Mar
29
2010
8

nearbynow iphone Web App for Navigating Shopping Centers

nearbynow provides a sneak preview of their new Web Application optimized for the Apple iphone allowing shoppers to graphically navigate a shopping center, search mall store inventory, list available sales, and even find the closest restroom. This application will be the first mobile navigation solution ever created for navigating inside shopping malls, and creates a unique venue for retailers to contextually advertise to in-mall shoppers. The new iphone Web Application will be available to consumers in July 2008. www.nearbynow.com Test the service: www.westfield.com/valleyfair click on ‘Product Search’ Get hot deals sent to your phone weekly! Text DEALS to 632729 (nearby). ***Select ‘WATCH IN HIGH QUALITY’ to see detailed screen views***

Mar
28
2010
0

Project of the Week 2010Mar28 - Swimming in data

Many of the coastlines in OSM came from an import of the PGS coastline
data. It was a fantastic benefit to be able to add this coastline
data to OSM, and we’re better off having had it. And there are many
places that have aerial imagery that is now good enough to improve on
PGS coastlines. So that is the project of the week for 28 March,
2010, check your favorite bit of coastline and improve what you can
with overhead imagery.

Those without a favorite bit of unimproved coastline might take a look
at the crenelated coasts of North America for examples of what can be
improved. This
http://www.openstreetmap.org/edit?lat=41.044&lon=-72.1591&zoom=14 is a
portion of Long Island with aged PGS coastline that fails to meet our
current standards for Good Coastiness. Sure, it will be fixed up by
the time the second reader gets to it, but have a look at that area in
the original bulk import form,
http://www.openstreetmap.org/browse/changeset/693806 . Okay, perhaps
we can make our current imports a little friendlier to view.

And now a sea change

Let’s improve the Project of the Week while we’re improving the map.
Let’s increase participation. If you are participating in potw,
consider posting some of your before and after shots of the areas you
are mapping. Reply with your comments and links to your good work.
Consider adding “potw” to your changesets. It’s nice to know if you
find a project of the week interesting.

Propose a Project of the Week.

Write it up and add it to the Proposals page, or email me directly.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Project_of_the_week/Proposals
Make general or specific suggestions regarding potw on the discussion page.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Talk:Project_of_the_week/Proposals

Share your project!

Detailed, written potw proposals are very warmly welcomed. Tell us
what you are doing, show us how it is making a difference, and let us
know how we can help you with your project locally, or by replicating
it in our neighborhood. Give some example tags and guidelines if you
can.

The massively successful Image of the Week project has been running
since 2006, and is now a flipbook history of What Was New In OSM.
Plus a couple of entertaining April Fool images. Part of the strength
of the IotW is the indefatigable leadership of User:Ojw who has kept
it running for five years. Much of the strength of IotW comes from the
community interest. Folks do something interesting, make an image,
and share it with IotW.

Let’s see if we can make potw at least half as interesting and
informative as IotW. Join in, won’t you?

If you haven’t seen IotW (What? Is that possible?!?!) You must see it
now. Prepare to spend an hour learning the visual history of OSM.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Featured_images

The Beautiful fish on the reef photo is cc-by Alain76 on Flickr.
The Crashing waves photo is cc-by Wonderlane on Flickr.

Permalink

| Leave a comment  »

Written by admin in: News |
Mar
27
2010
0

Announce: OpenOS

As you’ve probably heard the Ordnance Survey is going to open some data next week. We don’t exactly know what data or what license it will be under but there’s a reasonable chance it won’t be importable in to OSM because either the data will be low scale or released with an incompatible license.

If that’s the case then I propose we start, separate from OSM, an OpenOS project. I basically see it as either a clearinghouse for putting up converted formats for the data and/or a full OSM stack, mapnik, potlatch and all for editing and fixing it. Because as Russ Nelson keeps saying, datasets without a community are dead.

I propose that until we know it’s compatible, usable and so on in OSM that no OSM resources are spent/used on something like this. Thus, I’ve bought the domain openos.co.uk to host it and set up a google group which you’re welcome to join to help discuss what to do if/when we get some data.

I think this data will need a community, tools and editing and who better to build all that than people from OSM?

Thoughts?

http://groups.google.com/group/open-os
http://openos.co.uk

Permalink

| Leave a comment  »

Written by admin in: News |

OpenMobileMap would not be possible without the generous support from our sponsors:

www.andgps.com provides gps and routing source code templates for android developers

www.j2megps.com provides gps and routing source code templates for j2me developers


OpenMobileMap | The Free Mobile Map Resources