Organic Maps, the privacy-focused, open-source alternative to Google Maps, celebrates its 4th anniversary. The project came to life during Christmas week of 202…
I use both. Osmand+ allows me to contribute way more efficiently with PDIs and GPS traces as well as editing existing features, but when I want to navigate, I prefer Organic Maps. I also like more their rendering since it's faster across all my devices. They are both useful apps. My main gripe is with the data in my area, as everyone uses Google or Apple's data we struggle with contributors.
Organic Maps is great. Recently learned about Geo Share, which makes my job doing deliveries possible with Organic Maps. It basically redirects gMaps links to Organic Maps (even from food delivery apps).
They cooked, also interested in learning about the story with the party comment at the end about regretting inviting maps.me team without background check. What happened?
Organic maps is probably my favourite osm app for general use. I still have OsmAnd for various purposes, and I use Magic Earth when driving for the included traffic calculations. I hope that Organic Maps can generate some traffic data in the future. Though, I imagine for it to work well, some sort of open sharing of traffic data would need to happen to avoid fragmentation between apps.
As Kilgore said, it isn't FOSS. And while it's hard to prove, they claim they don't collect any user data, and instead make their money through partnering with businesses.
I’ve been looking for something like this! So far I had an open street map bookmark but this is way better for when I’m hiking. Other commercial maps sucks for hikes.
It's great for trails in America. I've used it for years. Offline maps by default and you can easily drop a pin. FYI, in the android build, you drop a pin with a triple touch. It used to be long touch.
Been using Magic Earth with Android Auto, and it's been working great. I prefer it over Organic Maps. While I prefer Organic's privacy focus, it was laggy on my phone and search also was more fussy and difficult to find things.
I love offline maps. I only have data enabled when I want internet access.
Magic Earth can do directions for walking without data enabled. Google Maps with an offline map still requires data to generate a route for walking.
Honestly guys. I've used organic maps and osmand. Don't like both. For my roadtrip I plan on using Waze or something. For some reason it's so slow and buggy on my device, osmand crashes everytime and organic maps doesn't have enough data of all the small places on the roadtrip.
Its not about contributing to the map data. There's quite few quality issues with organic maps, from small things in the UI to how it calculates the navigation from A to B. I want to like organic maps, but its still far from usable for me. I do however regularly contribute to OSM - mainly thanks to streetcomplete.
Interesting that the post is showing Prague. I think it's a nod to the influx of Czech users after our most popular map app, Mapy.cz by Seznam.cz, underwent enshittification to accomodate a premium tier.
It's especially good for the Czech Republic, the rest is just an OSM reskin (still good though). If you stop updating at 9.55.2 (9550200), you will still get the premium feature (multi-country offline maps) for free and without downsides, AFAIK. However, they have stopped server support for old versions before and it's pretty much impossible to unofficially import the map data without root.
I do like Organic maps, but it doesn't have live bus timings and multi-bus route calculation like google does, so I still occasionally have to use that instead.
Fortunately I'm on GOS, and can atleast restrict gmaps from seeing my GPS location, but they're still able to guess where I am and where im going and build data points to sell or hand over to cops based on which bus routes I look at.