This is really great!
How does Wikidata's approach compare with geocoordinates used by, for example, Google's approach to mapping and navigation?
Scott
On Wed, Jun 12, 2013 at 8:48 AM, Sven Manguard svenmanguard@gmail.comwrote:
I've been doing some manual importing, and have found that in the vast majority of cases, when different languages' Wikipedias have different coordinates for a location, the coordinates that are most accurate are the ones in the language that is spoken where the location is. For example, some of the first locations to have their coordinates brought over to Wikidata were some train stations in the Netherlands. The Dutch and English Wikipedias' coordinates differed, and the Dutch coordinates were right every time. One English Wikipedia coordinate was even for the next station down the line, over an arcminute away.
Therefore I think that we should coordinates for locations in Germany from dewiki, locations in Spain from eswiki, locations in the Netherlands from nlwiki, etc.
Sven
On Wed, Jun 12, 2013 at 5:36 AM, Cristian Consonni < kikkocristian@gmail.com> wrote:
2013/6/12 Kolossos tim.alder@s2002.tu-chemnitz.de:
Hey, the question is now how we can merge coordinates from all languages to Wikidata. I would propose to use the coordinate from the longest
article to
have a good chance for using the most accurate one. Thats the way I use
in
Wikipedia-World[1]. After an update we could also use this database for
an
import.
Worst case would be that everyone use a bot and we would have a great bot-war.
I think it should be possible to just import them as data with different sources. If a coordinate pair is the same over multiple Wikipedia then you have more sources, see for example the property occupation:politician here[1]
Ciao,
Cristian
[1] http://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q76
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