Foursquare gives Superusers web links to map editing tools

Foursquare gives power users direct map editing links

Foursquare switched to editable OpenStreetMap data for its check-in services over a year ago, but many of its users wouldn’t know it when there hasn’t been a way to tweak maps through place pages. As of today, Foursquare is encouraging a little more interaction: Superusers (frequent contributors) in Australia, Brazil, Germany and the UK can now click a web link to edit a location in OpenStreetMap. Those who aren’t keen on signing up for OSM can still leave a note with their proposed changes. There’s no mention of plans to expand access to regular users, but the firm expects additional rollouts to Superusers in areas where map data is less than trustworthy.

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Via: Foursquare Blog

Source: Foursquare

Google launches Views hub to showcase Photo Spheres and panoramas in Google Maps

Google launches Views hub for sharing Photo Spheres

As slick as Android’s Photo Spheres can be, they’re typically hard to find unless someone posts them for you. Google is making that discovery almost trivial by launching Views, its new Google Maps section for Photo Spheres and panoramas. The page both streamlines importing photos from Google+ and simplifies tracking them down by their author, location or popularity. Google also includes its Street View galleries, giving explorers fast access to professional tours alongside the usual amateur photography. Not many of us can contribute to Views when Photo Sphere only works with a few of the latest Android devices, but everyone can at least see what they’re missing at the source link.

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Via: Google Maps, 9to5 Google

Source: Views

Track Your Travels on a Solid-Lego Map of the World

Track Your Travels on a Solid-Lego Map of the World

Even if you haven’t seen one in person, you’re probably at least familiar with the concept of a scratch-off world map—it hangs on the wall, you scratch off each country as you visit it, etc. But Lego Cuusoo user TPNK came up with a brilliant, far more tactile version made entirely out of—you guessed it—Lego pieces.

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You Can Compare 16 Cities 35 Different Ways With This One Mapping Tool

You Can Compare 16 Cities 35 Different Ways With This One Mapping Tool

These days we’ve got plenty of ways to visualize data within our cities, from car crashes to Flickr photos. But there aren’t many tools that let us compare information about multiple cities at once—until now. Meet Urban Observatory, a site that compares data from 16 global metropoli.

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Travel the World with These Interactive 8-Bit City Maps

Travel the World with These Interactive 8-Bit City Maps

Do you ever wish you lived in a video game? But not like a fancy Xbox game or anything like that. Do you ever wish you lived in Legend of Zelda except with all the comforts of home? If yes, then Brett Camper’s 8-bit city maps are for you.

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Explore an Interactive Map of Every Meteorite Seen in the Past Century

Explore an Interactive Map of Every Meteorite Seen in the Past Century

As long as you’re not in the immediate landing path, meteorites are really fascinating. Over the past century, The Meteoritical Society has confirmed 606 eyewitnessed meteorite landings around the world. Designer Sebastian Sadowski maps them all out in a great interactive infographic that’s tons of fun, until you realize you’re a meteorite’s sitting duck no matter where you live.

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Get Lost In These Abstract Maps of the World’s Great Cities

Get Lost In These Abstract Maps of the World's Great Cities

A city’s street plan isn’t just the canvas that we paint our lives on—it’s a work of art on its own. This is true regardless whether the avenues and thoroughfares were meticulously arranged into an anal-retentive grid, or whether they just, ahem, happened over time as residents sprawled away from the center of town.

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7 Brilliant Reinventions of Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion Map

7 Brilliant Reinventions of Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion Map

The world has changed in countless ways since Buckminster Fuller invented the Dymaxion map in 1943. Wars have come and gone, populations have changed, and entire generations have passed. But Bucky’s map endures, thanks to its endless adaptability—and to prove it, the Buckminster Fuller Institute recently invited the public to help reinvent the map for 2013. Today, we get a glimpse at the best entries.

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11 Map Tattoos That Pay Tribute to Cities and Their Systems

11 Map Tattoos That Pay Tribute to Cities and Their Systems

Tattoos, just like hometowns, leave a permanent mark. If you harbor a special attachment to a city or town—even if you left long ago—inking it on your body forever is often a fitting tribute.

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The Weekly Roundup for 07.15.2013

The Weekly Roundup for 12032012

You might say the week is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workweek, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Weekly Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past seven days — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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