Hi,
some questions from a non-native (to the British, US, AU and other natives):
1. What is a steel worker?
Is it someone who works in a steel mill
http://growthexpertblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/SteelWorkerGentex_l1.jpg
or is it someone who builds structural steel work (aka the men (and
I feel so confused... of course you aren't talking about mapping people ??
On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 11:43 AM, M∡rtin Koppenhoefer
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> some questions from a non-native (to the British, US, AU and other natives):
>
> 1. What is a steel worker?
>
> Is it someone who works in a steel
On Fri, 15 Apr 2011 11:48:35 -0400, Josh Doe wrote:
> I feel so confused... of course you aren't talking about mapping people ??
Why not? :)
Realtime worldwide people tracking using OSM.
(and now you all know what's the purpose of the subcutaneous chips implanted by
aliens)
Yay!
--
. ''
2011/4/15 Josh Doe :
> I feel so confused... of course you aren't talking about mapping people ??
Let's say I am tagging people offering services. I am less interested
in the man working in the steel mill, I am interested in the word for
constructing supporting/structural steel buildings.
ch
I think Josh's joke does get to a serious answer to your question: I don't
think you should use the word that describes the worker, but the word that
describes the work. However, I see that in the craft=* space (is this where
you're heading with this Martin?) most of the tags do describe the perso
2011/4/15 Brad Neuhauser :
> I think Josh's joke does get to a serious answer to your question: I don't
> think you should use the word that describes the worker, but the word that
> describes the work. However, I see that in the craft=* space (is this where
> you're heading with this Martin?) mos
Am 15.04.2011 19:49, schrieb M∡rtin Koppenhoefer:
2011/4/15 Brad Neuhauser:
About "steel worker", I would imagine that as a person working in a steel
mill, who might also be called a foundry worker. The other case you mention
could be called a framer, although carpenter or just construction wor
Hold it, there was consistency in the past? :)
IANACW (construction worker) but framer seems like it would be generic and
could apply to steel or wood framing. I think some (many?) carpenters in
the US know how to work with steel for framing as well as wood.
As further information, from my unde
On 4/15/11 2:18 PM, Brad Neuhauser wrote:
Hold it, there was consistency in the past? :)
IANACW (construction worker) but framer seems like it would be generic
and could apply to steel or wood framing. I think some (many?)
carpenters in the US know how to work with steel for framing as well
recently i stumbled across one of my edits i did over a year ago. i
mapped a new house with building=construction and the area around it
with landuse=construction. i totally forgot about that, and since
there don't seem to be any other mappers close by, nobody removed the
construction tag even thou
I'm not sure if I'd call it delete, maybe something more verbose and
general like "reinspect_date". This would be useful for some highway
construction projects I've added which have given an estimated date of
completion.
-Josh
On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 4:08 PM, Flaimo wrote:
> recently i stumbled
On 4/15/11 4:18 PM, Josh Doe wrote:
I'm not sure if I'd call it delete, maybe something more verbose and
general like "reinspect_date". This would be useful for some highway
construction projects I've added which have given an estimated date of
completion.
yes, reinspect_date might be useful. al
2011/4/15 Peter Wendorff :
> On the other hand we in Germany - probably in the German speaking countries
> in general (but I'm not sure) do not consequently distinguish between making
> cuffins and making furniture - although there are words for either historic
> meaning - Tischler (where Tisch is
2011/4/15 Brad Neuhauser :
> In searching, I also came across the term "ironworker" which applies to
> larger buildings, bridges, etc.
thank you, this is the term I was looking for.
cheers,
Martin
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2011/4/16 M∡rtin Koppenhoefer :
> 2011/4/15 Brad Neuhauser :
>> In searching, I also came across the term "ironworker" which applies to
>> larger buildings, bridges, etc.
ironworkers can (wikipedia, please correct me if I got it wrong) be
divided into the following types:
- reinforcing ironwork
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