mostly stuck to using Organic Maps to add individual businesses, that's a very easy thing to do. Drop a pin, name, phone number/website/hours/whatever, submit.

pbmonster 9 hours ago [-]
> Basically, I am never confident I am editing OSM correctly.

This is the case for the majority of users. The rules are complex and not always obvious or clearly defined. The world is complex, unfortunately, and so is describing it accurately.

One of OSM killer features for me is finding drinking water along the route when I'm hiking/biking/exploring. Unfortunately, there isn't a single, consistent label used for all sources of drinking water. So I have to check amenity=drinking_water, man_made=water_tap, amenity=fountain, one after the other.

I think StreetComplete has missions to add the label drinking_water=yes to all of those, so the situation might improve in the future.

Cider9986 1 days ago [-]
When I'm unsure I make a note with a photo and someone who knows more looks into it.
westnordost 1 days ago [-]
In regards to your edit: Yes, this is exactly correct.
aweb 1 days ago [-]
I discovered that recently, it's a very fun way to contribute to OpenStreetMap, and the UI is really well-done, it's totally beginner friendly! I wish there was a way to do more than labeling though, like add simple roads and footpaths
eskori 1 days ago [-]
I have used it one (1) time in my life, ans it was my first experience with OpenStreetMap in general. It was pretty fun!

It's very intuitive and makes you learn just how detailed and specific map data can be. Can't say much about missing features since I don't event know what can be done.

Recommended experience, it's like playing Pokemon Go without the evil part :)

hadi121 1 days ago [-]
What's the "evil" part?
weavie 1 days ago [-]
throw101010 1 days ago [-]
Then again you produce public open-source data when you contribute to OSM, and nothing prevents the military from using it for morally questionable purposes... at the end of the day the only difference is the intermediary that could make a profit selling the data, no?
koolala 23 hours ago [-]
No, the huge difference is creating the good part. Where is the open data for the general public created from Pokemon GO? You can't stop the military using open data but that is on them. The evil is them getting your private data to have an exclusive advantage people have no control or transparency over.
throw101010 21 hours ago [-]
I was talking about a difference for the bad outcome in this case... if Pokemon Go was open souce and public, the military could have done the same, for that matter the might be doing the same with OSM data to some extend right now and it would be harder to know about it.

Open-source software and data are obviously public goods I support. I was just pointing out that the only "evil" parts here are rent seekers reselling this data and the military... not the people assembling the data (players).

koolala 19 hours ago [-]
You have no idea what they are selling though. You can ask to get bad things removed from Open Street Maps. It isn't just the money making aspect it's the secrecy too.
amiga386 18 hours ago [-]
If StreetComplete starts asking road width and loading capacity for bridges and viaducts... start to get suspicious :)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bqzwsM6eoQ

m4rtink 10 hours ago [-]
Street complete does load width - it can be quite useful for example for the fire fighters. They can try to plot some routes based on OSM data, then check if the narrow places are actually there and reach out to the city to address them, so their fire engines can get through.
amiga386 7 hours ago [-]
That's a fair use for the data, but it would be hilarious if StreetComplete asked users to get a trundle wheel and measure the width of roads around embassies or seats of government...
ygra 5 hours ago [-]
There's a companion app, StreetMeasure, that uses Google's AR measuring capability on compatible phones. Personally, I carry a laser distance measure.
black_puppydog 23 hours ago [-]
well, I sure don't get to have access to all the pokémon data even if I ask very nicely, do I? I'd think that's a (related but important) difference
throw101010 21 hours ago [-]
I was questioning the qualification of Pokemon Go being "evil" here, it's the data broker and the military who are evil in this case in my opinion. (Making it open-source also doesn't help, as I said we'd only short-circuit the intermediary who sold this data).

Maybe it's a useless nuance, but I don't think Pokemon Go gamers should feel/evil or even that they should be careful the next time they try to entertain themselves.

hadi121 24 hours ago [-]
how am i just hearing about this, wow
DonHopkins 21 hours ago [-]
[Surprised Pikachu Face]
Forgeties79 1 days ago [-]
Niantic would sell your children’s social security numbers if they thought they’d get away with it.
inigyou 22 hours ago [-]
Every business would sell your actual children if they could.
Ajedi32 1 days ago [-]
Usually if I need to add a footpath I use the "Create new track recording" feature to trace out the path with GPS, then come back to it later on desktop. Adding paths is pretty awkward to do on mobile, especially since there's no satellite overlay.
0l 1 days ago [-]
FYI someone else has probably already traced this through Strava, which is allowed to be used for tracing: <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Strava#Data_Permission_-...>
tga_d 21 hours ago [-]
Strava doesn't have complete coverage, especially on newer trails, but more importantly: doing the trace via Street Complete attaches it to an OSM note with an optional (but encouraged) photo. This additional context makes it a lot more useful for editors than an ordinary trace, which can just as easily be an actual trail, a desire path, or someone deciding to improvise a shortcut through some brush. Even if the note just contains the word "trail", that helps us (though more detail is greatly appreciated, of course).
nightpool 1 days ago [-]
StreetComplete doesn't have satellite overlays, but both Vespucci and EveryDoor support viewing satellite overlay tiles!
KomoD 23 hours ago [-]
Though if you like StreetComplete and want aerial/satellite, there's SCEE, a fork of StreetComplete. I tried both Vespucci and EveryDoor, but neither is nearly as easy to use in my opinion.

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/SCEE

khahlsvr 20 hours ago [-]
I have my mapping spells where I do OSM mapping for a week or a month and then I might not map for a year or two. For mobile mapping I have all those you mentioned installed. They all are useful for something, except perhaps StreetComplete which is just a crippled version of SCEE for me. I also have OSMFocus Reborn installed which I use if I want to inspect ways and nodes in an area when I'm not in the middle of editing/adding anything with one of those other apps. That app is good for quickly checking some things out.
janpeuker 5 hours ago [-]
I love the app idea but I don't think it's beginner friendly - for example it starts zoomed out of the globe and there is no button to zoom to the location; also it's unclear what the hatched lines until one zooms in.
jdboyd 10 hours ago [-]
I think adding things, instead of updating existing things with missing data is where you get into needing a more serious app. I keep Vespucci for when I want to initiate an edit, and StreetComplete for fun filling in missing information tasks.
TeddyDD 1 days ago [-]
Great app. There is also https://every-door.app/ that gives you slightly different set of tasks and allows you to place POI easily. I recently mapped a lot of trash cans and benches around my neighborhood while walking with my dog.
Ajedi32 1 days ago [-]
StreetComplete lets you place trash cans and benches too (among other things) using the "Things" overlay. IMO Every Door has a much more complicated UI, though it's also more of a full featured editor than StreetComplete. (Though still less so than something like Vespucci.)
progbits 1 days ago [-]
Thank you!

Is that a new feature? I have over a thousand contributions on StreetComplete (casually using it during walks) and somehow I never noticed that button.

ygra 1 days ago [-]
The overlays are intentionally a bit hidden, since they're more of a power-user feature and I appreciate that StreetComplete retains beginner-friendliness as a core tenet. But the overlays are indeed awesome for survey-type walks where you just want to make sure that all sidewalks are mapped correctly, or to see which shops are still missing.
Ajedi32 1 days ago [-]
TeddyDD 1 days ago [-]
Each to their own, I use both for different things, I like EveryDoor UI better for placing POIs.
mrpeek 21 hours ago [-]
Is this better than GoMap?
deckar01 1 days ago [-]
The UX is really bad. POI loading is taking 10+ seconds to update, then any zoom or pan reorders the list of locations. Most of the missing info (around me) is just phone numbers and hours of operation, which are boring and should be trivial to collect automatically.
jllyhill 1 days ago [-]
The thing is that the best way to get the phones and opening hours is to walk in person and look them up. Any source for the automated collection is way more likely to be outdated/wrong than what the sign or the person behind the counter tells you. And can also have non-permissive license not compatible with the OSM license.
jorvi 1 days ago [-]
Raw Information cannot be licensed, and I am not sure why OSM sticks to the policy that it can.

Google Maps does not hold the rights to which opening hours Bob's Bakery keeps. If someone entered them from Bob's Bakery their site onto Maps, you are free to type it off of Maps onto OSM. Legally anyway. OSM themselves still hold the policy you can't, so you should adhere to that.

bluGill 1 days ago [-]
Of Google is wrong and you copy that is illegal since wrong things are not facts and thus can be copyright
cwillu 1 days ago [-]
Google's ability to make life difficult for contributors to a project should not be underestimated.
Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
That doesn't fly for several reasons, one of them another commenter already mentioned. See these pages for why we can't copy facts from proprietary sources:

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Copyright_Easter_Eggs

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_right

jorvi 19 hours ago [-]
It's too bad you guys aren't incorporated in the EU[0].

Looking at that, Google is only allowed to protect its content with database rights for 15 years after publication, with "substantial additions" getting the same 15 years from the moment of their publishing. I bet there is an interesting legal argument in if modifying opening hours or location of a PoI is considered a "substantial addition", because otherwise any PoI (including businesses) added up to July 2011 would be fair game now :). Not that OSM has the financial means to fight off a behemoth like Google.

Tbh, even then, OSM itself states: "The project is not an exercise in copying maps while trying to avoid copyright traps. We create maps without copying at all! That is the challenge we have set for ourselves.", so the point is moot.

I do wish Apple would just incorporate OSM's PoI data. Right now their's is complete garbage compared to Google Maps and OSM, missing vast swathes of info (or being woefully out of date) in almost all cities.

[0]https://intellectual-property-helpdesk.ec.europa.eu/regional...

Aachen 6 hours ago [-]
We broadly aim to be legal worldwide since it's not very cool if we get outlawed in e.g. Australia and businesses there can't use OpenStreetMap for anything, can't download OsmAnd there, MapComplete is blocked from browsers, etc. Incorporating in the EU was actually a consideration due to Brexit (don't remember the reasons) but it sounds like the benefits didn't outweigh the effort of moving, seeing as it hasn't happened

Interesting though that there's this different (15 years) term where normal copyright is just about forever. That's going to come in handy somewhere for datahoarder me I'm sure :D

jampekka 21 hours ago [-]
I wouldn't be surprised if Google’s lawyer army could explain to some Google-paid arbitrator how it’s in their interest to find that such behavior violates Google’s database copyright under legislation of Google’s choosing.
Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
> should be trivial to collect automatically.

Feel free to contribute that, if you think it's so easy! Just make sure what you're scraping is also correct.

didip 1 days ago [-]
oooo what a fantastic idea. I have always wanted to map as many clothes donation boxes as possible.
ndriscoll 1 days ago [-]
You can do that, little free libraries, water fountains, etc. all in StreetComplete as well.
lapetitejort 19 hours ago [-]
The amount things you can map in OSM is impressive. However I ran into two things that have no formal tags: time capsules (historic=time_capsule), and camera obscuras (camera_type=obscura). You can add the values, but they are not official. Time capsule is in the work [0].

[0]: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposal:Time_capsule

habi 5 hours ago [-]
> However I ran into two things that have no formal tags:

You can use https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Any_tags_you_like on OpenStreetMap. Many of the used tags are simply "in use" and not formalized with a proposal.

earth-tattoo 1 days ago [-]
It sucks that Google is probably using OSM data to check what they are missing and adding it to their maps, but we can't do vice versa. OSM should change their license to something like if you use our data, you have to make yours open as well.
JacobKfromIRC 1 days ago [-]
The license seems to already require this: https://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright/

Maybe I am misunderstanding the summary, but it says: "If you publicly use any adapted version of this database, or works produced from an adapted database, you must also offer that adapted database under the ODbL." <https://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/summary/>

mips_avatar 1 days ago [-]
Yeah the problem is what's considered an adapted database. If it was strict it would mean apps like Alltrails (which is 90% openstreetmaps data) would need to list their trailmaps as open databases, but they don't.
cwillu 1 days ago [-]
The problem is that factual details aren't copyrightable in the first place, so no amount of licensing will prevent organizations with enough money to pay a lawyer from understanding this and using the data as they see fit. And on the flip side, those organizations can pay those same lawyers to write scary boilerplate to make it seem like their map data is “proprietary” and therefore “protected by copyright” even though it isn't.
bluGill 1 days ago [-]
Maps Traditionally have a few intentional errors because those are copyright, in turn meaning if one is found you can sue for copyright violations.
cwillu 24 hours ago [-]
I know that's the common story, but I have never seen any actual court cases confirming that theory; certainly the recoverable damages from such copying such an error would be minuscule.
technothrasher 22 hours ago [-]
Wikipedia has an entry that lists a few court cases, mostly showing that this strategy, as you surmise, fails to stand up in court.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fictitious_entry

maxerickson 21 hours ago [-]
They probably aren't really using the OSM data.

For example, if I use Google Maps to drive to a new neighborhood and then take a bunch of notes about the new neighborhood, my notes are not subject to the terms and conditions of Google Maps.

pteraspidomorph 1 days ago [-]
> It sucks that Google is probably using OSM data to check what they are missing and adding it to their maps

If only. Maps are still super broken around where I live. I personally mapped everything in OSM (which thankfully is used by most third party services these days) a couple years ago, but Maps is still people's primary source for routing and traffic related stuff.

cwillu 1 days ago [-]
Various driving/delivery apps ultimately use OSM data. Doordash and instacart both use it to various degrees via mapbox, for instasnce.
cube00 1 days ago [-]
As evil as they are, it's hearting to see the delivery platforms are embracing OSM when they could probably afford to just pay for Google's Maps API.

It gives hope that Google/ESRI won't always be the dominant mapping platform, however OSM is still missing a lot of local businesses which the delivery platforms don't need as urgently as house numbers so there's less focus there.

Aachen 21 hours ago [-]
> It gives hope that Google/ESRI won't always be the dominant mapping platform

Are they? I get the impression that only consumer-facing stuff is Google, to give people a familiar color scheme¹ as well as allow terribly formatted search queries to still work (if google can do one thing it's search). However, anything using geo data in a back-end fashion seems about evenly split between government base maps, OpenStreetMap, and a collection of misc providers that Google is one of

¹ conversely, I struggle to find my home town on Google Maps. It's all about vague, washed-out shapes, besides the bright shop icons and, nowadays, advertising pins. It's a matter of what you're used to so I can very much understand that the average consumer, who's less familiar with maps than me, is totally lost when getting Carto as a map

patmorgan23 22 hours ago [-]
Lyft even pays people to contribute to OSM
Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
Many companies do. Microsoft, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, TomTom, Über, Komoot, VKontakte; I see German, Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish local governments mentioned; Austrian emergency dispatch; USA school bus operator...

Full list: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Organised_Editing/Activi...

It's more surprising at this point that Google isn't getting in on the fun, at least taking the good bits and calling their own data a 'separate layer' so they don't have to contribute anything back. (And of course no Chinese companies, since accurate maps are illegal there: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restrictions_on_geographic_dat...)

Acrobatic_Road 17 hours ago [-]
How do I get a job like this? Should I just email the team leads or is it the kind of job that's done in-person in another country?
Aachen 6 hours ago [-]
I'd say government is your best bet unless you live in a low-income country and can get into one of these teams
SchemaLoad 18 hours ago [-]
OSM is actually perfectly sufficient if you just want street and address data. This stuff gets pulled in from official government sources so it's all present and up to date.

Where it's lacking is business info since this has to be entered manually and changes much more often than streets or buildings change.

pferde 8 hours ago [-]
I'd like to point out that it only "gets pulled in" if the data is actually made available by the government, and there are dedicated volunteers who work on getting the data, massaging it into the right format and importing it into OSM, and that is not the case in many countries.
cwillu 3 hours ago [-]
Not to mention the occasional drift between what's on paper and what's actually been built.
pferde 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah, that's a whole different kettle of waspnests. :)
pbmonster 9 hours ago [-]
The thing lacking even more is a good search engine. Doesn't matter how complete the database is when search keeps missing text appearing verbatim in a label.
cwillu 40 minutes ago [-]
This is the problem with using vector search for everything: there is no “verbatim” when the corpus and the search are both converted to a vector, and not necessarily using exactly the same transform.
krzyk 1 days ago [-]
If google does that, then they do a poor job at that. In Europe OSM is way more detailed and up to date than Google Maps.
GreyStache 1 days ago [-]
Change that to definitely. I added a brand-new road on OSM and a week later it was on google maps.
plorg 1 days ago [-]
On the other hand, I've been trying to submit changes to Google for several new and vacated roads for over a year (having already updated OSM) and they are constantly rejected. I suspect it is much more that their updates are responsive to car traffic. The segments I'm submitting are or were low-traffic although they include a road that a local municipality has directed people to in official communication for overflow yard waste after some big, recent storms.
juliangmp 1 days ago [-]
I had a similar experience with Google Maps, I used to live in a place where the house on Google maps was located on the wrong street, like one parallel street off. I put in a few requests from time to time because deliveries were a huge pain, to no avail. I opened a thread on some Google forum or support place and then it was mentioned that I actually can't change that because only the city is allowed to... why I get the option in the app I don't fully understand. At some point it got fixed but I have no idea why. Of course it was a few months before I moved out
ygra 1 days ago [-]
Google can cheat a little, especially for new roads since they notice when someone is driving over it. When there was a redesign of an intersection near here, someone marked the road as completed in OSM maybe half an hour after it was opened (we have a few quite active mappers), and Google had it open about two hours later and I suspect no one changed the data directly.
ssl-3 20 hours ago [-]
Waze definitely does this[1]. As a map editor, I can mark a road segment as closed and it will stay closed for as long as I say, unless reverted by another editor or traffic is observed moving through that closed segment (based on parameters that they set).

This kind of cheating usually works extremely well, from my observation.

Anyhow, Google owns Waze and data goes back and forth between there and Google Maps. They're like two heads of the same snake, so it's implicit that the same thing also works on Google Maps.

[1]: https://www.waze.com/discuss/t/closures/374712#p-2273808-aut...

ronnier 16 hours ago [-]
They probably do. I’m thankful for every contributor because each edit makes my Tesla that much better
pbmonster 9 hours ago [-]
> It sucks that Google is probably using OSM data to check what they are missing and adding it to their maps

No way they are doing this deliberately globally. My city has a lot of pedestrian stairs interconnecting roads, and not a single one is on GMaps. If you navigate on foot, it will send you on walks 2x-3x longer than necessary.

OSMand and CoMaps reliably find the shortest way. And can tell you the pavement type, number of steps, stroller ramp and hand rail situation of every single one of those stairs.

Google has a really hard time adding roads without frequent car traffic, I think.

freakynit 1 days ago [-]
Just downloaded and made 15+ small contributions in the vicinity of my area. Very well built app. Super simple to use. And gamification is top-notch. Recommended.
Cider9986 1 days ago [-]
I naively thought that Duolingo's gamification was for a good cause, helping you learn a language by addicting you, but now I know it's not only an extremely ineffective way to learn a language, but they're an advertising/social media/data broker company, which makes the gamification unethical.

I wonder if there are any other FOSS apps or websites with gamification that are for a good cause, like StreetComplete.

tancop 1 days ago [-]
> an extremely ineffective way to learn a language

thats only if you use duolingo exclusively without things like reading news in the language (which is common unfortunately).

its a problem with their specific design using a weird hybrid of spaced repetition with traditional separate lessons. you only learn a couple words for each section but if they decide you know a word they never repeat it again so its easy to forget.

if they made it harder with more open questions and removed combos/perfect lessons to compensate it would be a lot more effective. non linear with multiple paths would also be great, like you decide you want to learn more grammar so you click on that instead of vocab exercises.

the addictive and social pressure parts are the whole point. its giving people motivation to learn and well designed interactive tools are always better than passively reading textbooks [1]. even the ui is made with lots of animation, colors, positive messages to make you feel good every time you get something right.

if streetcomplete added daily progress bars and fireworks every time your edit gets accepted it would probably have a lot more users. ive actually been thinking about making a new anki frontend with this type of addictive ux. that would be more effective and more general than duolingo but lose some of the features like open questions. would need to integrate a llm to fix that.

[1] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11933506/

westnordost 24 hours ago [-]
In my opinion, gamification that makes one addictive is very unethical.

So, any measure that aims at keeping users engaged (as the duolingo icon for example) should be viewed cautiosly.

Also, specifically with apps with which people provide real data, the more they see it as a game, the more the system will be gamed. When users start to guess, without really confirming it on-site, this leads to outright incorrect data.

What's fine, in my book, is to make the experience more gratifying, more "fun". That's probably what you meant, with firework animation etc.. The progress bars however already fall somewhat in the former category.

By the way, edits are accepted immediately. There is no verification step by the community (just like in wikipedia), all the more important it is that people don't start seeing it as a game first and as a way to contribute to a libre map second.

goodpoint 23 hours ago [-]
Also Duolingo's gamification is too obnoxious
timoshishi 8 hours ago [-]
Is your area already well mapped? I opened up the app to find more than 5000 tasks within a 20 minute walk of my place
freakynit 8 hours ago [-]
Nop... when I opened the app, I found 100's of tasks within 100 meter radius.
giancarlostoro 1 days ago [-]
Reminds me of when Microsoft released a new Flight Sim, and people immediately started spotting buildings and things that were out of the norm in the game, which in turn started getting reported to OSM for corrections.

https://hackaday.com/2020/08/21/microsoft-flight-simultors-d...

jnpnj 1 days ago [-]
Are there other similar apps to stimulate soft "crowdfixing" ? I'm sure there are plenty of other aspect of society that would benefit from a light way to know where someone can contribute or notify so other can fix things (forest dumps, random trash). Homeostatic apps to ensure our surroundings are close to a good state :]
matsemann 20 hours ago [-]
I upload street view pictures to Mapillary, which again can be used to automatically infer info into OSM (like signs etc)

But I feel very few OSM mapping apps use street view / have it as a feature. But for me it's the main feature I use Google Maps for. Like checking road conditions or finding nice places to camp when bikepacking. Which is why I also upload my stuff to Google (cars can't access most of these areas), but I'd prefer open alternatives.

jraph 6 hours ago [-]
Check out panoramax if you don't know about it already.

https://panoramax.fr/

matsemann 1 hours ago [-]
Thanks! Did look at it a while back, and currently no instance where I can provide my street views, unfortunately. Hopefully more instances will come soon. And also hope that more mapping apps will use this data, it's a chicken&egg problem I guess.
jacobajit 16 hours ago [-]
This is a big underutilized dataset for mapping features, eg. parking restrictions on a given street or building entrances. With something like Gemini Flash, it's cheap to systematically extract map features from that imagery. Surprised that even Google doesn't extract much useful street view information into their maps.
ivanjermakov 1 days ago [-]
> forest dumps, random trash

Likely you can report such occasions to local authorities via online form. Of course every city/county would have their own.

macintux 1 days ago [-]
My city had a very vanilla, but very useful mobile app for submitting problems like missed trash pickup or dead traffic lights.

Someone apparently decided it needed to be "more modern", making it nearly unusable for quick reports like traffic light problems while I was stopped at the light. Every page was a separate request to a server, slow JS, etc.

They've since improved the flow and performance, but it still asks me for contact information before I can submit it. Fortunately they haven't started server-side validations yet, so I can still submit bogus info.

Just let me tell you your traffic light is out! Why is this so hard?

jnpnj 21 hours ago [-]
ah yeah pretty common and pretty annoying.. either they had to avoid false issues or maybe there was a regulation forcing the use of a more beefy system (or maybe someone thought it's "better" to use the latest shiny thing)
ivanjermakov 1 days ago [-]
They likely provide plain email you could write to instead.
jnpnj 21 hours ago [-]
That is true, that said reporting is not the same (imo) as having a global map of problems and proposals to fix some of them. To me it's a lot more engaging (again, imo) as you see the distance to a goal.
ivanjermakov 19 hours ago [-]
Local authorities might not be happy with civilians painting curbs, fixing potholes, installing road signs. Or I'm not sure what kind of problem we're talking about.
jnpnj 43 minutes ago [-]
Fair point, I wasn't thinking about making everybody a civil engineer but you can clean some walkway, fix a simple bolt, a bench. that sort of thing.
marking-time 24 hours ago [-]
hmmmm .... this prompted me to visit google street view in an area I lived in for 5+ years. When I was there it was a homeless haven. Hundreds of tents and hundreds of people lived there. Now when I go back and look at all the old photo dates, all the homeless have disappeared, as if they were never there. But the homeless were there when I was there.

It's easy to blame Google, but then again they kept a record of what they did and you can see it for yourself.

black_puppydog 23 hours ago [-]
I've been mapping out shops, their contacts, cuisines (for restaurants), opening hours etc in my area. It's a lot of work and much of the information will actually simply not be available to me without a shop owner. So I'm trying to get some of them to update their own shop information. But I'm really struggling to find good arguments. Small shop owners often have quite stressful days already and taking even five minutes to update some information only makes sense if I can present them with a case that this will help their business.

Does anybody here know of ways that OSM data is used and products that people actually use to find businesses? I have heard rumors that Apple pulls data from OSM every now and again in areas where their own datasets are sparse. But do we have anything more meaningful or more concrete that would work in an area like France where data is not necessarily sparse in Apple's maps? (I'm saying this looking at Google Maps here in southern France where half of the shops that it displays just don't exist anymore for years...)

esperent 23 hours ago [-]
> So I'm trying to get some of them to update their own shop information. But I'm really struggling to find good arguments.

I did that for my business (a bakery). Spent ages on it, put in all the details I could think of. At the end of the process there seemed to be a requirement to send it you review so I did that. This was several months ago (probably six months), and it's never showed up.

I'm busy, and I have a thousand more useful things to do for my business. I'm very unlikely to try again.

On the other hand, if the process had been easier I'd probably have then gone on to adding other businesses in the area.

The actual business is listed, but with a slightly wrong name. But I can put that exact slightly wrong name into the search on openstreetmap.org right now and there's zero results.

Then I can manually zoom to the location (which is correct), see my business, tap on it... And nothing. It doesn't open. So given all of this, why would I bother with openstreetmaps as a business owner?

KomoD 23 hours ago [-]
Seems like a trend with your business, though:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36566783

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44364090

Banned from Google Maps, banned from Instagram...

esperent 22 hours ago [-]
Yep, both of those things actually happened, what's your point? I'd love to say we were just unlucky but unfortunately I think it's par for the course when running a small business these days. At least when I was researching how to fix these I found a lot of other people with similar problems and a while industry of YouTubers and bloggers claiming to show you how to fix it.

We got back on Google maps after a few weeks and haven't had any problems since. We never got back on Instagram and had to make a new account, although to be honest we've barely used it since our business pretty much all comes from Google maps.

jllyhill 7 hours ago [-]
Do you remember what you've used to add your business? The process shouldn't be so difficult and normally the changes to the OpenStreetMaps database are instant and don't require any moderation or review. There are some sites that were intended to help business owners to get info to the database, maybe there's a problem with one of them.

> The actual business is listed, but with a slightly wrong name. But I can put that exact slightly wrong name into the search on openstreetmap.org right now and there's zero results.

Can you give the name and location? I can look it up to see if there are any errors.

> Then I can manually zoom to the location (which is correct), see my business, tap on it... And nothing. It doesn't open. So given all of this, why would I bother with openstreetmaps as a business owner?

That's the part that annoys me the most. Counterintuitively the map at openstreetmap.org is NOT intended to be an interactive common user web-map, a Google map alternative. It is a non-interactive map for the mapping volunteers to get feedback on whether their changes to the OpenStreetMap database were correct. While you can still right click on a feature, select "Query feature" and look at the raw text, you are better look up your business on something like mapy.com or an app like CoMaps (that use OSM data to create a Google map alternative) to understand what would the users see.

jllyhill 7 hours ago [-]
You can get some info on the tag use with taginfo, e.g. https://taginfo.openstreetmap.org/keys/cuisine#projects But it is really technical and not all projects provide this info.

The most obvious place where people will look for and query this kind of data are the OSM-based map apps: OsmAnd, OrganicMaps, CoMaps, mapy.com etc. I don't know if this data is pulled into other major maps like Google's or Apple's.

wcedmisten 16 hours ago [-]
For what it's worth, I use OSM for my modest project SurpriseDateSpot[1] which will randomly pick a restaurant (or other amenity) in your area! It gets a few thousand users per month :)

I've also used this project to upstream 2,000 suggested edits to OSM

[1]: https://surprisedatespot.com/

m463 13 hours ago [-]
Tesla cars with their dashcam turned on collect enormous amounts of data. They have 4-6 cameras writing continuously to a USB flash drive.

I wonder why we can't get folks to drive around and collect it, then use AI/automation to fill in great swaths of information automagically.

EDIT: some people do similar things:

- https://wcedmisten.fyi/post/dashcam-to-openstreetmap/

EDIT2: and maybe it goes the other way:

- https://teslamotorsclub.com/2019/11/04/tesla-owners-can-edit...

hexomancer 1 days ago [-]
This is very cool, I wish there was some way to use it on a bicycle though. For example, when moving into a street it could ask (using voice) if this street is paved, and I could answer it using voice too.
pavel_lishin 1 days ago [-]
I downloaded this, and I'm slightly amazed at how much detail there is. What material the utility poles are made of?
ivanjermakov 1 days ago [-]
My favorite one is smoothness, I find it very useful when building cycling routes.

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:smoothness

flaburgan 23 hours ago [-]
I am using EveryDoor to contribute to OpenStreetMap. I find the information it allows to add much more useful than the one in streetcomplete quests.
Schiendelman 1 days ago [-]
Hi! Is this yours? Would you like help porting this to iOS?
looperhacks 1 days ago [-]
Not mine, but you can check this issue: https://github.com/streetcomplete/StreetComplete/issues/5421
herrherrmann 1 days ago [-]
Wow, that is one well-documented migration project! Thanks for sharing, I wasn’t aware they are so seriously on it.
Schiendelman 22 hours ago [-]
Thanks, I didn't even think to look!
wxlong2000 1 days ago [-]
StreetComplete's trick is hiding the tagging model until you actually need it. Most contributor tools expose the schema too early.
hirako2000 1 days ago [-]
One thing missing on osm is pictures. Would defeats Google maps if it had some, where users would feedback and bad shots would get wiped to save space. We would get the best shots the world has to offer.
maelito 23 hours ago [-]
In the app I'm developing, cartes.app, we acknowledged this lack of pictures.

We show local Wikimedia common pictures, osm tag pictures, og:image pictures of the website if any, Wikipedia article infobox pictures, Panoramax for street-view, and last but not least, any picture dropped by an ATproto place review.

Lots remain to be done, especially building the latter community of reviews.

jllyhill 1 days ago [-]
There are ways to add pictures as the tags of the OSM objects

- https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:wikimedia_commons

- https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:panoramax

- https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:mapillary

Mobile apps can use this data to either give links to them (e.g. CoMaps) or display them in the app (e.g. OsmAnd)

edent 1 days ago [-]
OSM does have a pictures layer.

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Panoramax

I use https://mapcomplete.org/ to add images of artworks to OSM objects.

lapetitejort 1 days ago [-]
I had been using mapcomplete to add images of artwork, which in turn used panoramax. However I saw someone else use Wikimedia Commons, and to me that makes more sense. Wikimedia ties into more systems, so if you wanted to create a Wikipedia page about an artist, there will be readily available images to use.

On the flip side, panoramax can be used as an open source StreetView. Different sites for different purposes I suppose

ygra 23 hours ago [-]
Wikimedia Commons also requires more up-front work by the uploader to categorize the image properly, which can be daunting if you're new to how things are organized there. But yeah, for well-known objects, adding Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons links can be awesome and there are plenty of apps making use of it to show additional information.
matsemann 8 hours ago [-]
Panoramax is still unfortunately very lacking outside a French instance. I've tried to contribute my street view images, but it's not used by anyone or anything as far as I can see.
thangalin 23 hours ago [-]
https://shufflenblues.com/location/

OSM is fantastic. I wanted a free, unencumbered map that matches the site's theme for ride sharing, billeting, and the venue location. The solution wasn't trivial, but at least it was possible. Couldn't imagine doing that with Google Maps.

Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
Is that OSM? I didn't even recognise it, good job on matching the color scheme to the website so well!

There's a little (i)nformation icon on the bottom right but it doesn't seem to do anything. If this is OSM then attribution is required. It's how we make people aware of the noncommercial project (considering we barely have budget for servers, running ads is a bit hard) and it also tells people where they can add corrections

The legalese is here if you want https://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright but in short, OSM maps need to show something like "©OpenStreetMap Contributors". There's debate whether an (i) fold-out icon is enough since the license technically stipulates that anyone interacting with the material must also be aware that it's OSM data and not literally everyone will click that. Personally I find that clause too restrictive, and the use on your website so minimal... but that's the legal terms. Nobody ever got sued by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. Do with the information as you see fit :P. Personally I'm already happy that you found it suits your purposes well!

thangalin 13 hours ago [-]
Thanks! The location page was a map image, it's now an interactive map with the clickable (i)nformation icon.
Aachen 6 hours ago [-]
Yay! Works for me and looking good :)
aucisson_masque 20 hours ago [-]
I just downloaded it and launched it. It's very funny and somewhat addictive but it also feel overwhelming, just around me there are hundreds and hundreds of questions.

Some,I really don't care to answer, like "the Telephone pole, is it made of wood or steel ?!"

Who cares honestly.

mhh__ 20 hours ago [-]
Yes but there is Hans, 25, of Wiesbaden who is the telephone-pole-material guy who catalogues these things.
eliaspro 20 hours ago [-]
Feel free to unclutter your view by disabling quests you don't want to answer in the settings, maybe just start with only 3-4 very basic ones.
m4rtink 9 hours ago [-]
You can make more realistic simulations based on the data.

Also I am sure this is used for data science.

aembleton 20 hours ago [-]
If you go into settings and then quest selection you can choose what you do care about
endymion-light 1 days ago [-]
I really love this - fantastic that it's open source too as would love to contribute. Is there an opportunity to add fresh new sites on this?
Aachen 19 hours ago [-]
SCEE adds a bunch of features on top of StreetComplete. One of them is that you can always open up the tags for a feature on the map and add or update, e.g., the website information. To do this, open up the appropriate overlay (such as "things" or "places"), tap the POI, and choose "Show/edit tags" in the options menu

Some editors like OsmAnd also let you do that. In OsmAnd you can enable the OSM development plugin (it's pre-installed, more like a setting to unlock expert options than a plugin) and use "Edit POI" to add or update website information

Or simply use the website at https://osm.org/edit

StreetComplete doesn't ask for websites specifically. It's pretty restrictive in what they'll allow as 'quests' to avoid overloading new users

ndriscoll 1 days ago [-]
As in can you add points of interest like shops? Yes, there's a places overlay with an add button, and a things overlay for things like benches, bicycle parking, etc. For adding buildings, roads, or paths you'd need something else.
khernandezrt 1 days ago [-]
Does it have to be a mobile app? Id love to do this when im bored at work but i dont wanna make it seem like im just sitting on my phone.
stndef 1 days ago [-]
I think the reasoning behind this is that ideally you're at the location where you can confirm what you see, instead of maybe referring to older media or from memory.

That being said, I agree with you and would like to see more ways to access the tool!

circuit10 1 days ago [-]
A web app would also make it work on iOS (and other non-Android platforms) at the same time
habi 8 hours ago [-]
There are many apps for editing OSM on iOS: https://osm-apps.org/?platforms=iOS

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Go_Map!! also has some kind of 'quests' built in, and the StreetComplete is planning to porting SC to iOS: https://github.com/streetcomplete/StreetComplete/issues/5421

Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
https://MapComplete.org is made by someone from Belgium with the aim of making a website that's at least as good as a native app could be. It's both a data viewer and editor but generally that sounds like it's what you're looking for!

I have yet to get into it myself (I already have established workflows in StreetComplete and other editors) but from the demo that the author gave on CCC ~1.5 years ago it seemed perfectly usable back then already

pietervdvn 19 hours ago [-]
Hi! <3
modriano 1 days ago [-]
You can edit OSM from its main site [0], although there's a much steeper learning curve when using the site (as you have far more freedom and it's not super easy to figure out the standard way to tag some situations).

[0] https://www.openstreetmap.org/

harvey9 1 days ago [-]
You can edit OSM from their web apps. This is intended to be used in the field but I guess you could use it to find things that need fixing.
petrzjunior 1 days ago [-]
Adding to that: StreetComplete specifically creates only quests for information which must be checked in the terrain like opening hours, surfaces, traffic light sounds. Anything surveyable from maps and other sources should be edited using the web editors. OpenStreetMap iD is probably the easiest to learn.
okok3857 1 days ago [-]
Rapid Editor is a good web app for editing OSM: https://rapideditor.org/
bjoli 8 hours ago [-]
Last week I am #2 in Sweden on StreetComplete, despite using veapucci for about half my edits (my neighborhood is pretty effed up).

AMA I guess

throwawayk7h 18 hours ago [-]
Please advertise that you offer it on f-droid as well! I only see Play store and App store links. But it's available right here: https://f-droid.org/en/packages/de.westnordost.streetcomplet...
netfortius 1 days ago [-]
Some more info in an earlier thread [1]

[1] CoMaps – FOSS Offline Maps | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48808928

ryandrake 22 hours ago [-]
Is https://keepright.at still a thing? That used to be my go-to site when I was bored and wanted to find things to fix in OSM. No matter how much you fix, it seems that when you go back to that site, there seem to always be tons of stuff flagged for fixing.
bspammer 20 hours ago [-]
Seems like it's pretty out of date, from the site:

Site updated at 2024-03-03

It's a shame because it seems very useful.

jmspring 1 days ago [-]
Is there something equivalent for iOS?
Quot 1 days ago [-]
StreetComplete has been making steady progress on an iOS port over the past few years.

https://github.com/streetcomplete/StreetComplete/issues/5421

circuit10 1 days ago [-]
It would be nice if they made a web app, that would make it work on iOS but also desktop and every other platform with a web browser at the same time
Quot 1 days ago [-]
I agree! It seems like their work on the iOS app would bring them a lot closer to web app support as well. In the iOS tracking issue, they say the main changes are moving to Kotlin Multiplatform and Compose Multiplatform, which both support web as a target.
westnordost 24 hours ago [-]
Well, sort of. That'd be very bluesky. What's closer, actually, would be a desktop version, or rather, a version for Linux mobile like postmarketOS (would run like a desktop app in a JVM, but for a mobile target, the layout and UX wouldn't need to be changed.
jmspring 1 days ago [-]
I'll take a look and see if I can help out. Thx.
mtmail 20 hours ago [-]
tiffanyh 1 days ago [-]
> ANDROID WILL BECOME A LOCKED-DOWN PLATFORM IN XXX

My guess is no because of the developer linking too below (and how it's always existed this way for iOS)

https://keepandroidopen.org

I wonder why this needs to be an app at all, instead of web based.

westnordost 24 hours ago [-]
It works offline, for one. A lot of datais kept persistently in a SQLite database.
Krasnol 1 days ago [-]
I love this tool.

It brought me back to mapping on OSM.

Wherever you are and need to wait for a minute, there are quests to be solved there.

I recommend SCEE for those who are already familiar with OSM mapping or are in an area where the most common tasks are already covered: https://github.com/Helium314/SCEE

marssaxman 1 days ago [-]
Thank you for the reminder! I got out of the habit of checking StreetComplete since my previous neighborhood was well populated in OSM, but having just moved, I should check it out again.
westnordost 24 hours ago [-]
When you are out of quests in your area, check the overlays! (Button to the left of the menu)
jcynix 1 days ago [-]
StreetComplete is cool, fun and useful, yes. And there is its companion app StreetMeasure which makes it easy to add measurements like the width of a narrow street, for example.
Acrobatic_Road 1 days ago [-]
Every day I take a 2 hour walk and contribute as much data as I can to OSM using this app.
hadi121 1 days ago [-]
This is such a great idea. Are there ever any plans for a web app?
kelvinjps10 23 hours ago [-]
What's the best apps as a Google maps replacement that uses open street maps?
Aachen 20 hours ago [-]
I would second CoMaps if you're just starting out. Google has some unique features like tracking everyehhh—I mean traffic data! (Tracking everyone is sometimes legitimately useful :P) and they got businesses on board by displaying Google Maps information alongside Google Search results, so all business owners seek out to add their data to Google for free whereas in OpenStreetMap (and other competitors) someone needs to painstakingly find all the businesses themselves. So business info is much less complete.

On other fronts, like hiking trails or public infrastructure, you'll find OSM much more accurate, especially around the world (I hear that Google is comparatively good on their home market). If you want things like trip planning, nautical maps, road avoidance, and tons more features: OsmAnd can do basically everything but the sheer feature count also clutters the UI. I have no problem with it but others say they prefer CoMaps and other apps for the simpler tasks, so just be aware of the different pros/cons and enjoy :)

flaburgan 23 hours ago [-]
Comaps is great. Works offline. https://cartes.app from France Murena maps have just been released: https://community.e.foundation/t/murena-maps-is-here-in-beta...
maelito 22 hours ago [-]
Main developer of cartes.app here. We've internationalised the app. Expect some traces of French but we're working on it :)

But yes, the development force remains mostly French for now. Waiting for more European contributions...

https://translate.codeberg.org

myself248 1 days ago [-]
kls0e 1 days ago [-]
scph1001.bin
Narishma 1 days ago [-]
More like scph1002.bin in this case. 1001 is for SCEA.
qmacro 1 days ago [-]
I enjoyed the simulated phone screenshots, particularly the choice of House of the Trembling Madness, a great beer stockist and drinking establishment on Lendal in York. I would like to think that the name in the input field is deliberately slightly wrong, ready to be fixed by someone. (It's "House of the Trembling Madness" rather than "The House of Trembling Madness".) Gamification at another level :-)
baumschubser 1 days ago [-]
Just through your comment I found out that they have different screenshots for all their localization settings. Cool!
altern8 23 hours ago [-]
They should've called the app MapQuest :-)
Aachen 19 hours ago [-]
Maybe that's what you're referencing but MapQuest is a commercial company that existed already at the time StreetComplete got started iirc
piebro 1 days ago [-]
If anyone is interested in where StreetComplete is used or which quests are the most popular, you can check out: https://piebro.github.io/openstreetmap-statistics/stats/04_s...
LowLevelKernel 17 hours ago [-]
AMAZING work
crudgen 23 hours ago [-]
In principle I like it, what I don't like is that some companies will use the data only for their own benefit / dystopian nightmare mission.
timbit42 17 hours ago [-]
Another comment here claims their license forbids that.
lisper 1 days ago [-]
maelito 23 hours ago [-]
It's basically Comaps but not open-source, right ?
lisper 23 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I actually meant to post this comment in the comap thread. Both comaps and SC were on the home page at the same time.
preetham_rangu 1 days ago [-]
Been using this for my dog walks too. There's something oddly satisfying about turning a boring loop around the block into "wait, does that bin have a lid?" Never thought trash cans would be the thing that got me into mapping.
isanjayjoshi 21 hours ago [-]
[dead]
santiagohzszmex 1 days ago [-]
Muy bien
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