


Boundaries and other layers worldwide.1968leocomeeatabite wrote:What features that we had on classic Maps will we not have on the current "Ward Map"?
Boundaries is already mention but there are a bunch of neat features in that too. Another one that is in classic is the ability to underlay other maps. For example if you are dealing with flooding it might be handy to put the topographic map in. And different maps show different information. For example one of the maps I can load shows the official town boundaries which none of the other maps do. Another map shows school sections so I know they are state ground. Another one of them has a better listing of small reserviors(might want for water in an emergency) So having that about dozen other maps you can use is a resource. Plus there are a number of other handy small features in the classic maps if you go looking for them. For example the ability to change scale from metric to american. Full screen and the ability to turn other menus on the edges of the screen on and off are really handy for doing screen shots to print maps. To minimize the number of pictures that need to be merged to make a large map this is really handy while doing the screen shots part of the operation.1968leocomeeatabite wrote:.... What features that we had on classic Maps will we not have on the current "Ward Map"?
Under classic maps they already provide topo and it loads at least as fast as the arial photo mode that is commonly used. So don't know what the bandwidth problem would be. As for reading topo lines oh well if they can't then they won't be using the map so it won't matter anyway. Most of us hunt or fish or do other things with topo maps so I will guess most members can read a topo map successfully.pbeaty wrote:Providing Topographic information may choke down low bandwidth connections, and there is a lot of work on GIS department to get the data ready on the server. It may be better to collect 100-year flood (or equivalent in non-US countries) and serve that. This would not require people to be trained in reading topo lines to determine which way non-perennial streams flow, and how water backing up from connecting streams affect the upstream flow. (Let the engineers who did the work for the government provide the data.)
No, this isn't possible with the new maps. The export feature has been removed from most places, by design, to protect membership data.cdw3423 wrote:Anyone hear if we will be able to download the data like we could in the old map?