
Hi again, On 16/01/2011 02:54, Marko Mäkelä wrote:
What is the typical usage scenario of the shelter? Is it for protecting
4 posts in the ground with some kind of overhanging roof. People will seek shelter under the roof from either sun or rain. These are found all over Thailand on road sides. If it rains you can often even get your bike in there, if there aren't too many people. There are no bus stops in the country side, but people may wait there for public transport. You can't call it a building, as it doesn't have walls. Whatever you call it, it should not show in the map as a camp ground, as even alpine shelters have nothing to do with that.
In any case, amenity=shelter in the img file becomes "Unknown type (0x2b05, point)" in GPSMapEdit. Why in the map this becomes a camp ground is beyond me, but it's a bug.
To me it would seem to be a bug or omission in GPSMapEdit. It is Garmin who defines the meanings of the codes, not some third-party software author.
I'm with you there.
Incidentally, the area highway=services on the GPS map turns into a POI "Exit Unknown" with an interesting properties page. Check it out @ N14.85751 E100.09283
This is probably because you are using add-pois-to-areas.
I think you are correct here (Lambertus certainly does), although the POI should be something more intelligent.
The POI for the highway=services could be inappropriate. Are there any significant amounts of highway=motorway_junction that are tagged as highway=services? If not, we should probably remove the highway=services from the POI translation. The existing translations for amenity=fuel and shop=* should cover the road-side services, after all.
It's got nothing to do with junctions. From the wiki: "A service station to get food and eat something, often found at motorways " "Service station" is probably not a good description, as that implies a place run by a petrol company. For the POI I would suggest "Exit Services" if the area doesn't have a name, but others may have better ideas. Kind regards, Peter.