Category:Texas View history

Revision as of 06:14, 27 April 2014 by Txemt (talk | contribs)

Information related to using Waze in the State of Texas. THIS PAGE IS STILL UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Cities and towns

There are 6386 Cities and Towns spread across 254 counties in the state. See Connecticut/Cities and towns for proper naming information.

Major roads

See Road names/USARoad types/USA and Connecticut/Roads by type (work in progress)

Landmarks

In late 2012 a discussion was started in the Connecticut Section of the Waze Forum that determined the existing world-wide guideline of "don't map individual businesses" wasn't enough and we needed a more complete set of guidelines for landmarks in Connecticut. As a result of that discussion we've come up with a set of guidelines for landmarks in Connecticut. If you wish to propose changes to these guidelines, please do so in the forum. As always, the world-wide rule of "don't map individual businesses" still applies.

Please do not forget that a recent update to WME has enabled the Address properties for Landmarks (City, State & Country) and ensure this information is filled out & correct.

Major construction projects

See Connecticut/Construction for a list of LONG TERM Road Closures & Changes to Traffic Flow that impact the Waze Map.

Special roads

Non-drivable roads

Generally, if a road can't be driven on (e.g. Walking Trail, Pedestrain Boardwalk, Stairway, Railroad, Runway/Taxiway) then it should not be mapped in Waze. This is due to the way the routing engine works, as Waze WILL route users to drive on these "Non-Drivable" road types. Please note there are several Railroads mapped in Texas, these railroads are mapped in aVERY particular manner by Senior Area Managers and Country Managers to prevent Waze from routing on them.

Speed / red light cameras

Red Light Cameras are ARE LEGAL in the State of Texas.

Contrary to popular belief, these cameras do not sit on the top of lights at an intersection. If you've gotten to an intersection, you've already passed the red light camera.

There are also cameras mounted on traffic signals that are used as part of the signal control. These compare sequential images of the intersection approach to determine if there is a vehicle (car, truck, motorcycle, bicycle, etc) waiting and will trigger the sequence. These devices CAN NOT issue tickets.

There are traditional traffic monitoring cameras covering most of the major highways in the state. These send live video to CT DOT & local media and serve ONLY as a traffic monitoring system.

How to Identify Cameras.

Speed cameras are CURRENTLY ILLEGAL in the State of Texas.

To do list

Want to help out with the map in Texas? Check out the To Do List and the Landmarks To Do List.

Mapping utilities

Area Managers

Username Area Managed Comments Forum PM
Level 6 Country Managers
txemt
US South Central Regional Coordinator Based out of Miami, FL born/lived/travelled through most of Texas PM
jasonh300 US South Central Regional Coordinator Based out of New Orleans, LA PM
Level 5 Country Managers (Texas Based)
LittlestLou DFW Metroplex PM
pjlasl North Texas Based out of Weatherford PM
Level 4 Area Managers
jstrangfeld North DFW Metroplex PM
ctpoole Austin
PM
Level 3 Area Managers
jeigh17 El Paso PM
shadoh DFW Metroplex PM
MisterTodd East DFW Metroplex PM
tcalvert317 San Antonio PM
danofsatx San Antonio
PM
PvilleT Austin
PM
If you are an Area Manager that covers the Texas, or a USA Country Manager that does a lot of work in Texas, please add yourself to this list (alphabetical by username).

Pages in category "Texas"

This category contains only the following page.