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Steven says...

The goal here is to set up a local cache to use with TangoGPS or other apps like that. I don't have 3G neither WiMax (and there isn't a great coverage anyway...) so I like to grab my tiles before a trip.

Here is a little bash script which help doing this. You just have to know the coordinates of the first tile you want to get.

Example for the Finistère (France, Brittany)

You get it with a right click on the wanted tile, and "show picture", then you get :

Here this is the path from the URL which we are interested in : 8/124/88.

  • 8 stands for the zoom level.
  • 124 si the x coordinate
  • 88 is the y one.


There is a little algorithm to do a recursive download. I tried to sketch it by a small sample based on Brest Area.

Now you know how to use it, open the dl.sh and modify HOME, MAPHOME and EDITED variables. Execute it with "sh dl.sh args".
To finish, don't abuse on it...  If you need a huge area, or very often the same one,  this will be far better to render by yourself the tiles. For that, have a look to Osmarender ot Mapnik on the OpenStreetMap Wiki.

 

 

Click here to download:
dl.sh (1 KB)

Filed under: open

BREAKING: Leaked UK government plan to create "Pirate Finder General" with power to appoint militias, create laws


A source close to the British Labour Government has just given me reliable information about the most radical copyright proposal I've ever seen.

Secretary of State Peter Mandelson is planning to introduce changes to the Digital Economy Bill now under debate in Parliament. These changes will give the Secretary of State (Mandelson -- or his successor in the next government) the power to make "secondary legislation" (legislation that is passed without debate) to amend the provisions of Copyright, Designs and Patents Act (1988).

What that means is that an unelected official would have the power to do anything without Parliamentary oversight or debate, provided it was done in the name of protecting copyright. Mandelson elaborates on this, giving three reasons for his proposal:

1. The Secretary of State would get the power to create new remedies for online infringements (for example, he could create jail terms for file-sharing, or create a "three-strikes" plan that costs entire families their internet access if any member stands accused of infringement)

2. The Secretary of State would get the power to create procedures to "confer rights" for the purposes of protecting rightsholders from online infringement. (for example, record labels and movie studios can be given investigative and enforcement powers that allow them to compel ISPs, libraries, companies and schools to turn over personal information about Internet users, and to order those companies to disconnect users, remove websites, block URLs, etc)

3. The Secretary of State would get the power to "impose such duties, powers or functions on any person as may be specified in connection with facilitating online infringement" (for example, ISPs could be forced to spy on their users, or to have copyright lawyers examine every piece of user-generated content before it goes live; also, copyright "militias" can be formed with the power to police copyright on the web)

Mandelson is also gunning for sites like YouSendIt and other services that allow you to easily transfer large files back and forth privately (I use YouSendIt to send podcasts back and forth to my sound-editor during production). Like Viacom, he's hoping to force them to turn off any feature that allows users to keep their uploads private, since privacy flags can be used to keep infringing files out of sight of copyright enforcers.

This is as bad as I've ever seen, folks. It's a declaration of war by the entertainment industry and their captured regulators against the principles of free speech, privacy, freedom of assembly, the presumption of innocence, and competition.

This proposal creates the office of Pirate-Finder General, with unlimited power to appoint militias who are above the law, who can pry into every corner of your life, who can disconnect you from your family, job, education and government, who can fine you or put you in jail.

More to follow, I'm sure, once Open Rights Group and other activist organizations get working on this. In the meantime, tell every Briton you know. If we can't stop this, it's beginning of the end for the net in Britain.

Filed under: open

Adnan says...

The first is the winner-takes-all world that we saw with Microsoft Windows on the PC, a world that promises simplicity and ease of use, but ends up diminishing user and developer choice as the operating system provider.

The second is an operating system that works like the Internet itself, like the web, and like open source operating systems like Linux: a world that is admittedly less polished, less controlled, but one that is profoundly generative of new innovations because anyone can bring new ideas to the market without having to ask permission of anyone.

I've outlined a few of the ways that big players like Facebook, Apple, and News Corp are potentially breaking the "small pieces loosely joined" model of the Internet. But perhaps most threatening of all are the natural monopolies created by Web 2.0 network effects.

Filed under: open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

bight says...

Here's some gameplay screen shots from our upcoming game Fleeced! Shear Terror, for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Filed under: Open

sanilunlu says...

Academic Earth

MIT OpenCourseWare öncülüğünde başlayan, dünyanın çeşitli yerlerindeki eğitim kurumlarının katıldığı ders kaynaklarının herkesin erişimine açılması ve paylaşılması söz konusu. Bu noktada Academic Earth adlı girişim de bu kaynaklarının birçoğunun toplanmasını sağlamış. Hedeflerini, herkesin dünya standartlarında bir eğitime erişebilmesi olarak tanıtan sitede birçok konuyla ilgili ders videoları, görseller, belgeler ve bu videoların metin halleri yer alıyor. Bunlara aynı zamanda YouTube gibi video sitelerine üyelerin yüklenmiş oldukları ve burada sayfası olan üniversitelerin yükledikleri de eklenebilir. Apple'ın müzik, film ve uygulama satışı yaptığı iTunes Store üzerinde de iTunes U adıyla birçok üniversiteden kaynak bulunuyor.

Ülkemizde de bu kaynaklara katkı açısından Ulusal Açık Ders Malzemeleri Konsorsiyumu girişimi başlatılmış.

Dünyada bilgiye ulaşmanın ne kadar kolay (ve belki daha da önemlisi sıfıra yakın maliyetli) hale geldiğini, internet ortamının sınırları nasıl kaldırdığını ve insanları kendilerine sunulan olanaklar noktasında daha eşit hale getirdiğini görüyoruz. Bizlere de üçüncü dalganın nimetlerinden yararlanmak düşüyor...

Filed under: open