I'd encourage use of StreetComplete, you can walk around your local area and get lots of points to survey with data on street widths or businesses' opening times. Imagine if all the people who were busy with Pokemon Go used that, OpenStreetMap would be nigh perfect in terms of data.
Amusingly, it's widely believed that improving location information is a big part of the reason Niantic (at the time a subsidiary of Google) created Ingress (their game before Pokemon Go—and a much better-designed game, IMO) in the first place.
I just recently put in a Note for a fix in my local area (not a business, but an incorrectly placed toll road), but looking around the area I see a bunch of other Notes that are months old that don't seem to have been actioned. So I don't have a lot of hope that my feedback will be fixed any time soon.
Can you link your note here? I might look over the area and do some of the notes. There probably isn't any mappers ever looking at the area if there's a bunch of really old notes.
You can download an app called StreetComplete that makes it very easy to do little edits such as marking whether a bus stop has a bench and what material the sidewalk is made of. It's also available on FDroid!
It isn't open source, which makes it's hard to verify their claims, but Magic Earth uses OSM data and has traffic data in some countries. It has worked really well for me in the UK with arrival times being quite accurate to within a couple of minutes for 3-4 hour drives. They claim not to gather/sell any of your data, as they make their money through corporate customers.
fwiw I'm pretty sure in several countries it would be illegal for them to gather/sell your data if they've explicitly said they don't do that. I might actually trust that fact more than I'd trust the code, since they could easily build from a slightly different code base than the one shared online, if they wanted.
Someone suggested Organic Maps to me some time ago and I really love it. Their map data is not that old (just a few days up to a month behind OSM edits), it doesn't annoy me with stupid features, it allows routing, and can fully operate offline.
I use both, OSMand is way better but slow and not simple - if I was going to recommend an app I would recommend organic as OSMand would probably be too much for most, and too confusing.
I’ll use Organic Apps as soon as public transport integration is working in my city. ATM it seems to be a build time feature-flag, which is no use for my phone.
OSMAnd rules but fair warning to anyone who tries it: information overload is absolutely going to happen, go into filters and get picky with them because their default choices are.... Interesting
I was looking at switching to AllTrails from Outdoor Active. Does AT have a track feature where i can track a hike or other path and share it with friends?
Also available on Linux, and with the magic of Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL2) it works on Windows too.
Basically, export your mobile data to a sync service and import on other devices.
Far better than Google Maps in many regions and works perfectly offline.
My city doesn't have home addresses listed on OSM. Can I just sorta copy/paste them from Google maps, or do I have to like physically walk around to get addresses so I'm not using copyrighted material?
It's kind of like Wikipedia, you have to cite the original source (State or council maps) rather than a 3rd party source.
The map data for my suburb is all kinds of wrong on Google Maps, there's a park around the corner from me which is marked as a house for starters, blindly copying that into OSM would be a disservice.
The main use I have for navigation apps is traffic and bypassing it where possible. OSMand and Organic Maps, as well as every other app using OpenStreetMaps I’ve tried over the last 5-10 years, do not do traffic.
Currently using Here WeGo, the maps are great, the business information is up to date (at least in my area of the world) and it does traffic.
As a benefit, it’s also not renamed to Gulf of America