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  2. OpenDRIVE (specification) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDRIVE_(specification)

    ASAM OpenDRIVE is an open format specification to describe a road network's logic. Its objective is to standardize the logical road description between different driving simulators. The initial release of ASAM OpenDRIVE was version 0.7 in 2005, as of November 2023 the current release is version 1.8.0. [2]

  3. Comparison of free off-line satellite navigation software

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_free_off...

    cross-platform; originally intended as a GIS; however can be fitted with GPS receiver and has support for it [72] and also allows to easily download maps from any location from an online database as OpenStreetMap, and many others [73] [74]

  4. OpenCRG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenCRG

    OpenCRG is a standardized efficient 3D road data representation defined in base plane by its direction (heading, yaw angle). It is optionally complemented by hilliness (slope, inclination, grade, pitch angle) and cross slope (super-elevation, banking, cant, camber, roll angle).

  5. Open Service Mesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Service_Mesh

    Microsoft donated OSM to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation to ensure that it is community-led and has open governance. [ 5 ] [ 8 ] On May 4, 2023, the project announced it would be archived, ending CNCF investment in the project so that its contributors could focus on Istio.

  6. JOSM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JOSM

    JOSM (listen ⓘ) (Java OpenStreetMap editor) is a free software desktop editing tool for OpenStreetMap geodata created in Java, originally developed by Immanuel Scholz and currently maintained by Dirk Stöcker. [5] The editing tool contains advanced features [6] that are not present in OSM's default online editor, iD.

  7. Wikipedia : Creating shape maps from OpenStreetMap data

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Creating_shape...

    Go to the OSM Relation Analyzer. Type in the item name and click 'Search'. Click the relevant relation ID (generally several digits long), then click 'Browse' to see it on the OpenStreetMap website. If you found the data on OSM, continue on to Part 3. If you did not find it, continue to Part 2 first to create the shape on OpenStreetMap.

  8. Open Source Routing Machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Source_Routing_Machine

    Since it is designed with OpenStreetMap compatibility in mind, OSM data files can be easily imported. A demo installation is sponsored by Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and previously by Geofabrik. The screen shot image shown is since September 2015 out of date with loss of attendant routing service features.

  9. OpenDroneMap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDroneMap

    OpenDroneMap uses the OpenSfM library to detect and match features, create tracks and determine their 3D positions along with the positions of the cameras. Then it uses the OpenMVS library to generate a dense point cloud from which it generates meshes. After that, the Geospatial Data Abstraction Library and the Point Data Abstraction Library ...