acuteaccent.com
Offline maps and GPS tracker app: review of Maps 3D | acuteaccent
http://acuteaccent.com/offline-maps-and-gps-tracker-app-review-of-maps-3d
Type e acute accent: é. Offline maps and GPS tracker app: review of Maps 3D. I looked for an offline topographic mapping and gps tracker app for a while. I intended to use it for hiking and cycling tours. I downloaded and tested the free versions of a couple of popular apps. GaiaGPS. Kept crashing on my iPhone although it had worked fine on an Android phone I used a while ago. CompeGPS’ TwoNav. Was interesting in that it uses the public and free Spanish Instituto Geográfico Nacional. Then I found Maps 3D.
blog.gravitystorm.co.uk
OpenStreetMap Carto Workshop | Gravitystorm Blog
https://blog.gravitystorm.co.uk/2014/07/07/openstreetmap-carto-workshop
At State of the Map Europe. I ran a workshop about openstreetmap-carto. The stylesheets that power the Standard map layer on OpenStreetMap.org. And many hundreds of other websites. The organisers have published the video of the workshop. Thanks to the organising team for inviting me to run this workshop – it was certainly well received by the audience, and I spent the rest of the day disussing the project with other developers. This entry was posted in General. July 7, 2014. July 7, 2014 at 6:45 pm.
blog.gravitystorm.co.uk
General | Gravitystorm Blog
https://blog.gravitystorm.co.uk/tag/general
TileMill, Carto and the Transport Map. A few months ago I started exploring some new technologies from DevelopmentSeed – namely Carto and TileMill. Carto is a CSS-style map description language, similar to Cascadenik, and TileMill is a browser-based application that lets you view maps while you’re designing them. This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged General. February 8, 2012. The main difference between last year and this have been the move to Potlatch 2. We need a deselect button. Is unclea...
rickmastfan67.blogspot.com
rickmastfan67's Stuff: MapQuest Open Map rendering problems in the USA
http://rickmastfan67.blogspot.com/2011/06/mapquest-open-map-rendering-problems-in.html
Place where I post stuff about the Nation's Highway system, and other things. Monday, June 6, 2011. MapQuest Open Map rendering problems in the USA. Well, you guys are probably wondering wondering why I'm writing this blog post. Well, I just felt like it because I'm active in the OSM community and I do want to see the data rendered properly if at all possible. Anyways, here's are some of the major glaring rendering problems that I've noticed here on the USA map ( http:/ open.mapquest.com/. 1D Here we hav...
blog.gravitystorm.co.uk
mapnik | Gravitystorm Blog
https://blog.gravitystorm.co.uk/tag/mapnik
A sneak peak at Thunderforest Lightning maps. Here’s a few screenshots from my new Lightning tile-server:. A refresh of the Transport Style, built on a brand new, state-of-the-art vector tiles backend. Thunderforest Lightning makes it easy to create custom map styles sharing vector tile backends. Here’s a Dark variant for the Transport layer. Vector tiles bring lots of other benefits – like high-performance retina maps! This entry was posted in General. March 28, 2014. WeeklyOSM 322 week….
blog.gravitystorm.co.uk
imports | Gravitystorm Blog
https://blog.gravitystorm.co.uk/tag/imports
Tending the OpenStreetMap Garden. Yesterday I was investigating the OpenStreetMap elevation. Tag, when I was surprised to find that the third most common value. Is ‘0.00000000000’! Now I have my suspicions about any value below ten, but here are 13,832 features in OpenStreetMap that have their elevation mapped to within 10 picometres – roughly one sixth of the diameter of a helium atom – of sea level. Seems unlikely, to be blunt. And found an example – Almonesson Lake. Mistakes are made, of course, but i...
blog.gravitystorm.co.uk
Getting Started With Chef | Gravitystorm Blog
https://blog.gravitystorm.co.uk/2012/11/19/getting-started-with-chef
Getting Started With Chef. A little over a year ago I was plugging through setting up another OpenCycleMap. Server. I knew what needed installing, and I’d done it many times before, but I suspected that there was a better way than having a terminal open in one screen and my trusty installation notes in the other. The first thing was to figure out some jargon – what’s the name of this particular wheel? Turns out that it’s known as “ configuration management. How many servers before it’s worth it? The one ...
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