Book Image

OpenStreetMap

Book Image

OpenStreetMap

Overview of this book

Imagine being able to create accurate maps that look how you want them to, and use them on the Web or in print, for free. OpenStreetMap allows exactly that, with no restrictions on how or where you use your maps. OpenStreetMap is perfect for businesses that want to include maps on their website or in publications without paying high fees. With this book in hand you have the power to make, alter, and use this geographical data in a collaborative way from anywhere on the Earth.OpenStreetMap was started because most maps you think of as free actually have legal or technical restrictions on their use, holding back people from using them in creative, productive, or unexpected ways. This book will allow you to take control of your own maps and use them smoothly. This book introduces the reader to the OpenStreetMap project and shows you how to participate in the project, and make use of the data it provides. No prior knowledge of the project is assumed, and technical details are kept to a minimum.In this book, you'll learn how easy it is to add your neighborhood to OpenStreetMap using inexpensive GPS equipment, or even no GPS at all. You'll find out how to communicate with other mappers working in the same area, and where to find more information about how to map the world around you.Once you have your area mapped, you'll learn how to turn this information into maps, whether for use in print or online, large or small, and with the details you want shown. The book describes several rendering methods, each suited to different types of map, and takes you through a tutorial on each one.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
OpenStreetMap
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
4
How OpenStreetMap Records Geographical Features
Index

Why contribute to OpenStreetMap?


You don't have to map anything yourself to make use of OpenStreetMap data, so why should you do any mapping yourself?

It's fun! Mappers tell stories of finding footpaths less than a mile from their house or workplace that they didn't know existed. Surveying has taken mappers to places they'd otherwise never have visited, and made them appreciate their local area in a different way.

The area you need may not have been mapped in OpenStreetMap yet. While urban areas in Western Europe have extensive coverage, more rural areas in those countries or places elsewhere in the world may still not have been mapped. The project mostly relies on volunteers, and less densely populated areas get mapped at a slower rate. Surveying the area yourself, at whatever level of detail you require, is easy to do. If you have a commercial project that requires mapping, you could pay a professional surveyor to do the work, which may be more cost-effective in the longer term than paying license fees for a proprietary database.

You may be interested in features that no one else has mapped yet. An area may have its roads extensively mapped, but not have any post boxes, car parking, or retail outlets mapped. If you add those features, you may find other mappers start adding them in other areas, and that the features you add to the database are kept up-to-date by the community. You could get back more from the project than you put in this way.

By contributing to the project, you're also contributing to the common good. The license used by OpenStreetMap means that any data in the database forms a commons, in perpetuity, and without restrictions. It puts accurate, customizable mapping within the reach of small, non-commercial groups, such as clubs and societies, charities and other voluntary organizations.