awhile back i did a brief post on native names for major cities for the website Cohost. anyways, i’ve spent approximately the past week assembling place names for a much more comprehensive map–as of writing, more than 1,000 individual points from approximately 60 different sources are listed–and you can find that at the submission link here.

this is what i’m calling v. 0.1 of this project and pretty much the moment this post goes up i’ll be back to adding new names. because this is such a large project i’ve only gotten around to a handful of states in great detail—but rest assured, a lot more is coming. the next big part of the map in progress is the Ojibwe sphere of influence which should knock out most of the Great Lakes area.

any errors or corrections you happen to notice are appreciated

    •  Helix 🧬   ( @Helix@feddit.de ) 
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      19 months ago

      This doesn’t answer my question and you’re being rude, as usual.

      It’s easier to use this in other projects when the license is free and you have a data format you can export.

      You’re intentionally making it harder to do anything useful with your data.

      If you don’t care, that’s fine. If your reason is that other platforms are hard to use, that’s also a fine reason. If you like to suck Google’s cock, that’s also valid. But answering with an empty comment is less useful than not answering at all.

      Next time please just ignore the question if you’re uninterested.

      • Honestly, I understand the reaction. I’m sure you didn’t mean it this way, but I have seen a number of times on beehaw and constantly on other lemmy instances situations where someone will post something cool that they did, and the comments are all complaining about the poster not using FOSS software to do that thing. I understand that Lemmy is very popular with FOSS communities but sometimes people just want to make a thing and they don’t want to spend all of their time wrestling with the tool they use to make it. I’m sympathetic with the idea of FOSS, but sometimes the gatekeeping is very off-putting.

        And, FWIW I believe that Google Maps exports to KMZ/KML which are open standards for geospatial data.