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Jaysyn , (edited ) in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@Jaysyn@kbin.social avatar

I've pulled data from the OSMs for building outlines & such For CAD landbase, so thanks for that.

troybot , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@troybot@kbin.social avatar

Pokemon Go uses OSM for the map data in the game. I've submitted park trails by tracing them in the satellite view and now the game has all the trails.

Obsession , in What was your first experience using Linux? How old were you? Stick around or did you go back to windows before eventually circling back to Linux?

Ubuntu ~2005/2006. I was introduced to Linux by my friend’s older brother in highschool, then proceeded to nuke the windows install on my parents’ PC.

That’s when they decided to buy me a laptop, which I dualbooted ubuntu on. Now almost two decades later, I’m a devops engineer working professionally with Linux

laivindil ,

I was starting in similar years, some time in high school (03-07) I set up a dual boot with Ubuntu. I've dabbled on and off since. Usually put Ubuntu on old laptops to give em some more life, current work laptop is that way. It's never been my primary OS. But I've had either a dual boot or laptop running it most years since then.

UntouchedWagons , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@UntouchedWagons@lemmy.ca avatar

I used OSMAnd for a while before I got a data plan but found it next to useless as it would routinely take nearly an hour (not even joking) to figure out where I was.

TomMasz , in What was your first experience using Linux? How old were you? Stick around or did you go back to windows before eventually circling back to Linux?
@TomMasz@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve been a Mac guy since 1985 but I’ve always had additional machines running other OSes (including Windows). My first Linux experience was with Yggdrasil, which my small company was trying out. We never got it to boot. After that, it was early Red Hat, which I ran for years until the hardware I was using died. After that, it was various versions of Ubuntu on machines at work. Now I’ve got a couple of Raspberry Pis running Raspian.

Spiracle , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@Spiracle@kbin.social avatar

OsmAnd is my family’s go-to app for navigation. I didn’t notice it missing information compared to Google Maps. The opposite really, with several hiking trails or small side-roads not being on Google some years ago. The only issue it has is navigation for more than ~200km at a time. Often, it just times out if you try that. That’s why Google Maps is still installed on some devices.

I haven’t added anything actively. I think I might have enabled an option to send location data to improve the accuracy of the streets or something at some point, but I’m very unsure about that one.

xoggy , in What was your first experience using Linux? How old were you? Stick around or did you go back to windows before eventually circling back to Linux?
@xoggy@programming.dev avatar

A friend loaned me a CD set of Mandrake which had an early version of KDE. I was floored away by something as simple as the level of customization you could do with the taskbar. And having this alien operating system running on an alien EXT3 partition format instead of FAT32 or NTFS that you didn’t need to defragment. It seemed pretty fantastical.

I loved tweaking the desktop environment on Windows by replacing explorer.exe with LiteStep and Blackbox so likewise I did this on Linux. Over time I had fun discovering Gnome2, Fluxbox, XFCE, etc. you name it. Eventually I got a desktop I really liked and felt productive on and as Windows XP approached end of life I had no intention of using Vista so I transitioned to exclusively Linux at that point.

I did play with different distros and running servers at the time, hosted VMs back in the day you had to take whatever distro they offered. But for my desktop I basically went Mandrake, Arch (didn’t know how to make everything work), Debian, Ubuntu, back to Arch.

emhl , in why did you switch?

I only used Windows because I wanted to play video games. My family computer has always been an Ubuntu machine. Since starting university I played less games and I heard that compatibility has gotten much better since the last time I tried to play video games. I decided to Dualboot for a while and decided to fully switch after using the mess that windows 11 was when it was newly released

centopus , in Has anyone used or contributed to OpenStreetMap?
@centopus@kbin.social avatar

I regularly do edits in my city. Its way better than google maps. Especially when you're travelling and want to visit the less tourist crowded parts of whereever you are.

inverimus , in why did you switch?

Windows has just become worse and worse over the years. I was building a new PC and realized I wasn’t going to give MS my money for a terrible OS when Linux was free.

yamapikariya , in Which distro has the best GUI in your opinion?
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

For some reason I find stock GNOME UIs appealing

eugenia , in MATE DE
@eugenia@lemmy.world avatar

Not a bad DE, but nearly unmaintained lately. The development of it has been crawling.

LiquorFan , in why did you switch?

Windows 10 sounded like shit, and Windows 7 stopped being supported.

I had some experience with Linux, most things seemed to work and for the rest I decided that it wasn’t worth the hassle of dealing with Microsoft.

Esin , in Tabby: A terminal for a more modern age
@Esin@lemmy.film avatar

No way, a TNO reference

Makussu , in why did you switch?

Only real option if you want to tinker

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