<div>Free-thinking from ignorance of how practical it would be for the developer...</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Maybe one way of foregrounding OSM's data-richness would be to have access to some of this detail - and ideally an edit option (just the tags for that area/way/node) - if you click on something. This takes you from "I can see it" to "I know what it is" to "I could change it" in the minimum number of steps. </div>
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<div>You could go further - shift click to add a new point (at high zoom levels), perhaps.</div>
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<div>Richard<br><br></div>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Thu, Jun 18, 2009 at 10:34 AM, Tom Chance <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:tom@acrewoods.net">tom@acrewoods.net</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid"><br>On Thu, 18 Jun 2009 07:07:45 +0000 (GMT), Joe Richards<br><<a href="mailto:joefish75@yahoo.com">joefish75@yahoo.com</a>><br>
<div class="im">> You make a valid point, but the instant reaction of a few people I showed<br>> <a href="http://openstreetmap.org/" target="_blank">openstreetmap.org</a> to in Australia was "oh a map of Europe/UK". It was<br>
only<br>> after a bit of scrolling/panning that they got the idea, it was "a bit<br>like<br>> Google Maps but with different colours". Obviously after much ranting on<br>> my part they 'got it' but if I hadn't been there, they would have looked<br>
at<br>> the map, and surfed onto another site.<br><br></div>That's exactly why I think the front page needs to really highlight more<br>than the slippy map, which just says "we're Google maps with different<br>
colours (and with gaps, slooowwww search and no obvious way to send a link<br>with a marker)."<br><br>It's funny how a lot of people just ignore most of the UI elements on a web<br>page and stick to what looks like the main content. We've learned to ignore<br>
adverts, menus we probably don't need, etc.<br><br>The idea that many people will understand OpenStreetMap by seeing the map,<br>noticing the edit link and maybe signing up, or read and understand the<br>text on the left, or following a link to "Help/Wiki" and navigating through<br>
the tremendously confusing pages, is a bit fanciful.<br><br>People are different; some like text, others like pictures, and those we<br>can't help much with a web page like sounds and touchy-feely learning. The<br>least we could do is give stronger visual clues to the distinctiveness of<br>
OSM, which so far the 3 column layout does better than any other<br>suggestions I've read about so far.<br><br>Regards,<br><font color="#888888">Tom<br></font>
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