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How can I view OSM extracts?
  • @Irelephant at least .osm files can be loaded in #JOSM, but if your extract is big enough (say, a city or bigger), it might clog it, since it will try to render _everything_. It's mostly aimed at loading changesets, not whole areas.

    After that, it seems like you can convert the pbf into a SQLite/Spatialite DB and load it in #QGis, but you're already transforming the data.

    EDIT: yay! Federation works! (Answered from Mastodon :)

  • « Les cyclistes ne respectent pas le code de la route », vraiment ?
  • @bassad @CeJiDe et même pas parler des motards, qui sont une espèce de combinaison de voiturer et cycliste...

  • weeklyOSM 741
  • @strubbl wrong link?

  • What distro do you use for your servers?
  • @bjoern_tantau @communism That 'support for years and years' means security support. So even if the nominal versions stay stable, security fixes are backported. Security scans that only check versions usually give false positives: they think fixes in newer versions are not present when in fact they are.

    Many others distros do exactly the same. I only chose Debian because the amount of software already packaged in the distro itself is bigger than any other, barring 3rd party repos.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • @notTheCat there's a technique where you boot with a live system, mount your linux system, chroot into it amd change passwords. If you think this is insecure for your system, then you should considering encrypting at least your home diretory/partition.

  • mdione Marcos Dione @en.osm.town

    Developer, SysAdmin, Open Source, map and photo enthusiast; POI collector.

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