Sorry to bring back this old topic...<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:56, Lennard <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:ldp@xs4all.nl">ldp@xs4all.nl</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
<div class="im">On 24-9-2010 11:38, Tiziano D'Angelo wrote:<br>
<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
- The administrative boundary between some regions and autonomous<br>
republics of North Caucasus was marked as country border [3] while it<br>
should be merely an administrative one<br>
</blockquote>
<br></div>
Not wanting to get into border disputes, but admin_level=2 _is_ the national level, and 3 is subnational.<br></blockquote><div><br>Found out that...the North Caucasus Republics borders within Russian Federation are correctly tagged with admin level=3 as they are a subnational entity (Federal District). But IMHO Mapnik shows them similarly to country borders, this could lead to misunderstandings if one doesn't look at the actual data...problem of the renderer???<br>
<br>--------<br><br>On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 11:56, Kirill Bestoujev <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:bestoujev@gmail.com">bestoujev@gmail.com</a>></span>
wrote:<br>>The
question was discussed on the Russian osm-forum, we decided to<br>
>leave the borders as they are now, not to start a war of edits with<br>>Georgian osmers, as Georgia does not recognize Abkhazia or South<br>
>Osetia as independet countries. I think it would be wise to leave it<br>
>as it is now not to create conflicts.<br>
><br>
>Kirill<br>
<br>
2010/9/24 Tiziano D'Angelo <<a href="mailto:tiziano.dangelo@gmail.com">tiziano.dangelo@gmail.com</a>>:<br>
> - Depending on the points of view, the border Georgia / Abkhazia
[4] now<br>
> marked as an administrative can be marked as country border. For
example,<br>
> Kosovo is marked likewise (with a country border), although not
recognized<br>
> internationally by the majority of countries (36% of the total
recognize it)<br>
> and it isn't even listed on ISO-3166-1 / UN [5], as well as
Abkhazia (4 UN<br>
> member states recognize it).<br>
> From a "de facto" point of view (and for some countries "de jure")
Abkhazia<br>
> is a fully independent state from Georgia (I noticed it personally
while<br>
> there) and as far as the Georgians say, it is no longer under
Georgia's<br>
> influence or control and it will be like that also in the future.
What would<br>
> you say to a cartographic point of view? from a tourist point of
view, for<br>
> example, it is a separate entity from Georgia (you pass a border
control,<br>
> there is a visa...), so a tourist-oriented map would logically draw
it as a<br>
> separate country.<br>
> Generally speaking about any kind of disputed terriories, is there
any way<br>
> to keep both POV tagging boundaries as "Disputed" / "Recognized by
Some<br>
> states"/"something else"?<br>
> Then, if we want to develop OSM in this country, it goes without
saying that<br>
> if locals will see the boundaries as they are now (as part of
Georgia<br>
> region, unrealistic and not corresponding to reality), they will
never agree<br>
> to use OSM! ... while it would be reasonable to use OSM
extensively, since<br>
> for example Google has no map of Abkhazia, and instead there's
something<br>
> already on OSM.<br>
><br>
> - what is the standard for naming of places? What has to be put in
name, in<br>
> int_name tags? Which is the scale of priority? local language I
suppose...<br>
> so capital of Abkhazia, Sukhum, should be tagged as name=Аҟəа
(local<br>
> abkhazian name) name:ru=Сухум name:ka= სოხუმი , int_name=Sukhum;
Sukhumi ;<br>
> etc...<br>
> Is there a way to simultaneously display multiple names (like
Google Maps<br>
> showing the name in Cyrillic and transliterated Russian or English
version)?<br><br>About Abkhazia, after Kosovo, I discovered North Cyprus border (de facto) is tagged as admin_level=2, even though it is recognized by only one country in the world, as for the draft proposal that I saw in this page: <a href="http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:boundary%3Dadministrative#10_admin_level_values_for_specific_countries">http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:boundary%3Dadministrative#10_admin_level_values_for_specific_countries</a><br>
So the same tagging scheme could apply to Abkhazia as well, I guess. Or as the iure status under Georgia would be autonomous republic, then level=3<br>Sorry to bring up again the issue, but my opinion is that all
countries/territories in the same de facto situation shall be tagged
likewise, so either admin_level = 2 for all or =4, or as compromise use admin_level=3 in these situations. I'm happy to see that the proposal for North Cyprus has been adopted.<br><br>Moreover, here: <a href="http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Cyprus">http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Cyprus</a> / <a href="http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Disputes#On_the_Ground_Rule">http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Disputes#On_the_Ground_Rule</a> I found more evidence that the scheme of naming should be the same as the mentioned cases, so Abkhazian name in the name tag (cause it is definitely the on ground version, and even official language for Georgia too in that de iure autonomous republic) + all the other languages naming with their respective tags.<br>
In this case Abkhazian is written in cyrillic, so the international better-known name is put into brackets next to the Abkhazian name for easier understanding by non-Abkhazians. In fact, this exact scheme has been applied by fellow mapper Ulrich Ludat in his edits this last month in Abkhazia.<br>
<br>Ulrich really made a great job improving greatly Abkhazia map situation, maybe the issues weren't properly raised before because of the very little mapping activity in that place???<br><br>thanks for the attention<br>
<br>Tiziano<br><br></div></div>