Curses- A Peril MAP
Premiering at 8:50 am AEDT (or 5:50 pm EDT) as part of the Halloween MAPathon!!!
please check it out if you can, it is my baby and everyone worked so hard to make it as awesome as it is!
seen from China

seen from Poland
seen from China
seen from Belarus

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from Russia

seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Dominican Republic
seen from Germany
Curses- A Peril MAP
Premiering at 8:50 am AEDT (or 5:50 pm EDT) as part of the Halloween MAPathon!!!
please check it out if you can, it is my baby and everyone worked so hard to make it as awesome as it is!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
So theres this thread on twitter
And while I fully agree with it, and it's bringing a good conversation for not only the warriors fandom I think but also many artistic communities, some people are worried many people are just upset they aren't getting on popular projects and are jealous of popular artists and that's the end of the story.
In particular I saw an artist I love but won't name say there's nothing wrong with crunching for MAProjects, as its just like being in a game jam. So as someone who's done both I thought I'd share a comparison I made with some friends privately, as to make a point in favor of the thread.
TLDR; short deadline maprojects the way they are right now are bound to the capitalist system that encourages artists to crunch while jams are healthy creative challenges, i dont want to accept this system or treat it as normal even if it is because its very unhealhy.
#BSAMapathonTraining hosted by #TransatlanticSeaScouts made a first impression ==> " Posted @withregram • @tacexploring Results: Here is a screenshot of the initial set of #MissingMaps contributions that were made under the #bsamapathon hashtag that was used at our training #mapathon. Over 100 buildings is not bad for a group of @openstreetmap #newbies! Thank you to the ~30 #explorers, #scouts, #seascouts, and #venturers who participated in the #training. Of course, everyone wishes that our #youth could be doing this kind of training in a group at some creative workspace. Unfortunately, COVID19 makes that impossible. So, we hope that the @Prezi presentation will inspire other scouts to do #humanitarian mapping while under #quarantine! 😁 (@boyscoutsofamerica @seascoutsbsa @scoutmasterjose) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_1LT3ip7xs/?igshid=1lo1tptxzqq5v
L'art de faire du #tea #Grin223 pendant le #GrinCarto ou #CartoGrin un #mapathon sur mesure du samedi 18 Août 2018 #mapequilibre #mapcapturedmoments (à Sikasso Region)
thinkWhere Helps Humanitarian Missing Maps Project
thinkWhere Helps Humanitarian Missing Maps Project
The Missing Maps project is an open, collaborative project to map the most vulnerable places in the developing world, to enable international and local NGOs and individuals to respond more effectively to crises affecting those regions. On June 13 2018, thinkWhere, Scotland’s geographical information specialist, will bring together around 50local community volunteers, including members of the…
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
It gives me great pleasure to announce that my AXS Mapathon Kickstarter has earned over 6k to date. My fingers are crossed that we can work together to meet the lofty goal of 60,000. I’ve gotten a couple of inquiries as to what the funding will be used for if the Kickstarter is successful. After all the Mapathon tool is already built and has been used successfully in over 20 cities. Here are my answers:
1. The Mapathon tool on AXS-MAP requires maintenance and debugging. With each Mapathon, we find new challenges and things that need to be fixed. The Kickstarter helps us with the on going effort to rebuild access-map and the Mapathon tool.
2. The Kickstarter funding will be used towards outreach into colleges and community groups. We want to spread the roots of AXS-MAP into new cities, both large and small.
3. With the success of the Kickstarter the plan is to go international, in a big way. We can work with organizations and NGO-partners to hold Mapathons around the globe. Because AXS-MAP was built using the Google Places API, any place on Google will be on the map.
4. Outreach to corporations and charitable giving in companies. This is one thing which is long over due, because we have been so focused on the build of AXS-MAP, we haven’t had the resources to spend time and effort. To keep reaching out to potential corporate partners.
5. Assembling the Team. Your Kickstarter donations will be used directly to having a dedicated unit, who can start pushing the pavement and make AXS-MAP a permanent fixture of the web so that people with disabilities all over can contribute to the world. Just as everyone else does.
For more information, please look at the information on the Kickstarter page:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/587735327/the-axs-map-mapathon-project
I'm giving a talk at State of the Map and need your help!
I'm giving a lightning talk at my first ever State of the Map conference in a few weeks. I'll be talking about how to organize and run a mapathon. I want to hear from people who have organized or participated in a mapathon so that I can draw from others' experience to provide the most relevant information during the talk.
Please take this brief survey if you want to help others organize mapathons to improve OpenStreetMap! https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/8YLRKKC
(or if you haven't organized a mapathon but have participated in one, take this survey)
A new kind of Yelp
Filmmaker Jason Da Silva was diagnosed with MS when he was 25, and became extremely aware of the difference between accessible and inaccessible environments in public. Through impossible trips on the subway to unreachable meet up spots with friends, he documented his journey with MS and his loss of mobility in When I Walk. Then, he set out to create AXSmap, a crowdsourced map to rate businesses on their accessibility to disabled people. It functions like Yelp – users can leave their own reviews and ratings. Learn more at AXSmap.com or through the iOS or Android apps.
Learn about “mapathons” and how to contribute here:
http://www.fastcoexist.com/3042583/a-ms-patient-builds-a-yelp-for-people-with-disabilities
http://www.axsmap.com/