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Poradnik edytowania | Updated Editing Guidelines ● Edycja Map - szybki start |
Edytor Map Waze | Zastrzeżone funkcje edytora map ● Ochrona mapy ● Interfejs i kontrolki Edytora Map |
Drogi | Kategorie dróg w Polsce ● Tworzenie i edycja segmentów dróg |
Ograniczenia prędkości | Przewodnik po ograniczeniach prędkości ● |
Nazewnictwo | Wzorce nazywania dróg ● Nazywanie ulic ● Tabela skrótów ● Miejscowości o takich samych nazwach |
Pierwsze kroki w edytowaniu | Najlepsze Praktyki ● Editing Basics ● Editing Bridges and Tunnels |
Połączenia | Skrzyżowania ● Ronda ● Niepotwierdzone i potwierdzone skręty |
Problemy i Błędy | Zgłoszenia użytkowników (UR) ● Problemy mapy (MP) |
Wszystko o Miejscach | Przewodnik po miejscach ● Standaryzacja nazw ● Zgłoszenia aktualizacji miejsc (PUR) ● Miejsca wjazdu/wyjazdu |
Ograniczenia i blokady | Planowe ograniczenia w ruchu ● Zamknięcia w czasie rzeczywistym |
Routing i Nawigacja | Oblicznie trasy ● Navigation Instructions |
Wydarzenia | MapRaid ● WoW |
Poniższe informacje obejmują różne procesy aktualizacji związane z Waze.
Czasy aktualizacji mapy
Zmiany wprowadzone w edytorach internetowych nie pojawiają się natychmiast na mapie na żywo ani w kliencie. Serwery Waze zazwyczaj aktualizują klienta i Live Mapę co 24 godziny, ale czasami opóźnienia mogą powodować, że może to być kilka dni między aktualizacjami.
Opóźnienia spowodowane problemami z serwerem
Czasy wymienione poniżej zakładają, że Waze działa normalnie. Obecnie aktualizacje są nadal poniżej czasów docelowych Waze, co znajduje odzwierciedlenie w podanym zakresie czasów. Czasami aktualizacje mogą spaść znacznie poniżej normy, a czasy będą znacznie dłuższe. Sprawdź oficjalną stronę Statusu Waze zanim zgłosisz opóźnienia.
Aktualizacje mapy
Po uruchomieniu aplikacji Waze spróbuje połączyć się z serwerami Waze. Jeśli się nie połączy, będzie okresowo ponawiał próbę. Po rozłączeniu masz dostęp do buforowanej mapy i niektórych buforowanych informacji o routingu. Klient może również wyznaczać własne trasy, ale bez uwzględnia prędkości na drodze, a szacowane czasy będą całkowicie błędne.
Po połączeniu z serwerami Waze w razie potrzeby zaktualizuje mapę klienta w stosunku do Mapy Live. Jeśli wytyczysz trasę, spowoduje to również aktualizację mapy wzdłuż trasy.
Traffic notifications
Traffic notifications come to your client in real time. These include traffic speeds and accident reports. Waze may automatically generate a new route based on such traffic speed reports.
Update requests
Update requests appear in Waze Map Editor as soon as your drive processes (see Your Routes below).
Editing the map
Unless you become an Area Manager or rank up to a higher level, you can only edit the map up to 1 mile (1.6 km) from where you have driven. Permission to edit your new routes does not always happen immediately. While it may appear in your recent routes in a few hours, it can take up to a few days to appear.
Your routes
When you travel with the Waze client app enabled, your route is recorded and can be viewed in the Waze Map Editor. It can take as long as 3 days for your routes to appear. Substantially longer times may occur when Waze is dealing with more urgent problems, and sometimes it can appear in just a few hours (or even a few minutes).
If you go to the Waze Map Editor page you will see a Drives tab in the upper left. Select the entry you want to see displayed on the editor map to view the route and see any road segments that you created so you can get them verified.
New roads
If you record (pave) a new road it will first appear as a red line on your client device. It will not be visible in Waze Map Editor (WME) as a new road until about the same time it appears as a recent route on the Drives tab (sometimes a few hours to a full day). The red line roads will disappear from your client device after a week at most.
After roads are confirmed in WME, it takes a few days for the routing server to fully update to reflect the changes. So you can see new roads, and navigate to them by choosing them as a destination, but you may not find them as a location. Routing may not be optimal (or may fail), until the routing server processes the new changes.
Live Map
Points
When your client device connects to Waze it retrieves your current points from the Waze points table. As you gain points while driving, your client device updates your points, and tries to send them to the Waze server. The Waze server holds these updates and adds them to the points table once a day.
Your client device will estimate how many points you earn, but may give you points that you shouldn't receive. For example, you may earn points by road-munching an unconfirmed road, but in fact someone else drove it an hour earlier. The Waze server will sort that out, and the points your phone gave you provisionally will disappear when you get an update from the server.
If you restart Waze it will download the current points from the Waze points table again. Without the updates it will appear as though your points have been lost. New points will continue to be added as you use the Waze application throughout the day. At the end of the day, the Waze server will process all the points updates and your total will be as it should.
Munching roads
Even after your route can be viewed in the Waze Map Editor, an unconfirmed road you have driven over may still appear as a pacman-road. It can take up to 2 days, but can be up to a week, before the road will lose the dots on your client map and appear as confirmed road. This is due to Waze wanting multiple data points for this road.
Loss of information
There are reports of permanent losses of points, missing road updates, and missing routes. Many of these are resolved by the passage of time.
There have been users that actually had some genuine losses, but these instances are uncommon and getting less and less often as Waze continues to develop and grow.
City names and boundaries
In Waze Map Editor you can see faint gray areas marking the boundaries of a city. These areas are calculated automatically from the position of roads labelled with those cities. These boundaries are updated within a couple of days of the Live Map being updated. The city name will appear at a point central to all these roads. When a city is first being mapped, and roads leading to the city have the city name, the placement of the city name will not be accurate and will even move as you change your location and zoom level. This becomes fixed as more roads, closer together, are given the city name.
If you are editing the roads for a new city, you will need to have at least 20 streets with the city name, before the city name will appear. You can expect a few days delay between seeing the street names appear on the map and your city name appearing.
Automatic road updates by Waze
With enough wazers driving along a route, Waze will automatically learn and apply corrections, but only for roads that have not yet been edited by a map editor. Through this process the road layouts will improve, roads will change from two-way to one-way or from one-way to two-way, and Waze will learn what turns are permitted at junctions.
But to avoid errors due to inaccurate GPS measurements (especially in cities), and a few incidents of driver error (illegal turns or going the wrong way down a one-way street), Waze is conservative and requires a large number of accurate driving tracks before making a change. Between 20 and 100 trips accurately recorded seem to be enough to trigger Waze to make an automatic update to the roads.
When the Waze servers find something on the map that should be adjusted, but it is blocked because the item has already been edited by a map editor, it will send a map problem alert.
So the more wazers, the faster this will happen.