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Taking Control of Canada’s Digital Geography with Open-Source GIS

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(This is the second part of our series, following the article exploring France’s success with open-source GIS)

Canada’s geospatial systems are at a crossroads. Technology is moving fast, and the pressure is on for more efficient, flexible solutions. It’s time for Canada to think seriously about modernizing its geospatial infrastructure. Open-source GIS could be a game-changer — cutting costs, making everything work together better, and giving developers the freedom to create what we actually need.

This also ties into the larger conversation about creating systems that truly work for Canada and protecting our digital sovereignty. With shifting trade alliances and global politics in a constant flux now, it’s becoming clear that control over our own digital infrastructure is more important than ever.

This concern was echoed by multiple thought leaders at GeoIgnite 2025, where panelists and keynote speakers underscored the need for Canada to take greater ownership of its geospatial infrastructure and reduce reliance on foreign technologies.

France is the best example of how a clear commitment to open-source GIS has paid off. With over 1,000 local authorities publishing open geodata and a 19% year-over-year increase in government data sharing, the French model demonstrates how a national strategy can drive real change.

This change didn’t come overnight, but is the result of a more than a decade-long strategy — a commitment that started back in 2012 when then-Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault issued a directive calling on public administrations to prioritize open-source software. Since then, over the past 13 years, the French government has put significant resources into supporting open-source initiatives.

The result? A thriving ecosystem that not only helps the public sector but also empowers local developers and citizens.

Why Open Source?

Open-source GIS not only offers financial benefits by reducing licensing fees but also encourages more flexible and transparent systems. This aligns with the growing global trend of governments embracing open-source solutions to increase control over their geospatial data and enhance service delivery. From Germany, to the UK, Australia, South Korea, Brazil, India, governments are pushing for new software to be built on open standards, and there’s a growing emphasis on transitioning existing systems to open-source platforms.

The aim is clear: reduce costs, boost digital sovereignty, and create a more resilient technological foundation. This global trend demonstrates how open-source software is no longer just a nice-to-have, but a critical element in modernizing public sector infrastructure.

Beyond financials, open-source GIS provides greater flexibility. The software is often more intuitive and feature-rich, tailored to the needs of end-users. It’s highly customizable, supported by an active community of developers and users, and built with up-to-date standards for interoperability. This means that open-source GIS can seamlessly integrate with other systems and read a variety of file formats — reducing the barriers to adoption and making it easier for public services to work together.

Moreover, the extensibility of open-source software allows for continuous enhancement, enabling governments to add new features and capabilities as needed.

As digital sovereignty becomes a bigger deal globally, it’s clear Canada needs to step up — and the time to act is now.

Canada: Fragmented, But Room for Growth

Canada recognizes the value of open-source software, but our approach is largely inconsistent. We have made data more accessible, but we haven’t built the open-source GIS tools to back it up.

The key framework for open source was the 2018 Directive on Management of Information Technology, which has since been replaced by the Policy on Service and Digital and the Directive on Service and Digital that came into effect on April 1, 2020. These policies push for using open standards and open-source software in public services to make them more accessible and interoperable.

The Policy on Service and Digital also has a clear message for departments: use open standards and solutions whenever it makes sense. To help with this, the government released the Guide for Using Open Source Software.

But here’s the catch: none of these policies actually make open-source mandatory. They just suggest it when it’s practical. That’s a big difference from how France approaches it, where open source is often the default.

Where Canada has made real progress is in making geospatial data more accessible. Back in 2014, the Open Government Directive introduced the idea that public data should be “open by default” unless restricted by privacy or security concerns. The goal was simple: enhance transparency and public engagement while making data available in reusable formats.

One of the key projects that came out of this is Open Maps, a platform that brings together geospatial data from different government sources. Another important effort is the GeoBase Initiative. It’s a partnership between federal, provincial, and territorial governments to provide high-quality geospatial data without any cost. The principal is to “collect once, use many times” to avoiding duplication. Then there’s the Canadian Geospatial Data Infrastructure (CGDI)  which helps make data sharing easier across the country.

One notable initiative is Geo.ca, which provides access to high-quality, publicly available geospatial data and serves as a key resource for federal, provincial, and territorial governments. It aligns with the broader goal of enhancing transparency, public engagement, and data-sharing across the country. While Geo.ca plays an important role in data accessibility, there’s still no coordinated national strategy to build open-source GIS tools specifically for public administration.

One of the few examples is Whitebox Geospatial Analysis Tools (Whitebox GAT), an open-source GIS tool developed at the University of Guelph. While it has received recognition, it’s more of an academic project than a national effort. There’s no coordinated plan to build open-source GIS tools specifically for public administration.

The result: even though a lot of geospatial data is openly available, people still often use commercial software to work with it. That means there’s still a heavy reliance on proprietary GIS tools. It’s a bit of a mismatch — open data, but closed software, which limits the potential for fully open, interoperable geospatial ecosystems.

Lessons for Canada’s Digital Future

For Canadian policymakers and tech leaders, France’s experience offers a masterclass in digital transformation. The French success story hinges on four key elements:

  • First, policy consistency. France didn’t just start encouraging open-source adoption. It was mandated through clear legislation. Such an approach created the certainty that developers and institutions need for long-term planning.
  • Second, investment to back up policy. By funding projects like OrbisGIS and Constellation-SDI, France ensured that open-source alternatives could mature into enterprise-grade solutions.
  • Third, pragmatism. France’s willingness to use proprietary tools where necessary ensures the public sector does not lose out on technological advancements. The goal is not to eliminate commercial software but to minimize reliance on it.
  • Finally, active engagement with the public converts users into useful contributors. Projects like Panoramax are a huge success because they tap into civic pride and professional expertise, which in turn creates a virtuous cycle of improvement.

The Path Forward

Digital maps and geospatial systems are now a cornerstone of our digital infrastructure. During disasters like floods or wildfires, these tools are critical for coordinating emergency responses and directing resources where they’re needed most. When it comes to urban planning, decisions about where to place new transit lines or hospitals rely heavily on accurate geospatial data to ensure those choices are sound and effective.

France recognized this reality years ago. Their adoption of open-source GIS is much more than cost saving — it’s about reshaping the way we control the digital infrastructure that increasingly influences our physical world.

Canada can learn a lot from France’s approach. We don’t have to copy it, but we can certainly draw from their insight that geospatial data is too important to leave entirely in external hands. Open-source solutions give Canadians the chance to take control of their digital geography, all while encouraging homegrown innovation.

The real question for Canadian policymakers isn’t whether we can afford to invest in open-source GIS — it’s whether we can afford not to.

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sarcozona
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These evangelical men saved sex for marriage – they weren’t well prepared

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Like many people, reaching the age of 40 inspired Matt to do some self-reflection. He had achieved many hallmarks of adulthood: a college degree, a career he enjoyed, and two beloved dogs. But he’d never had a relationship, or even a sexual partner.

This weighed heavy on him; he craved the experience of a deep romantic connection and wondered how it might feel to be in love.

Matt, who is using a pseudonym, grew up in a fundamentalist Christian household where sex and masturbation were considered sins. The only message he could ever remember hearing was that it would ruin his life and condemn him to hell.

Though he’d drifted from evangelicalism, sexual shame still clung to him. Around his birthday, he decided to experiment and bought a male sex toy. But after unwrapping the bulky plastic object and fumbling with it, he felt nothing.

“I felt so embarrassed and stupid,” he said. “I’m 40 and I don’t even know how to use this thing.”

Frustrated, he vented in a Facebook group for ex-evangelicals, ranting about how he’d never learned even the basics of sex. It struck a chord. With 30,000 members, the group regularly discusses sexuality and relationships. Members trade stories, comfort each other, and share resources – books, therapists, anything that might help.

One commenter recommended a private group: the Purity Culture Dropout Program, run by sex educator Erica Smith. It offers sex-ed lessons and a safe space for people to unpack fear, compare upbringings, and confront the shame they’ve internalized.

Matt enthusiastically signed up.


Purity culture – the conservative Christian belief in abstaining from sex until marriage – boomed in the 1990s and early 2000s, just as Matt was a teen.

In 1993, the Southern Baptist Convention launched its “true love waits” program, which encouraged teens to take “pledges” promising to save themselves for marriage. Books such as I Kissed Dating Goodbye (1997), gave teens strict instructions not to date for fun. Purity balls popped up, where girls attended with their fathers, who vowed to “protect” their daughters’ virginity.

By the 2000s, purity culture was mainstream. The Jonas brothers wore true love waits “purity rings.” But it wasn’t just a church thing – its leaders pushed it as a national issue.

In 1994, “true love waits” gathered thousands of teens in Washington, carpeting the National Mall with 200,000 pink, yellow, and blue pledge cards. Two years later, Bill Clinton signed a bill funding abstinence-only sex ed at $50m a year. The Bush administration expanded it, despite mounting evidence that abstinence-only education didn’t reduce teen sexual activity.

Purity culture enforced rigid gender roles: men were cast as aggressors; girls were told not to tempt them. Both ended up alienated from their bodies and desires.

But rarely do we hear about heterosexual men raised in this ideology. Purity culture “tells men they’re supposed to lead”, says former minister and religion scholar Bradley Onishi, co-host of the podcast Straight White American Jesus. “It says God made you aggressive, an uncontrollable sexual beast.”

“If men don’t heal from purity culture, they’ll keep hurting themselves and others,” he adds. “They won’t form healthy relationships – romantic, familial, professional, or political.”

Joshua Harris, author of I Kissed Dating Goodbye, has since apologized for the fear he instilled and the false promise that his method would lead to a happy ending.

Too little, too late, perhaps. Today, 17 US states still offer abstinence-only sex ed – and they have higher-than-average teen pregnancy rates.


Matt was born in 1982 in Pennsylvania. His father was heavily involved with the Independent Fundamentalist Baptist church, a deeply conservative denomination that believes men have divine authority over women and children. Weekends meant choir practice and pledging allegiance to the American flag near the pulpit.

As a child, Matt was quiet and empathetic. He couldn’t play sports due to a heart condition and instead enjoyed music and art – activities his community considered feminine. “I got the message early that there was something inappropriate about that,” he said. “The message was men should be strong and tough.”

Formal sex education was off-limits in his house. However, like many children, he discovered masturbation around the age of nine or 10 – even though he did not understand what it was. “Sometimes I had trouble falling asleep, and I realised that touching myself was soothing,” he said.

At 11, his father caught him in the act and dragged him to the dining room, where his mother was helping Matt’s younger brother with homework. “He was yelling at me, screaming ‘Are you sexually active?’” Matt remembered. “I felt so humiliated, I just wanted to melt into a puddle on the floor.”

Weeks later, his Sunday school teacher told the class Magic Johnson’s HIV diagnosis was God’s punishment for sexual sin.

“I immediately started panicking,” Matt said. “I figured I must have made some kind of sexual sin, and that was why my dad had been so angry. So I thought I must have made God just as angry.”

He soon found himself in a repetitive loop, promising God not to masturbate again, then breaking his promise and praying for forgiveness.

“I think I eventually figured out you can’t catch HIV from masturbating,” he recalled dryly. “But by then, I was receiving all kinds of other purity culture messages.”

As he moved through his teens, the purity industry was booming. Matt’s youth pastors read passages from I Kissed Dating Goodbye and explained that sexual contact would ruin their future marriages. They compared pre-marital sex to a piece of gum: the more times it’s chewed, the less appealing it is.

“The idea of sexual sin terrified me,” Matt remembered. Whenever he came across pornography or sex scenes in movies, they didn’t make him feel aroused: “Which made me feel smug, like I was more godly than other boys.”

According to his church’s teachings, this godly behavior would be rewarded with a perfect relationship, and Matt still craved a romantic connection. But he wasn’t sure how to turn any of his friendships with girls into something deeper.

“From what I was taught, it seemed you were friends with someone and at some point it would just happen,” he said. “But I didn’t know how to make it happen.”


The Purity Culture Dropout Program costs $50 a month. It offers two live lessons per month, a lesson archive, and a private discussion space.

The first session Matt joined, in 2024, tackled the myth of porn addiction. Most experts don’t consider it physically addictive, though it can become compulsive. Matt shared that youth leaders had told him porn would destroy his life.

“The responses were so open and accepting – it felt safe,” he said.

Smith, the course founder, wasn’t raised in purity culture but has seen its wreckage firsthand. She has an MA in Education from Widener University’s Center for Human Sexuality Studies and previously taught sex ed to young women and LGBTQ youth in Philadelphia’s juvenile justice system.

She’s watched the post-2016 wave of religious “deconstruction” accelerate during Covid. “People were leaving churches and saying, ‘I need sex ed. I need someone to talk to,’” she said.

When she launched the program in 2019, most clients were women. Now, more men are signing up – often nudged by partners or female friends.

She sees two main groups: men who rushed into marriage to have sex, only to end up in dysfunctional relationships; and men like Matt, who arrive at adulthood with no sexual experience at all.

“So many struggle with sexual thoughts, body image, and basic confidence,” Smith said. “And when it comes to dating, they don’t know where to begin.”

Sex therapist Jeremiah Gibson often quips that “you don’t need to have grown up in the church to be fucked over by the church”. Along with his partner Julia Postema, he specialises in working with couples who’ve left high-control religions. The pair also host a podcast, Sexvangelicals, with the tagline: “The sex education the church didn’t want you to have.”

Both were raised in fundamentalist traditions and married – then subsequently divorced – while young. They partly blame purity culture for those relationship breakdowns; none of them had the emotional tools to discuss the crucial components of a life lived together.

“Communicating your sexual needs and desires is one of the most vulnerable things you can do,” Gibson said. “One of the theories in sex therapy is that if couples can solve problems around sexuality, then they can solve problems around anything.”

“Purity culture can really dehumanize both men and women,” added Postema. She says the men she works with are often stuck in a “double-bind” of being told God made them insatiable sexual creatures, but that they must also constantly fight this God-given nature.

Gibson believes that comprehensive sex education would not just help couples have healthier sex lives, but would go some way to reducing wider divisions in society.

“If it were a part of our curriculum, I think that we would have better ways of resolving differences,” Gibson said. “We wouldn’t be excoriating people who have different values to us. We’d see an increase in both men’s and women’s ability to communicate clearly and concisely.”


Nathanial, or “Nate”, now 37, grew up attending a non-denominational evangelical megachurch in upstate New York. Religion trickled down to every aspect of family life.

In his early teens he joined a church-based men’s “accountability group”. These sprung up around the country during the 1990s, with the most famous being Focus on the Family’s Promise Keepers. Youth leaders encouraged the boys to confess every time they “stumbled” by looking at porn or masturbating. Nate and his peers shared tactics on how to resist sin, such as snapping an elastic band around their wrist when they had “impure thoughts”.

“What that does – or at least, what it did in my mind – is that all women are viewed as potential wives,” he said. “It frames women as not people, but as plot devices in your life.”

Nate met his first girlfriend at church when he was 16 and asked her out by telling her he could see them getting married one day. The pair were determined to keep their relationship as Godly as possible. The one time the couple went slightly further than kissing, “she was so upset she didn’t speak to me for a whole week”.

He met his now-wife, Katy, on a study abroad program in France and got married at 23. Though they were beginning to question evangelical teachings, they still waited until their wedding to have sex – partly because Katy, who’d never received sex education, was terrified of getting pregnant.

But their combined lack of experience placed a strain on the relationship. Katy had been taught in church to submit to her husband, that she should never refuse him sex, and that men needed to have sex daily. When Nate would sometimes rather – in his words – “eat ice cream and watch TV”, she’d feel upset and rejected.

“There were times where it was uncomfortable, because we had certain expectations of what the opposite sex wanted,” said Katy. “And when that wasn’t the case, it felt very confusing.”

Therapists working with couples in similar situations often witness relationships break down entirely. But over time, Nate and Katy learned to discuss what they were experiencing. These conversations led them to completely pick apart purity culture, and they eventually left evangelical Christianity in favour of the liberal ELCA church.

“In a weird way, [purity culture] helped us communicate – we didn’t have previous partners to figure things out with, so we had to figure them out together,” Katy said.

Hearing about women’s experiences in evangelical culture has played a big role in helping Nate question the ideas around gender he grew up with. “For us boys, the teachings were always very internal, policing our thoughts and feelings,” he said. Katy, on the other hand, was taught from an early age to not tempt men to stray, to always dress modestly and never do anything that could be misconstrued as flirting: “It sounds like so much pressure, having to monitor your surroundings.”

The experience has shaped how the couple are raising their six-year-old daughter and ten-year-old son. “I want my daughter to have full information about her body – I don’t want her to go through what I did,” said Katy. As for their son, “I just want him to understand that women are people,” said Nate.


Today, most of the purity balls and rings are gone, only to be replaced by Christian influencers. “I see this new generation of TikTok and Instagram influencers talking about how wonderful it is to follow God and wait until marriage for sex,” says Smith. She also sees purity messaging being absorbed into new-age spirituality, with ideas about the “divine masculine or feminine” mirroring the same rigid gender roles.

As he made his way through the Purity Culture Dropout Program, Matt began sifting through childhood memories. “I see so much that triggered shame, and that probably made me the way that I am,” he said.

As someone who doesn’t feel much arousal from typical erotic material, the course has helped him realise he may fall somewhere on the asexuality spectrum. “But the question I still have is: Was I always that way? Or is it because of purity culture?” he said. “I think it really installed a fear of anything sexual in me.”

Matt still longs for a romantic connection, but the idea of embarking on one remains daunting. “Not having any of that practice that most people have had, and having this trauma, it all makes me a bit nervous at the idea of going into relationships,” he said. “I don’t know if that will ever change.”

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sarcozona
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Trump quietly shutters the only federal agency that investigates industrial chemical explosions

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This coverage is made possible through a partnership between Grist and Verite News, a nonprofit news organization with a mission to produce in-depth journalism in underserved communities in the New Orleans area.

On a summer night in 2023, an explosion at one of Louisiana’s biggest petrochemical complexes sent a plume of fire into the sky. More explosions followed as poison gas spewed from damaged tanks at the Dow chemical plant, triggering a shelter-in-place order for anyone within a half mile of the facility, which sprawls across more than 830 acres near Baton Rouge.

For more than a year, a little-known government agency has been investigating the incident. But the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board will likely shut down before completing its probes of the Dow explosion and other such incidents across the country. President Donald Trump’s administration has quietly proposed shutting down the board, an independent federal agency charged with uncovering the causes of large-scale chemical accidents.

Near the end of a 1,224-page budget document released with little fanfare on May 30, White House officials said shutting down the agency, commonly called the CSB, will help “move the nation toward fiscal responsibility” as the Trump administration works to “redefine the proper role of the federal government.” The CSB’s $14 million annual budget would be zeroed out for the 2026 fiscal year and its emergency fund of $844,000 would be earmarked for closure-related costs. The process of shutting the agency down is set to begin this year, according to CSB documents

Eliminating the CSB will come at a cost to the safety of plant workers and neighboring communities, especially along the Gulf Coast, where the bulk of the U.S. petrochemical industry is concentrated, said former CSB officials and environmental groups. 

“Closing the CSB will mean more accidents at chemical plants, more explosions and more deaths,” said Beth Rosenberg, a public health expert who served on the CSB board from 2013 to 2014. 

“This shows that the Trump administration does not care about frontline communities already burdened with this industry,” said Roishetta Ozane, founder of the Vessel Project, an environmental justice group in Lake Charles. “We’re the ones who have to shelter in place or evacuate whenever there’s an explosion or [chemical] release, and now there will be less oversight when these things happen.”

The CSB did not respond to a request for comment. 

The proposed closure of the CSB follows several other moves by the Trump administration to slash staffing levels at the Environmental Protection Agency and ease federal health and safety regulations. 

Founded in 1998, the CSB investigates the causes of petrochemical accidents and issues recommendations to plants, regulators and business groups. The CSB doesn’t impose fines or penalties, instead relying on voluntary compliance or on enforcement by other agencies, such as the EPA, to mandate safety improvements.

Of the more than 100 investigations the CSB has conducted, Texas leads the country with 22 cases, followed by Louisiana with eight. 

“Those numbers tell us that Louisiana and Texas really need the Chemical Safety Board, and there will certainly be negative impacts here if it closes down,” said Wilma Subra, an environmental scientist with the Louisiana Environmental Action Network.

Along with the Dow chemical explosion, the agency has four other active investigations of incidents in Texas, Kentucky, Georgia, and Virginia. CSB investigations often take several months to complete. 

In an update of the Dow explosion investigation last year, the CSB hinted at “several events of concern” at the chemical complex between Baton Rouge and the town of Plaquemine — an area that forms part of the industrial corridor known as “Cancer Alley.” Among the targets of the investigation were at least two mechanical problems, multiple smaller explosions after the initial blow-up, and the release of more than 30,000 pounds of ethylene oxide, a colorless gas the agency noted is a cancer-causing substance.

The CSB’s last completed investigation was a fatal 2024 explosion at a steel hardening facility in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The CSB identified several safety failures and at least three other dangerous incidents involving similar hazards at other facilities owned by the same company, HEF Groupe of France. 

HEF “failed to ensure that information about those incidents and lessons learned from them were shared and implemented organization-wide,” the CSB investigation, released early this month, found. 

A chain reaction of mishaps at the Chattanooga facility resulted in an eruption of “hot molten salt” that killed a worker, according to the investigation. 

On average, hazardous chemical accidents happen once every other day in the U.S., according to Coming Clean, an environmental health nonprofit. Coming Clean documented 825 fires, leaks and other chemical-related incidents between January 2021 and October 2023. The incidents killed at least 43 people and triggered evacuation orders and advisories in nearly 200 communities.

Trump called for the CSB’s closure during his first term but settled for leaving many investigator and agency leadership positions unfilled. Slowing the agency’s work resulted in a backlog of 14 unfinished investigations by the time former president Joe Biden took office in 2021. 

Under the first Trump administration, investigations were hampered by staffing shortages and monthslong conflicts between the board and the agency’s Trump-appointed director, according to a federal inspector’s report

In the new budget proposal, the Trump administration indicated the CSB’s duties could be handled by other agencies.

“The CSB duplicates substantial capabilities in the Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to investigate chemical-related mishaps,” a CSB budget proposal said. “This function should reside within agencies that have authorities to issue regulations …”

This justification is “a lie,” said Jordan Barab, a former deputy assistant secretary of OSHA and a former CSB recommendations manager. 

While OSHA and the EPA are limited to assessing specific violations of their existing standards and regulations, the CSB can look far more broadly and at the “deeper causes” of accidents, including worker fatigue, corporate budget cuts, and lax oversight, Barab said. 

Even when other federal agencies appeared to ignore CSB recommendations, community groups and local governments could cite them when pushing for improved safety standards, Ozane said. 

“It was scientific evidence we could all use to pressure the state or the federal regulators to do something about pollution and safety in the places we live,” she said. “This is just another tool and another resource that’s been taken away from us.”


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sarcozona
7 hours ago
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this is a very exciting timeline
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Google Maps is riddled with major flaws and no one is talking about it | Creative Bloq

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Google Maps is something most of us use every day. But is it really as good as it could be? I think not.

My main beef with Google Maps is that it doesn't take safety into account. I live near a big expanse of green with no lighting and when I set off, budget camera phone in hand, and ask Google Maps to take me anywhere, at any time of day or night, it suggests crossing the green.

Now, that might be ok for someone not concerned about their personal safety (okay I'm just gonna say it, I'm talking about (not all) men) but for those of us who don't like crossing dark expanses at night, it's no good.

Could Google Maps not include an option for you to mark a route to say, 'I don't want to go that way'? It could then ask you why and one of the options could be safety. If enough people report the same, that route could then be potentially marked as potentially unsafe for others.

That's my first bugbear. Second up is that it doesn't seem to take into account accessibility needs. It also likes to suggest walking down a tiny alley that has a massive boulder in front of it.

The boulder and probably the size of the alley make it totally unsuitable for anyone in a wheelchair or pushing a buggy (or stroller) but again, there's no option to mark this up in Google and say that it's not a suitable option.

My annoyances with Google Maps don't stop there though. When driving rather than walking I also find the app limiting. First of all, Google Maps will take you down single track roads with no room to turn in, without giving you any warning that you're doing so.

The other day I was stuck in a traffic jam and Google Maps suggested I take a left to escape the traffic. So far so good. But it actually took me across what was essentially a field with a single track road in, which I ended up having to reverse down for a fairly long time because there was nowhere to turn and someone coming towards me.

Had I been given the choice of sitting in the traffic or going down the one-track road, in this case, I'd have taken the traffic jam.

Other apps such as Waze enable you to click whether you want to go on one-track roads or not. Waze also gives you the option to avoid tricky junctions.

Waze also addresses another one of Google Maps' pitfalls in that it shows you where the Clean Air Zone is in cities. Google Maps does not show this so if you do have a diesel car it is very hard to work out where you need to go to avoid a charge.

Google Maps also doesn't show you where dedicated cycle lanes are either, making it not ideal for cyclists. I'd also like it to show me if an area is particularly hilly, as that would help me plan my route both cycling and walking.

Overall I think that Google Maps needs some improvements. It needs to stop sending people down dark alleys and parks at night and it needs to give users options to say that they don't want to go a particular way. If they could say why they don't want to, that could potentially help other users.

It could also have more options for driver preferences and more information for walkers and cyclists.

Waze is an alternative but it's only for driving and I don't find the user experience as good as with Google, it doesn't show which lane you need to be in, for example. There's also City Mapper available in some cities but that doesn't show you options for driving, though it is very good for public transport.

So I'll keep my fingers crossed that Google Maps improves, although I think the developers really should've thought about these options by now.

To see an app that I do rate, check out gardening app Hota.

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sarcozona
15 hours ago
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On the one hand, Google maps needs improvements. On the other hand, the myth that lighting has fuck all to do with safety needs to die. It reduces your chance of tripping, not rape.
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starsoforionwrites:

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sarcozona
1 day ago
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He’s read the fic
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illustrations from lectures on ventilation (1869) by lewis w. leeds

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atthecenterofeverything:

illustrations from lectures on ventilation (1869) by lewis w. leeds

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sarcozona
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