Talk:Geohashing

From Geohashing
Revision as of 21:52, 17 February 2009 by imported>Dawidi (+ suggested definitions of assorted lengths)

As a definition, how is this page substantively different from the Geohash definition?

As an explanation, what are its benefits over the Main Page or the FAQ?

I think anything novel (perhaps the silliness/costuming aspect) should be moved to the FAQ, and the page turned into a redirect to Geohash. -Robyn 17:29, 17 February 2009 (UTC)

I just looked at the history and see that it used to be a simple definition. I would vote to revert to that. -Robyn 17:33, 17 February 2009 (UTC)


...Definitions? :)

Sorry, I'm just being silly again... I thought of this when Robyn complained "Definitions should be short." (about this page) on IRC... maybe someone has a better idea where to put it:

1 word: "geohashing".

2 words: "expeditions, wiki."

4 words: "A spontaneous adventure generator"

8 words: "Do not worry. We are from the internet."

16 words: "Visiting automatically generated coordinates on a given day, meeting others, taking pictures, writing an expedition report."

32 words: "Geohashing is a project in which people visit effectively random, but well defined points on the globe, maybe meet other hashers there, and document the expedition online at wiki.xkcd.com/geohashing."

64 words: "An algorithm generates unpredictable, but well defined coordinates depending on the current date and the latest dow jones opening value. Geeks of all stripes try to visit those points on the same day, hoping to meet like-minded others, do silly things on location and take pictures of themselves with a stupid grin, and write about the expedition on a wiki for the community."

128 words: "A simple algorithm published in May 2008 by American web comic author Randall Munroe takes a date and the latest dow jones opening value on that date, and outputs a pattern of effectively random coordinates around the world, one point for each day in every area of one by one degrees. Geeks who like the idea try to reach these spots whenever possible. They may just enjoy cycling, walking or driving and take the coordinates as an arbitrary fixed goal, or try to meet up with others there. Achievement ribbons await those who reach difficult hashes, perform tricks on location, or just get lucky. The expeditions are then documented with pictures and sometimes a video, so other hashers from around the world can cheer to each others' successes.