Archive for February, 2011

Tweaking MoNav’s Vector Renderer

Sunday, February 27th, 2011
Rastatt in Monav (data by osm and contributors, CC-by-SA)

Rastatt in Monav (data by osm and contributors, CC-by-SA)

I could not resist the temptation to tweak the vector rendering code of MoNav.

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Converting Germany OSM data into a MoNav Map

Friday, February 25th, 2011
Karlsruhe Vector Rendering in MoNav (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Karlsruhe Vector Rendering in MoNav (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Today I adjusted the MoNav vector renderer a little bit, just to get more ways relevant for cyclists into the map. The renderer does not support rendering of street names as of yet, and there’s still a lot of work to do to get all the details solved that make a nice looking map. But anyway, the map already does its job.

The map data for germany converted from OSM pbf to the MoNav format requires more than 4GB of free mass storage. Of course I couldn’t resist the temptation to try it on the N900. Panning works almost as smooth as panning a raster image map. It’s really a joy, and a dream I had back in 2006 when I began to contribute to openstreetmap.org comes true:

Karlsruhe Vector Rendering N900 (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Karlsruhe Vector Rendering N900 (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Thanks to all who contributed to MoNav. Feels a bit like Xmas :) .

Vector Rendering in Monav SVN

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011
Speyer Vector Rendering (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Speyer Vector Rendering (Data by openstreetmap.org and its contributors, CC_by-SA)

Thanks to the work of James Hollingshead, MoNav SVN contains the first incarnation of a vector renderer which aims to be a high performance renderer which creates the required map tiles “on the fly”. The current SVN code is a bit awkward to compile and use, hence this posting. The info provided here is replicated by the OSM wiki. The following bash commands have been executed using Ubuntu Lucid 10.04.1 LTS. You will at least need Qt 4.5 dev packages, and probably some additional packages before MoNav will compile properly.

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Wheelmap.org – find places suitable for handicapped people

Sunday, February 13th, 2011
Wheelchair (Wice@openclipart.org, public domain)

Wheelchair (Wice@openclipart.org, public domain)

Wheelmap.org is a map displaying various points of interest as a separate layer on top of openstreemap tiles. All of the PIOs are clickable. The map can answer questions like »Where’s the next restaurant with full wheelchair access?«.

But that’s only one half of the story. Users can also edit and classify the POIs to decide whether they are accessible by impaired persons. The classification in turn makes it back into the openstreetmap database. The following values are used for the wheelchair key:

wheelchair=yes
wheelchair=limited
wheelchair=no
wheelchair=designated (used seldom)

Wheelmap.org provides a flowchart (german language only) to decide which tag to use for a particular on-site situation.

So what’s special about wheelmap.org? More or less, nothing. Except for the fact that it is one evidence that openstreetmap.org is not just an ordinary map. Instead, it is a huge database hosting geographic data, which in turn can be used to create various outputs. Rendering maps is just one of its uses. Collecting information about wheelchair compatibility of POIs is another. And collecting information about the smoothness of highway surfaces is a third.

What I find interesting is that openstreetmap makes things possible that never happened without the free geodata the project provides. No commercial company has an interest in providing a service like wheelmap.org. But meanwhile such services are possible using the geodata of openstreetmap.org, free of charge. Yes (and fortunately), the web is democratizing information.

February? May? Anyway!

Saturday, February 12th, 2011
Wissembourg, Saint-Pierre-et-Paul

Wissembourg, Saint-Pierre-et-Paul

What a winter! Early snow in November (disappeared before Xmas). Fresh snow during Xmas (meanwhile disappeared even at the Black Forest). And now a warm and sunny day providing up to 13°C!

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OSM@Horizont OUTDOOR 2011

Sunday, February 6th, 2011

Once again, Joachim Kast managed to organize some sponsors for an Openstreetmap booth at the Horizont Outdoor fair in Karlsruhe/Forchheim. The sponsorship was provided by nogago.com and media-tours.de. As always, Geofabrik helped with various materials (like printouts). The rest of the booth was made possible by members of the OSM community respectively the helpers who did the on-site work.

The fair was well visited, as was the OSM booth.

Last year, many people were mainly interested in free maps for their Garmin gadgets. This year, people were more interested in the project itself. I often sense that people who are not that savvy about computers and the internet cannot imagine at all that Openstreetmap is a free and collaborative project, driven by enthusiasts. They also have difficulties to understand that we do not paint maps “manually”. The concept of a database hosting geo data, which in turn is used to automatically create different looking maps, is not easy to understand for many people. That’s not a problem, but those people will have difficulties to find all the other interesting maps except the one they realize as »the osm map«.

Many wanted to know whether we have map data available in certain regions of Europe, South America, Africa, or Asia. I had a conversation with a guy who intends to spend his holidays in spain, mapping cycleways, and who needed some hints which device to use, how to map, what to map, and which details he should pay attention to.

Next to our booth, Touratech demonstrated GPS mounts for motorbikes and version 5 of Touratech QV, a popular mapping application for operating systems developed in Redmond. The application allows to use several sources of tiles which have been generated using openstreetmap data. The tiles are mapped to a three dimensional mesh of the earth, and I assume it’s using SRTM data to create the mesh. The mapping results in some deformation of the map tiles, so it’s not a perfect solution, but surely sufficient for many uses.

We also got an offer for an interview at one of the public forums, and Joachim did not hesitate to attend – a great chance to “spread the word”.

I wasn’t at the booth today, so I cannot comment about today’s activities. Maybe one of the others will write another blog entry. Thanks to all who helped to make the booth possible.