On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 4:36 PM, Simone Saviolo wrote:
>
> We proposed the use of "landuse" because it really seems that simple:
> "what is the land used for?" "to deposit things, such as vehicles or
> goods, and, in general, to take care of them". In this sense, it may
> even include storage buil
2010/12/17 Pieren :
> On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 4:36 PM, Simone Saviolo
> wrote:
>>
>> We proposed the use of "landuse" because it really seems that simple:
>> "what is the land used for?" "to deposit things, such as vehicles or
>> goods, and, in general, to take care of them". In this sense, it may
I'll take a photo and add it to OSM in a week, when I am due back there. For
bus depots, I prefer Steve's industrial=vehicle_storage to avoid treating
various French kinds of dépôts in the same way.
- L
On 17 Dec 2010, at 04:43, j...@jfeldredge.com wrote:
> "Depot d'ordures" sounds like a plac
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 11:27 AM, Simone Saviolo
wrote:
>
> Of course, if you're drawing landuses that cover tenths of sq. kms,
> you're probably willing to ignore a mapping so detailed to describe
> depots.
>
>
Yes and it would fine if we could continue in that way. Since landuses
shouldn't overl
Hi,
I started to contribute to OSM a few weeks a ago. I have question. In
Argentina we have an special car service (I think this exists in other
countries, but I'm not sure) called "remis" o "remisse". It's similar
to taxis but the cars (with drivers) wait always in the agency o remis
stop (You ca
On 17 December 2010 11:37, Pieren wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 11:27 AM, Simone Saviolo > wrote:
>
>>
>> Of course, if you're drawing landuses that cover tenths of sq. kms,
>> you're probably willing to ignore a mapping so detailed to describe
>> depots.
>>
>>
> Yes and it would fine if we c
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 7:21 AM, Diego Woitasen wrote:
> Hi,
> I started to contribute to OSM a few weeks a ago. I have question. In
> Argentina we have an special car service (I think this exists in other
> countries, but I'm not sure) called "remis" o "remisse". It's similar
> to taxis but the
This sounds like it might be similar to the "minicab" in the UK. They
are licensed differently from taxis and are only permitted to operate on
a "pre-booked" basis, i.e. you can't just stop one on the street but you
have to phone or go to the office to make a "reservation". They are not
allowed
On 12/17/2010 06:21 AM, Diego Woitasen wrote:
> Hi,
> I started to contribute to OSM a few weeks a ago. I have question. In
> Argentina we have an special car service (I think this exists in other
> countries, but I'm not sure) called "remis" o "remisse". It's similar
> to taxis but the cars (with