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okok3857

39 karmajoined 4 years ago
currently working on oldinsurancemaps.net

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okok3857
·7 days ago·discuss
Rapid Editor is a good web app for editing OSM: https://rapideditor.org/
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Thanks for sharing, this is really nice. I've added it to the list of other projects I have on the site [0]. Feel free to get in touch if you want to use OIM for other years of Paris, TX.

[0] https://oldinsurancemaps.net/more-about-sanborn-maps/
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Thanks! Frankly the presentation side of the site needs a lot of work, and it's more about doing the georeferencing work, which sounds like you've already done. But you should get in touch I'd love to discuss further! I've done demo projects with old plat maps like you are working with.
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, some maps in the site are hidden as they are part of an ongoing research project, just happens that Tampa and Key West are both examples of that. If you follow the blog/newsletter I'll surely announce when those are available.
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, at certain points, like when I made that ohmg.dev website, I have looked at this as a re-deployable platform that anyone could self-host. It still technically is, but I've slowed down a lot on that idea (no one really showed up with interest). There are other good places to georeference maps on the web, like mapwarper.net and allmaps.org. That said, I do hope to expand to handle import of other atlases, not only Sanborns, and if you have something particular in mind you can mention it here: https://github.com/ohmg-dev/OldInsuranceMaps/issues/266
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
No (or, not yet...) and yes, I know the Allmaps team well--it is an excellent project. There are a lot of similarities, but I would say two high-level differences are 1) OIM is built around server-side processing that immediately produces downloadable files and web services (geotiffs) while Allmaps applies a client-side transformation to non-geo IIIF tiles, and 2) OIM is designed around the creation of mosaics from many different pages to a greater extent than Allmaps is. This year I do see bringing more IIIF/Allmaps tooling into OIM though, so stay tuned!
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Hi! I added a page about "georeference-a-thons" recently here: https://oldinsurancemaps.net/community-georeferencing/
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, there are a number of maps (the FHA ones and also one Sanborn) that are part of a research project that is still in the works, so they are hidden for now.
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
Great question: no. I've spent a lot more time making the georeferencing side of things work well than improving search and discovery, and even presentation (like the /viewer/ pages), of the maps on the site. It's something I hope to spend a lot more time on in the coming months. I know, dealing with those sliders is pretty cumbersome in big cities with many volumes (like SF).
okok3857
·5 months ago·discuss
I developed and maintain this site so I am both very happy to see it get posted here and also watching htop intently...

I wanted to point out it is a crowdsourcing project, so every overlaid page you see has been placed there by a person, often through large institutional efforts at universities, but also individuals just looking to learn about their hometown through these old maps. Thanks for the interest!
okok3857
·10 months ago·discuss
Fun fact: QGIS was originally written just to view PostGIS tables.
okok3857
·10 months ago·discuss
GRASS v.generalize() has a lot of different methods: https://grass.osgeo.org/grass85/manuals/v.generalize.html. I can't personally speak to the differences but probably worth looking into.

The QGIS Simplify tool also has a Visvalingam method: https://docs.qgis.org/3.40/en/docs/user_manual/processing_al...

It may be interesting to combine a workflow with the QGIS Smooth tool: https://docs.qgis.org/3.40/en/docs/user_manual/processing_al...
okok3857
·2 years ago·discuss
I don't see mention of OHM anywhere within TimeMap, is there something I'm missing? Is there a page about where the historical data comes from for the map?
okok3857
·2 years ago·discuss
You may be interested in OpenHistoricalMap: https://www.openhistoricalmap.org, which anyone can contribute to (you can read much more about it here: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OpenHistoricalMap). Edit: I didn't realize at first but from other comments it sounds like TimeMap actually pulls data directly from OHM.
okok3857
·3 years ago·discuss
This was an incredible aspect of the app to have when in Rome this summer! So many public water sources, and it was so, so hot....