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This article was published on May 7, 2013

MapBox launches iD, a fast map editor for OpenStreetMap, enabling better contribution of data


MapBox launches iD, a fast map editor for OpenStreetMap, enabling better contribution of data

MapBox has unveiled a new map editor it created for the OpenStreetMap data project. Called iD, this software is said to make it easier for users to contribute data to maps right from within the browser. The new editor will be used officially in the project starting today.

With over a million mappers in its community, OpenStreetMap stands as one of the world’s largest open data projects. The organization is banking on the fact that as tools make it easier to add and edit data on a global map, the more appealing it will be for people to contribute. MapBox’s CEO Eric Gundersen tells us that not only does iD provide a “super fast user interface”, but it has improved data coverage and quality.

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Previously, the OpenStreetMap editor was slow and unintuitive. Gundersen says that it was built in Flash and just didn’t meet the needs of the users. So MapBox took all that was good from editor and started building a new one.

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Tom MacWright, MapBox’s lead developer on iD, says that the software is “written in JavaScript with the d3 visualization library, and on open standards that are constantly improving. Everything is open sourced and totally free of restrictions, so we already have coders around the world helping build and fix iD.”

The editor is not limited to English-speaking users. iD is available in more than a dozen languages, including Bosnian, Czech, Japanese, Polish, Slovak, Spanish, Vietnamese, French, German, and others.

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iD’s introduction gives the OpenStreetMap community another tool to make its mapping service as accurate as possible. In April, the organization added a new feature that made it easier to suggest data corrections.

Contributors to OpenStreetMap will find that starting today, iD has become the main editor. No additional software is needed in order to use it. However, right now, only additions and edits can be made through desktop browsers. Gundersen says that because the editor was developed using JavaScript, MapBox has the “perfect foundation” to make it mobile-friendly.

OpenStreetMap says that its data is used by many different companies and organizations, some private, public, or hobbyists, including startups like Foursquare, Hipmunk, and Evernote. Last month, Le Monde, one of the largest newspapers in France, integrated these maps onto its website. MapBox is an active contributor to the project and built this new tool with support from the Knight Foundation.

Photo credit: Tom Pennington/Getty Images

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