That’s definitely not normal. The rendering can be a bit slow, but everything else shold be usable. Unless you have a low-range phone. If that is the case, I can recommend Organic Maps, which are much less resource-intensive.
That’s definitely not normal. The rendering can be a bit slow, but everything else shold be usable. Unless you have a low-range phone. If that is the case, I can recommend Organic Maps, which are much less resource-intensive.
Well, you can create an account from EU, although mine got locked after creating just one blog post. And the support does not seem to respond, so I moved to a different platform.
I usually map these with a bare node - you could also use crossing=unmarked. I honestly don’t think a new tag is necessary.
OnlyOffice has a usable client for mobile. And it’s FOSS.
I absolutely love CyclOSM. It’s great for bike commuting, as it differentiates between separated cycle paths and cycle lanes, shows one-way streets that allow opposite bicycle traffic, good/bad surface quality, 20 and 30 km/h streets and bike stands.
OSM has much better coverage in Europe as more volunteers contibute. I heard it’s not that great in the US.
I prefer to map them separately. For paths going along the road I use highway=footway
+ footway=sidewalk
, for separate paths just highway=footway
. You can also add sidewalk=separate
to the road, so that routing software knows to prefer the separately mapped sidewalk to just using the road.
Peertube is a good federated alternative to Youtube, it also connects to the Fediverse and there is a central search engine called Sepia Search, which makes it easier to find content on the different instances.
Hmm… the ID editor is still light. That should be fixed asap along with the map dimming.