because there are like 10 west wing fans on here and only 3 of us think sam and josh had chemistry so they don’t have a ship name i’ve decided to give them one,, to the two other people on here their ship name is leaborn now

seen from Italy

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seen from Poland
because there are like 10 west wing fans on here and only 3 of us think sam and josh had chemistry so they don’t have a ship name i’ve decided to give them one,, to the two other people on here their ship name is leaborn now
La Joven Orquesta sierra de Madrid y la Asociación de Desarrollo Sierra de Guadarrama firman un convenio para potenciar la cultura musical y el turismo
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Using an iPhone as a GPS for JOSM (on Windows)
If you wanna see your current position in JOSM (Java OpenStreetMap Editor), but your mobile computing device lacks a GPS chip, this could help:
You need:
an iOS device
enabled tethering
the GPS 2 IP app
installed JOSM
We're going to install gpsd (and cygwin, socat) on windows and connect it with your iOS device and JOSM.
First, download and install the GPS 2 IP app to your iOS device. Enable tethering, then open the app and use following settings:
NMEA messages to send:
GGA
RMC
Connection method: Socket
iPhone IP selection: Hotspot
Then, install cygwin: Download and run the setup-x86.exe and use the defaults until you reach the Select Packages step. (you'll have to use the 32 bit version, else you have to compile gpsd yourself)
Search for socat, open the Net category and mark it for installation with one click. Then continue with next. A lot of dependencies will be installed, too.
Now download the gpsd binaries from http://home.arcor.de/ulf.lamping/gpsd/gpsd.html (look for gpsd-2.37-1-win32-bin.zip). Extract the contents of that .zip directly into your cygwin\bin dir.
Open the cygwin terminal twice. In the first one, input
socat GOPEN:/dev/gps,ignoreeof TCP:172.20.10.1:11123
(where 172.20.10.1 is the IP displayed by the app).
In the second one, run
gpsd -n -N -D 1 /dev/gps
You can check if everything works correctly by opening a third cygwin terminal and typing gpspipe -w.
Now, open JOSM and install the LiveGPS plugin (Go to Edit > Preferences > Plugins and look for LiveGPS. Enable it, then close the window with OK. The plugin gets downloaded and JOSM restarts itself.
Enable the display of the gps status information panel by enabling Windows > LiveGPS. Then activate the gps position tracking with GPS > Capture GPS track. If everything works correctly, the status field in the panel should read Connected and a new Live GPS Layer should appear in your layer list.
Have fun :)
11/30/14
everyone knows you’re fucked up and i see it too, you have an actual problem but in the morning you came out and smoked one of my cigarettes and when i turned to look at you you looked at me like you actually thought i am beautiful and you said something about my eyes and it was genuine and you were drunk and you were honest and i don’t know shit about you except that you’re a lost soul and i want to lose myself with you
# How to maproulette [on http://maproulette.org](http://maproulette.org)
Three Times Would Be Better || Amy & Jos
Amy was pretty, sure, but she wasn't the kind of drop dead gorgeous girl that a guy who looked like Jos would normally go for. Or at least, in her head she thought that. But none of that really mattered since he was cool and they were going to hang out and more than likely have sex. Amy let her long black and red pin straight hair fall around her shoulders as she slipped into fishnets and a black miniskirt with a red corset top and headed out the door hopping to pull her boots on. She had his address saved in her phone and gave it to the cab driver as she slid into the backseat. Shortly after reaching her destination, she hopped out, paying the driver and making her way to his door, posing on the side the way she always did and smiling while she waited for him to open up.
Mapping made easy!
On Tuesday (27 March) I was lucky enough to see Andy Mabbett @pigsonthewing http://pigsonthewing.org.uk/ share the delights of mapping using Open Street Maps (OSM) www.openstreetmap.org. It's truly enlightening to see how much data has been created and kept up to date by volunteers. I'm not ashamed to say I've always been a Google Maps kind of girl but seeing the level of detail available on OSM was bit of an eye opener! The information which can be used for many different purposes has very few restrictions, this includes using it for commercial purposes (although there may be some restrictions for icons etc). The other very interesting thing to discover was how easy it is for local people to start contributing and keep the data up to date.
There are several editors for contributing to OSM data. JOSM http://josm.openstreetmap is one such an editor written in Java 1.6. Currently it supports loading stand alone GPX tracks and GPX track data from the OSM database as well as loading and editing existing nodes, ways, metadata tags and relations from the OSM database.
Sounds technical? Trust me when I say it's not. To be truthful I haven't undertaken mapping on any scale since my undergraduate days, but as Andy was showing us the various technics you can use, my mind was ticking away as to how I could contribute.
I know it's unrealistic to expect every citizen to take up ownership of their own piece of England (or any part of the world for that matter) and keep it up to date, but, as the well-known retailer says 'every little helps'.
Mapping, here I come!