#GeoChat summary: Addressing the World with What3Words

المشرف العام

Administrator
طاقم الإدارة
Last Thursday on #GeoChat, Chris the CEO of what3words joined us to discuss the need for a better addressing system.

What is #GeoChat again?

What is #GeoChat and why you should participate! https://t.co/z8jQbbaW3G pic.twitter.com/O5JjRs1I7a

— Geoawesomeness (@geoawesomeness) April 7, 2016


Lets get it started!

@geoawesomeness All ready
#geochat

— Chris Sheldrick (@ChrisSheldrick2) April 7, 2016


Why does the world need a 3 word address?

@geoawesomeness The world needs a way of simply communicating locations, a version of lat/long that everyday people can use #GeoChat

— Chris Sheldrick (@ChrisSheldrick2) April 7, 2016


And that twitter poll comes in handy

@ChrisSheldrick2 Well isn’t that why we (still) have those long postal addresses? At least some think so – https://t.co/PH7lBX5v8E #GeoChat

— Geoawesomeness (@geoawesomeness) April 7, 2016


Postal addresses don’t work as well as we might think they do!

@chrissheldrick2 @geoawesomeness #geochat I think also non-urban applications seem likely – agriculture or recreation for instance?

— Will Cadell (@geo_will) April 7, 2016


agricultural applications are a good example of the limitations in our current postal system.

@geo_will @geoawesomeness Absolutely, rural areas are almost always badly addressed. Large farms often only have one address #geochat

— Chris Sheldrick (@ChrisSheldrick2) April 7, 2016


What3Words across the world

@maptiks #geochat we are used in 170 countries. Businesses/apps/sites who struggle with addresses are embracing w3w: https://t.co/oztObqmHAv

— Chris Sheldrick (@ChrisSheldrick2) April 7, 2016


And its going to be available in many more languages

@lovikovy #geochat newest are Mongolian, Hausa, Hindi, Bengali, Wolof, Polish, Finnish. Great to learn about all these languages.

— Chris Sheldrick (@ChrisSheldrick2) April 7, 2016



Speaking of Greek
 
أعلى