Do we follow the same standards in different places on different projects? I deliberately did not mention Nepal and the built up areas are different.
Cheerio John On 14 July 2015 at 17:38, Andrew Patterson <[email protected]> wrote: > Whilst I fully accept the concept of open debate in an attempt to reach a > consensus, I do find the current discussion less than helpful, because of > the range of definitions being thrown out, and the added geographic > dimension to the definitions. This is not helped by the variety in advise > in the instructions for various tasks - ranging from "if in doubt mark it > as a path, and this can be upgraded by someone on the ground" to much more > specific instructions in the Nepalese instructions, for example. But the > type of terrain in which one might contemplate a 4 wheel drive in Africa is > very different to that regularly used in Nepal. > > Surely if must be possible to come to a conclusion for a generic set of > definitions. I rather support John Whelan's breakdown, where he suggests > that "if its to a small group of huts its probably a track, if > its to narrow for a 4X4 and winds its a path, and if I can see two wheel > > tracks then its a track unless its between two settlements of reasonable > size then its unclassified > " > . > > There was a huge correspondence in a similar vein during the early days > of the Nepal disaster, which I found to be a real disincentive to > contributing during the first couple of weeks, and I have only latterly > started working on task. There has also been an impressive and important > Post Mortem exercise to improve things, and I would suggest that the size > of the preset list is one area in which some serious pruning could be done > with consequent increase in transparency to a new comer > > > > Andrew > > > > > -- > Andrew Patterson > > The information contained in this e-mail and any > files transmitted with it is confidential and intended for the addressee > only. > > _______________________________________________ > HOT mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot > >
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